Public preferences for corporate social responsibility activities in the pharmaceutical industry: Empirical evidence from Korea.

Although corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities are common in the pharmaceutical industry, there is little empirical evidence on consumer responses to CSR practices. We investigated public awareness, preferences, and expectations regarding social contribution of the pharmaceutical industry...

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Main Authors: Hankil Lee, Sang Yong Kim, Goun Kim, Hye-Young Kang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221321
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spelling doaj-bc1f7504ec5947259036ff102fd2926d2021-03-03T21:21:55ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01148e022132110.1371/journal.pone.0221321Public preferences for corporate social responsibility activities in the pharmaceutical industry: Empirical evidence from Korea.Hankil LeeSang Yong KimGoun KimHye-Young KangAlthough corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities are common in the pharmaceutical industry, there is little empirical evidence on consumer responses to CSR practices. We investigated public awareness, preferences, and expectations regarding social contribution of the pharmaceutical industry's CSR activities, and identified the factors associated with such activities. We conducted an online survey with 1,298 respondents comprising two groups: healthy individuals (546) and patients (752). Most respondents (78%) expressed interest in CSR activities undertaken by pharmaceutical companies. However, they reported a lack of awareness and experience thereof; only 26.9% were aware of and 7.9% had experience with such activities. Among our six CSR activity categories, both survey groups showed the highest preference for the "promoting public health" (healthy group: 6.34/10; patient group: 6.37/10) and "emergency disaster relief support" (6.31 and 6.35) categories. Among sub-categories, activities related to "development of innovative drugs in untreated areas" (6.63 and 6.82) and "support for research on new drug development" (6.59 and 6.84) received the highest scores. The mean expectation score of social contribution of all CSR activities was slightly higher than the mean preference score (6.37 and 6.06, respectively). The patient group exhibited a larger difference between the highest and lowest expectation scores than the healthy group (1.11 and 0.64, respectively). The results of the regression analysis revealed that being a patient, being male, and having positive attitudes toward CSR and its expected effects significantly and positively affected public preferences regarding CSR activities. We can conclude that CSR activities with high public preference might be an effective strategy to improve public awareness of the pharmaceutical industry's CSR activities. Furthermore, the highest preference for CSR activities relates to new drug development, indicating that our society believes the pharmaceutical industry's key CSR activity should be to pursue its intrinsic mission: to fulfill unmet medical needs by developing new drugs.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221321
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hankil Lee
Sang Yong Kim
Goun Kim
Hye-Young Kang
spellingShingle Hankil Lee
Sang Yong Kim
Goun Kim
Hye-Young Kang
Public preferences for corporate social responsibility activities in the pharmaceutical industry: Empirical evidence from Korea.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Hankil Lee
Sang Yong Kim
Goun Kim
Hye-Young Kang
author_sort Hankil Lee
title Public preferences for corporate social responsibility activities in the pharmaceutical industry: Empirical evidence from Korea.
title_short Public preferences for corporate social responsibility activities in the pharmaceutical industry: Empirical evidence from Korea.
title_full Public preferences for corporate social responsibility activities in the pharmaceutical industry: Empirical evidence from Korea.
title_fullStr Public preferences for corporate social responsibility activities in the pharmaceutical industry: Empirical evidence from Korea.
title_full_unstemmed Public preferences for corporate social responsibility activities in the pharmaceutical industry: Empirical evidence from Korea.
title_sort public preferences for corporate social responsibility activities in the pharmaceutical industry: empirical evidence from korea.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Although corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities are common in the pharmaceutical industry, there is little empirical evidence on consumer responses to CSR practices. We investigated public awareness, preferences, and expectations regarding social contribution of the pharmaceutical industry's CSR activities, and identified the factors associated with such activities. We conducted an online survey with 1,298 respondents comprising two groups: healthy individuals (546) and patients (752). Most respondents (78%) expressed interest in CSR activities undertaken by pharmaceutical companies. However, they reported a lack of awareness and experience thereof; only 26.9% were aware of and 7.9% had experience with such activities. Among our six CSR activity categories, both survey groups showed the highest preference for the "promoting public health" (healthy group: 6.34/10; patient group: 6.37/10) and "emergency disaster relief support" (6.31 and 6.35) categories. Among sub-categories, activities related to "development of innovative drugs in untreated areas" (6.63 and 6.82) and "support for research on new drug development" (6.59 and 6.84) received the highest scores. The mean expectation score of social contribution of all CSR activities was slightly higher than the mean preference score (6.37 and 6.06, respectively). The patient group exhibited a larger difference between the highest and lowest expectation scores than the healthy group (1.11 and 0.64, respectively). The results of the regression analysis revealed that being a patient, being male, and having positive attitudes toward CSR and its expected effects significantly and positively affected public preferences regarding CSR activities. We can conclude that CSR activities with high public preference might be an effective strategy to improve public awareness of the pharmaceutical industry's CSR activities. Furthermore, the highest preference for CSR activities relates to new drug development, indicating that our society believes the pharmaceutical industry's key CSR activity should be to pursue its intrinsic mission: to fulfill unmet medical needs by developing new drugs.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221321
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