FDA Tells Novartis That 'Facebook Sharing' Widget On Its Site Violates Drug Ad Rules
from the sharing-is-not-caring dept
Technology can certainly make for some interesting clashes with regulatory regimes. Social networking, for example, starts to bring up all sorts of questions about the fine line between certain regulated areas of advertising, and basic free speech communication issues. Eric Goldman points us to the news that the FDA is warning pharma giant Novartis (pdf) over its use of a "Facebook Share" widget on its site promoting the drug Tasigna (a leukemia drug).The shared content is misleading because it makes representations about the efficacy of Tasigna but fails to communicate any risk information associated with the use of this drug. In addition, the shared content inadequately communicates Tasigna’s FDA-approved indication and implies superiority over other products. Thus, the shared content for Tasigna misbrands the drug in violation of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the Act) and FDA implementing regulations.The FDA even picks on the specific word choices in some of the sharing features, such as calling the drug a "next-generation" drug, which apparently implies it's better than other drugs in the space when that might not be the case. Advertising and marketing for pharmaceuticals has always been a contentious area, and I believe that many countries ban it, while the US allows it. But with the internet and social networking, the line between advertising and communication can start to blur. Yes, it may be problematic if Novartis is suggesting people "share" misleading or incomplete info about the drug, but what if people just start sharing that info on their own? Where do you draw the line?
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Filed Under: communications, regulations, sharing, social media
Companies: facebook, fda, novartis
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One reason is that a companies pitch is supposed to go to the world (or target group) at large (In clinical trials WONDEREX(TM) was reported to cause loss of teeth, numbness in limbs, and in some rare cases, death), while an individual's advice is based off of their own anecdotal experience (WONDEREX(TM) didn't make my teeth fall out).
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That's exactly where the line is drawn. However, I could see this scenario coming soon if it hasn't already: where the people giving the "bad advice" are paid by the drug companies which is surely illegal, once they get caught.
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Explain to us all why scientists used complete stranger to play a game of protein folding and publish the results were people were able to do better than the algorithms they had and explain why a social network dedicated to gather medical information on all diseases is putting out information that later is found to be true by other researchers noting that the guy's doing the work are not scientists or medics just a bunch of people collecting and making sense of their own illnesses and therapies.
I think the people would be fine, they have the tools now to collect and process the information on a global scale and catch any misleading F.
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http://www.ted.com/talks/jamie_heywood_the_big_idea_my_brother_inspired.html
The website.
http://www.patientslikeme.com/
Protein folding game.
http://fold.it/portal/
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20727725.100-computer-gamers- crack-proteinfolding-puzzle.html
The research done by scientists has named the players as co-authors of the paper, many of them are not scientists, but have one thing that all humans share, the ability to identify patterns.
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Where?
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Re: Where?
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Prescription drug advertising
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Re: Prescription drug advertising
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I will trust the mechanics to solve that problem
Thousands of them, with the same problem as you reporting how they feel, what they feel and aggregating that data could just make big pharma regret all the propaganda.
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Difference between flacks share and user share
The flack has no particular expertise other than a job at a drug company. It's advertising driving the drug company. Not science or even testimonial, which we all know can be suspect.
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