Provision and use of drug information

There are numerous sources of information about drugs, but this does not necessarily mean that the information supplied by any particular source is adequate for the needs of the prescribing doctor. The government, the pharmaceutical industry, members of the health care professions and private busine...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hibberd, Patricia Lavonne
Published: University of Leicester 1978
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.459041
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4590412015-12-31T03:39:06ZProvision and use of drug informationHibberd, Patricia Lavonne1978There are numerous sources of information about drugs, but this does not necessarily mean that the information supplied by any particular source is adequate for the needs of the prescribing doctor. The government, the pharmaceutical industry, members of the health care professions and private business concerns have attempted to provide comprehensive information on drugs. The ways in which the government has both provided and influenced the provision of drug information are described. A survey was carried out to establish which sources of information are used by hospital doctors for prescribing and for learning about new drugs. The majority of hospital doctors use reports of clinical trials published in medical journals to learn about new drugs. A study of the information contained in a sample of trial reports appearing in several major medical journals is reported. Many doctors indicated that promotional material was an important source of information, particularly for learning about the existence of a new drug. Several studies of the information provided by the various forms of pharmaceutical promotion have been made, and these are critically reviewed. Finally, since the majority of hospital doctors had written to a pharmaceutical firm for further information about a drug, at some stage in their medical career, a survey was carried out to discover how medical information staff in the pharmaceutical industry provide information about drugs to the medical profession. There appears to be a need for a regularly updated manual providing the information that doctors require in a concise format, backed up by a drug information service which could answer more detailed questions.610.7343University of Leicesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.459041http://hdl.handle.net/2381/35279Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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sources NDLTD
topic 610.7343
spellingShingle 610.7343
Hibberd, Patricia Lavonne
Provision and use of drug information
description There are numerous sources of information about drugs, but this does not necessarily mean that the information supplied by any particular source is adequate for the needs of the prescribing doctor. The government, the pharmaceutical industry, members of the health care professions and private business concerns have attempted to provide comprehensive information on drugs. The ways in which the government has both provided and influenced the provision of drug information are described. A survey was carried out to establish which sources of information are used by hospital doctors for prescribing and for learning about new drugs. The majority of hospital doctors use reports of clinical trials published in medical journals to learn about new drugs. A study of the information contained in a sample of trial reports appearing in several major medical journals is reported. Many doctors indicated that promotional material was an important source of information, particularly for learning about the existence of a new drug. Several studies of the information provided by the various forms of pharmaceutical promotion have been made, and these are critically reviewed. Finally, since the majority of hospital doctors had written to a pharmaceutical firm for further information about a drug, at some stage in their medical career, a survey was carried out to discover how medical information staff in the pharmaceutical industry provide information about drugs to the medical profession. There appears to be a need for a regularly updated manual providing the information that doctors require in a concise format, backed up by a drug information service which could answer more detailed questions.
author Hibberd, Patricia Lavonne
author_facet Hibberd, Patricia Lavonne
author_sort Hibberd, Patricia Lavonne
title Provision and use of drug information
title_short Provision and use of drug information
title_full Provision and use of drug information
title_fullStr Provision and use of drug information
title_full_unstemmed Provision and use of drug information
title_sort provision and use of drug information
publisher University of Leicester
publishDate 1978
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.459041
work_keys_str_mv AT hibberdpatricialavonne provisionanduseofdruginformation
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