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B2B Marketing Health and Elder Care Services

May 27th, 2008 by admin

Quality Care Options is an established company advocating for the right of all seniors to receive excellent service and product. The organization recommends Certified Senior Approved Services to its elderly clientele.

Through its highly visible web sites and monthly ezines, Quality Care Options (QCO) attracts both the senior and the businesses that serve the senior population.

Barbara Mascio, Founder of QCO, has been inundated with requests from healthcare businesses for recommendations towards resources that would further promote an elder or healthcare related business.

These requests include; ‘Who should I call for the best liability insurance coverage?’ ‘Who do you recommend as a resource for market analysis?’ ‘How do I start an elder care business?’ and even ‘Who can handle our maintenance and lawn care?’

“Every business serving our senior population needs resources towards recruitment, security checks, lead generation and advice on marketing how-to’s and so we’ve provided a very affordable method for businesses offering these products, services and resources to reach our web site visitors”, states Barbara.

Not all advertising will be accepted. You must first submit your banner or text by following the guidelines found on http://www.qualityeldercare.com/advertising

Speakers and professional networking groups are offered special low rates of just $10 per month for an ad with a hyperlink to their web. Businesses to Business advertising can be purchased for as little as $20 a month. “We’re not trying to make a living from advertising revenue, that’s not what this is all about, states Barbara. We simply want to cover the administrative costs and provide our web visitors the resources they need to further grow their business.”

For businesses marketing directly to the senior citizen, please see http://www.qualityeldercare.com/providers to review how to apply for Senior Approved Certification as no advertising is accepted for this segment of our business.

Advertising on the Internet can be a crapshoot. You should do your homework before spending any amount of money. Does the web site have enough unique visitors each day interested in the service you offer? One site to check traffic stats on line is http://www.alexa.com Simply enter the url address of any web site to review certified traffic results. Obviously, you want a site to have higher web traffic than your own, or at the very least, equal to your traffic.

Barbara Mascio is the founder of http://www.qualityeldercare.com and of http://www.seniorsapprove.com

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Direct-To-Consumer Advertising by Pharmaceuticals

May 19th, 2008 by admin

In 1997, the Food and Drug Administration relaxed its restrictions on direct-to-consumer marketing of pharmaceuticals. Prior to this ruling, drug manufacturers were prohibited from mentioning both the name of the drug and its indications in consumer-directed advertisements without also including a large amount of technical information about the drug, including all known side effects, contraindications, and dosage recommendations (Stevens, 1998).

In addition to interfering with the appeal of the advertisements, such requirements
rendered broadcast ads infeasible due to time constraints, and hindered ads in print
media due to cost and space availability. These requirements were abolished in the
1997 FDA policy changes, and pharmaceutical companies were permitted to market
drugs by name as treatments for specific conditions, with the minimal requirement
that ads give mention to major risks identified in clinical trials (Melillo, 2001). As a
result, manufacturer expenditures on direct-to-consumer advertising, which totaled
$791 million in 1996, rose to $2.6 billion for the year 2000 (Mitchell, 2001).
Television, radio, and print media became saturated with ads promoting treatments
for conditions ranging from depression to high cholesterol.

Names such as Zoloft, Claritin, and Lipitor, which were previously known mostly to
health professionals, quickly became part of the national vocabulary. Consequently,
spending on prescription drugs has increased significantly over the past several
years as consumers are enticed to seek advertised medications (HealthBizNews.com,
2001). This new face of drug marketing has sparked a raging debate about the
accompanying effects on the health of the American public: does direct to consumer
marketing benefit the public by providing education about available treatments, or
does it diminish the quality of healthcare by raising costs and causing unnecessary
treatment? Proponents of direct-to-consumer, or DTC, pharmaceutical advertising,
most prominently the drug companies themselves, argue that DTC marketing
results in improved public health by increasing consumer awareness. According to
this view, direct marketing to the consumer alerts the public of the availability of
treatment for a given condition, a fact of which it may not otherwise be aware. This
knowledge may prompt people to seek medical help rather than unnecessarily
accepting their ailments (Miller, 1998). Furthermore, supporters claim that ads raise
awareness of undiagnosed conditions by providing information about symptoms.

Since countless Americans suffer from undiagnosed disorders-only half of the
estimated 16 million Americans with diabetes know they have the disease-the
motivation to seek treatment provided by these ads is a valuable public benefit
(Health Matters, 1998). Similarly, by prompting people to visit a doctor, ads may
help identify conditions unrelated to the specific area of concern. For example,
according to Mike Magee, a medical adviser for Pfizer, a large proportion of
consumers seeking Viagra would not otherwise see a doctor, so visits seeking help
for erectile dysfunction often uncover conditions warranting medical attention, such
as diabetes (Shapiro and Schultz, 2000). Some doctors support DTC ads as well,
claiming that they make their jobs easier by resulting in better informed patients.
Many ads, particularly for diabetes, stress the importance of self-management of
disease, which may increase compliance with doctors orders and result in reduced
need for more extensive medical care (New York Times, 2001).

Doctors appreciate having patients who are already briefed about current drug
therapies, which saves time in a medical system that often requires doctors to see
as many as thirty patients per day (New York Times, 2001). Critics of direct-to-
consumer drug ads, including the American Medical Association, insurance
providers, and many physicians cite increasing healthcare costs, improper
prescriptions, and corrupted doctor-patient relations as this type of marketing’s
major resultant evils. Substantial evidence exists that the escalation of DTC
advertising has increased expenditure on pharmaceutical purchases. Prescription
drug spending increased 84% between 1993 and 1998, and it is estimated that
consumer-directed advertising increased drug expenditure by $13 billion in 1998
alone (Cassels, 2001).

The twenty-five most advertised drugs of 2000 accounted for forty-one percent of
expenditure on new prescriptions (Sherrid, 2000). Escalating prescription cost is of
particular concern to healthcare providers such as HMOs and large corporations,
which face a choice between curbing costs and cutting benefits (Cassels, 2001).
Additionally, those without prescription drug coverage must pay the increased rates
out-of-pocket (Shapiro and Schwarz, 2000). DTC proponents counter arguments
centered on rising costs by claiming that increased outlays on prescriptions save
money in the long run by preventing the need for more extensive medical care
(Moore, 2000). Critics, however, cite the fact that the largest portion of the drug
industry’s advertising budget goes toward drugs for non-critical ailments such as
heartburn, allergies, and hair loss (Moore, 2000).

Another argument presented by DTC opponents holds that these ads result in
incorrect prescriptions by creating consumer demand for products regardless of
actual need. Critics believe that consumers are sold the idea that a pill can instantly
provide them with good health (Health Matters, 1998). Often, however, the drugs to
which consumers are exposed are not even the most effective, but simply the ones
with the largest advertising budgets (Headden and Melton, 1998). According to
Shapiro and Schultz, patients, if refused specific prescriptions, will frequently visit
another physician, who may comply with the request (2000). In addition to
unnecessarily adding to healthcare costs, patient demand pressures doctors to give
patients the drugs they request for fear of losing business (Shapiro and Schultz,
2000). Specific drug requests, according to Dr. Angelo Agro, often cause physicians
to lose credibility in the eyes of the patient, who has been convinced by
advertisements that the drug a physician refuses to prescribe is nonetheless the
best option (Tanner, 2001).

Responding to such concerns, the AMA, at its July 2001 meeting, debated a
proposal for the organization to encourage the federal government to ban all DTC
prescription drug advertising (Tanner, 2001). While I agree that public exposure
through advertising of the latest treatments for common conditions raises public
awareness and prompts people to visit physicians, I nonetheless believe that direct-
to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising does not adequately justify its social costs.
In the case of overt maladies, such as allergies or depression, for which a large
share of advertised drugs are indicated, a condition affecting a person’s life to the
point of warranting medication would certainly cause him or her to notice it and
presumably to seek treatment. While many other products, such as cholesterol
lowering drugs, are used to treat conditions of which an individual may not be
aware and that may eventually adversely impact health, these conditions would, in
nearly all cases, be uncovered during a routine examination. In both cases, the
central benefit accomplished by these ads is getting people through the doors of
doctors’ offices, an end that can easily be achieved more cheaply without the use of
DTC advertising. For example, less expensive public service campaigns encouraging
people to have routine checkups and informing the public of warning signs of
common conditions would achieve the same results without affecting the cost of
healthcare. As the situation now stands, the benefits that do result from DTC
advertising are purchased at the price of reduced healthcare quality for some.

As drug advertising drives up the cost of treatment, healthcare providers will be
forced to cut costs in other areas and may find it necessary to compromise coverage
by denying certain procedures or raising premiums. Increased premiums may drive
people who fund their own health insurance out of the system by making personal
insurance unaffordable. Additionally higher premiums may discourage large
employers, which often independently provide their employees with health
coverage, from continuing this practice. General Motors spent $900 million covering
prescription drugs in 2000, a 19% increase over the previous year (Cassels, 2001).
Escalating costs may render those without prescription coverage unable to afford
necessary medications. Furthermore, the production of a drug is only possible when
the disease it treats becomes understood through years of basic research, most of
which is conducted by publicly funded academic investigators. Since public money
lays the groundwork for pharmaceutical production, drug companies have a
responsibility to the taxpayers not to engage in practices that will result in a
reduction in the quality of healthcare.

The major problems underlying this situation is that, under our current insurance
structure, the costs of increasing drug prices do not accrue to the consumer and
thus do not decrease demand as they should in a free market system. As a result,
the pharmaceutical companies are not given proper incentive to control prices.
Insurance providers, rather than transferring rising costs to consumers through
reduced care, need to restore the incentive to curb drug prices and hold the
pharmaceutical companies responsible for their exorbitant budgets.

http://www.lonelycanuck.com

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Healthcare & Blogs Should We Believe The Hype

May 12th, 2008 by admin

Physicians, healthcare executives, pharmaceutical companies and others have been slow to jump on the blogging bandwagon. The primary reason is because they have a negative opinion of blogs. Some believe that blogs are filled with inaccurate information and cannot drive sales of healthcare products and services.

In some respects, this negative perception of blogs is justified. This is because
blogs are far from a perfect communications medium. Some of the reasons for this
include:

- It Is Difficult To Vet Blog Content: Currently, there is no standard set of
criteria people can use to determine whether a blog is credible

- There Are No Metrics: There is a lot of anecdotal evidence indicating
that blogs may impact a company’s bottom line, but no hard statistics showing how
blogs have driven sales or changed customer perceptions

- Blogging Is Hard Work: Blogs take a lot of time and effort to develop
and grow. Unless a blog is integrated into an organization’s long term
communications strategy, it may not be successful

Why Blogs Deserve A Serious Look

Despite the many drawbacks associated with blogs, executives, physicians and other
players in the healthcare industry should take them seriously. Blogs are poised to
significantly impact many aspects of healthcare, including perceptions of medical
products and the relationship between providers and patients. Following is a brief
overview of some of the key ways blogs may influence the healthcare industry.

Healthcare Blogs and the Provider-Patient Relationship

In July 2005, Harris Interactive released a poll indicating that 117 million Americans
have turned to the Internet for healthcare information. Think about this for a
moment. This survey suggests that online health information may be having a
profound influence on the healthcare provider-patient relationship. This means that
people may already be using information posted by providers, experts, patients and
others on blogs in conversations with their physicians.

Healthcare Blogs and Market Research

Healthcare blogs are already affecting healthcare-related communications activities,
including market research. Nielsen BuzzMetrics, an Internet monitoring firm, reports
that 14 of the world’s top 15 pharmaceutical companies are already using its
services to track “buzz” about their products on blogs and other “consumer-
generated content” (i.e., bulletin boards, podcasts, etc.). As the healthcare
“blogosphere” expands, the influence of blogs may only increase.

Healthcare Blogs and Disease Management

Healthcare blogs are also having an impact on medical treatment. For example, a
number of physicians have developed blogs that provide information to healthcare
providers on how to manage common and rare medical conditions. These blogs are
highly ranked on major search engines and are widely read.

Blogs and Healthcare: More Than Hype

So, should healthcare executives, pharmaceutical companies and others believe the
hype about blogs? Maybe so, maybe not. However, at the very least, they should
learn as much as they can about what blogs mean for healthcare and think about
whether launching one is worth the effort. When it comes to blogs, knowledge is
power.

Fard Johnmar is founder of Envision Solutions, L.L.C., a full-service healthcare
marketing communications consulting firm. Envision Solutions provides
innovative products and services to not-for-profit and for-profit
organizations. For more information and insights on blogs and healthcare,
pick up a copy of Envision Solutions’ report, “The Emerging Healthcare
Blogosphere: What Is It & Why Does It Matter?” Please visit
http://www.envisionsolutionsnow.com/spotlight.html to learn
more about this first-of-its-kind report.

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