I saw a program on TV about this, the doctor that was being interviewed decided that he and some of his colleagues were going to break away from this trap and get back into the patient real needs, not what the doctors benefits would be!
This article is from Dr. Mercola Newsletter
Shahram Ahari, who spent two years selling Prozac and Zypraxa for Eli
Lily, told a Senate Aging Committee that his job involved "rewarding
physicians with gifts and attention for their allegiance to your
product and company despite what may be ethically appropriate."
Ahari
claims that drug companies often hire former cheerleaders and
ex-models, as well as former athletes and members of the military, even
if they have no background in science.
During their five-week training class, Ahari says he was taught sales tactics such as:
- How to exceed spending limits for important clients
- How to be generous with free samples to leverage sales
- How to use friendships and personal gifts to foster a "quid pro quo" relationship
- How to exploit sexual tension
Ahari claims
that he's even heard stories about sales reps helping to pay the cost
of a doctor's swimming pool, or taking a doctor to a nightclub where a
hostess was paid to keep him company.
For this work, sales reps
often earned more than researchers. On top of a base salary of $50,000
for starting reps, Ahari says, "there were four quarterly bonuses, an
annual bonus, stock options, a car, 401K, great health benefits, and a
$60,000 expense account."
By now, it’s old news that drug companies use extreme sales tactics to influence doctors’ prescribing habits, but to hear the extent of just how far things go -- buying doctors’ swimming pools or using sexual innuendos to make sales -- is still shocking.
"The nature of this business is gift-giving," Ahari said, and indeed it seems that in the world of pharmaceuticals, everything has a price.
Your Doctor Probably Has a Relationship With a Drug Rep
It is the rare physician who refuses to meet with drug sales reps. In fact, as of April 2007, the percentage was just 7 percent of U.S. doctors.
Even I met with drug reps until the year 2000, at which time I just refused to see any. Before that I was actually a paid speaker for the drug companies. They would fly me to various physician education events around the country and pay me a VERY generous stipend to lecture to these groups. That was more than two decades ago, before I was able to remove myself from their very powerful brainwashing techniques -- and I was finally able to understand the truth of what they were doing.
So there is a very good chance that the doctor you see right now is being subjected to similar intense sales tactics like the ones Ahari describes. According to one study published in The New England Journal of Medicine:
- 94 percent of doctors have some type of relationship with the drug industry
- 80 percent of doctors commonly accept free food and drug samples
- One-third of doctors were reimbursed by the drug industry for going to professional meetings or continuing education classes
- 28 percent of doctors have been paid for consulting, giving lectures, or signing their patients up for clinical trials
“Physicians who refuse to see reps are detailed by proxy; their staff is dined and flattered in hopes that they will act as emissaries for a rep's messages.”
Clearly these are no ordinary sales meetings; this is psychological warfare.
Sales Reps are Trained to Brainwash Doctors
Pharmaceutical sales reps are trained in tactics that are on par with some of the most potent brainwashing techniques used throughout the world, according to the PLoS report. Said Ahari:
Drug reps must target doctors because it is only through a physician that a consumer can purchase their product. Although in the United States they have also ramped up their direct-to-consumer ads on television and in magazines, their real “meat and potatoes” comes from their marketing directly to physicians.
This is why drug companies spend $4 billion each year on direct-to-consumer ads in the United States, but $16 billion to influence physicians. That is $10,000 for every single doctor in the United States.
The Drug Sales Rep Ambush
Most doctors don’t even stand a chance against a seemingly innocent drug sales rep. They appear friendly, eager to please, and knowledgeable about their product, and most physicians think there is no harm in accepting a free sample here, or a free lunch there.
Well, studies have shown that those free samples and lunches DO impact doctors' prescribing habits. So you can imagine what a more lavish gift -- like a free vacation, “consulting fee” or even companionship -- can do.
What they don’t get to see is the well-oiled machine that is controlling these reps, and ultimately the physicians as well, like marionettes.
From the instant a drug rep enters your office, the ambush is underway. Says Ahari:
In their PLoS Medicine report, Ahari and Adriane Fugh-Berman, an associate professor in the department of physiology and biophysics at Georgetown University Medical Center, even put together this chart of the specific tactics used to manipulate physicians.
4 comments on "Drug Sales Reps are Trained to Brainwash Doctors"
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I sure believe this. Sometimes I benefit if the product happens to be good and fills my needs, e.g. I got free samples of Rinocort for about a year. However, my sleep apnea doctor was going to put me on that "restless leg" drug and I rebelled. This monstrosity used to be used for Parkinson's and the drug companies are trying for another use (one of their best nontechincal marketing tricks). He did admit the drug had side effects like "increased sex urge and ugre to gamble" - good greif!
Oh my restless legs are better then the "side" effects.
Very troubling.... I'm very glad I have a doctor who is more holistic and not a "pill pusher." That's good, because I am not a "pill popper."
Every Pusher needs a Poper, I mean Popper