Leveraging a brand's medical moment of
truth.
by Davis, Steve
Committing extensive resources to detailing doctors and heavily
marketing to patients using traditional DTC venues are standard
techniques used by pharmaceutical companies to educate their consumer
groups. So why, according to the National Council on Patient Information
and Education, are half of all prescription medications not taken
correctly by patients? Lack of persistency--up to 50%--can be traced
back to message deficiencies from the patient's prescribing
physician. In order to increase compliance marketers must focus on
improving the patient-physician interaction.
New research points to the initial prescribing office visit--also
known as the medical moment of truth--as the single greatest opportunity
to educate patients. This encourages the building of good adherence
practices that become habitual in the first 90 days of therapy and leads
to better persistence in the following six months to one year. Missing
elements of this conversation could leave the patient more likely to
lapse in therapy.
This presents a unique opportunity to identify gaps in the
patient-physician interaction and modify marketing messages to both
parties. New technology allows brand managers and sales operations to
combine monthly consumer surveys with longitudinal prescription claims
data in a Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act-compliant
environment. The result is an objective quantification of the
patient-prescriber interaction during the medical moment of truth. It is
now possible to determine the effect of specific messages on patient
behavior and brand-specific prescription fill rates.
Other elements of the office visit are quantified as well. It has
been observed that patients who receive a pharmaceutical sample during
their office visit are 35% less likely to fill their first prescription
within 90 days. This is especially true for new brands. However, when
the sample is packed effectively with the right patient education
materials, persistency can improve.
Among some patient segments, up to 50% of lack of persistency can
be traced to message deficiencies and over-sampling. For example, in the
cholesterol class, patients who report hearing key aspects of brand
specificity and health benefits during their office visit will fill 13%
more prescriptions on average during the first 90 days, yet only 32% of
patients report hearing this message.
Patients who hear from their doctor how and when to take their
cholesterol medication are 21% more persistent during the first 90 days
of therapy. Unfortunately, fewer than 60% report hearing this message.
Furthermore, almost 25% of patients who do not hear this message do not
even fill their first prescription within 90 days.
How can prescriber-to-patient messaging information be used to
improve brand persistency? This requires a multi-tiered strategy.
Detailing prescribers can improve adherence and reduce their number
of telephone queries. Patient-level data research technology can target
prescribers who have poor compliance records.
Patients should also be educated before they step into their
doctor's office. The 30-day period before an appointment with a
physician is when patients are most receptive to receiving information
about a disease or condition. Seventy percent of consumers claim the
Internet is their most-frequent source of health information. Specially
designed Web programs can qualify prospects with an upcoming appointment
and equip them with tools to improve the dialogue during their initial
doctor's appointment.
Product managers must continue to leverage their compliance and
persistency opt-in reminder programs. Samples could serve as an
enrollment vehicle to improve program effect at therapeutic initiation.
The knowledge gleaned from patient-level data research, combined
with systematic patient education programs, can have tremendous effect
on brand utilization. Marketers can influence a consumer's message
takeaway and the dialogue between patients and physicians--even the
slightest increase in compliance and persistency can lead to sharp sales
gains and increased brand marketshare.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Medicom International,
Inc. Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.