Ein Ex-Mietmaul erzählt Lesenswert. In der NY Times Magazine-Beilage erzählt ein Psychiater über seine Erfahrung mit dem Pharmamarketing als bezahlter Repräsentant für den Pharmakonzern Wyeth. As the reps became comfortable with me, they began to see me more as a sales colleague. I received faxes before talks preparing me for particular doctors. One note informed me that the physician we’d be visiting that day was a “decile 6 doctor and is not prescribing any Effexor XR, so please tailor accordingly. There is also one more doc in the practice that we are not familiar with.” The term “decile 6” is drug-rep jargon for a doctor who prescribes a lot of medications. The higher the “decile” (in a range from 1 to 10), the higher the prescription volume, and the more potentially lucrative that doctor could be for the company. ... At that moment, I decided my career as an industry-sponsored speaker was over. The manager’s message couldn’t be clearer: I was being paid to enthusiastically endorse their drug. Once I stopped doing that, I was of little value to them, no matter how much “medical education” I provided. Daniel Carlat ist mittlerweile Herausgeber eines unabhängigen Newsletters, The Carlat Psychiatry Report, und schreibt ein Blog. [Pharmamarketing]
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