Branded Care: The Policy Implications of Pharmaceutical Industry-Funded Nursing Care Related to Specialty Medicines.

IF 2.1 Q2 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Policy, Politics, and Nursing Practice Pub Date : 2023-02-01 DOI:10.1177/15271544221121749
Quinn Grundy, Larkin Davenport Huyer, Lisa Parker, Lisa Bero
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

An increasing proportion of new drugs approved for market worldwide are now high cost, specialty medicines. Pharmaceutical marketers face the challenge of convincing payers, prescribers, and patients that the cost and complexity of care associated with specialty medicines is worth the trouble, and now offer patient support programs, free of charge, to patients prescribed their drug. We conducted a secondary, qualitative, interpretive analysis of 24 interviews with leaders of patient groups and members of hospital formulary committees in Australia to describe the work of pharmaceutical company-employed or contracted nurses who provide support to patients prescribed specialty medicines, and to prompt discussion around the policy implications of relying on industry-funded nursing care within publicly funded health systems. Participants affirmed the value of specialist, holistic, person-centered nursing care, but perceived gaps within the public health system related to the availability and provision of nursing care for people living with chronic disease. Consequently, participants described the pharmaceutical industry as addressing health system gaps through sponsorship or direct provision of medication-related nursing care, but recognized that care was contingent on commercial interest. Participants highlighted a number of ethical and policy concerns stemming from industry-funded nursing care of people prescribed specialty medicines related to patient safety, continuity of care, inducement to prescribe, and health equity. This analysis suggests that outsourcing necessary medication-related care to pharmaceutical companies has implications for the health system and equitable, sustainable pharmaceutical policy that extend far beyond the care encounter.

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品牌护理:制药业资助的与专业药物相关的护理的政策含义。
如今,越来越多获准进入全球市场的新药都是高成本的专科药物。药品营销人员面临的挑战是说服付款人、开处方者和患者相信,与特殊药物相关的护理成本和复杂性是值得的,现在他们为开处方的患者提供免费的患者支持计划。我们对澳大利亚患者团体领导人和医院处方委员会成员进行了24次访谈,进行了二次定性解释分析,以描述制药公司雇用或签约护士为患者提供处方专科药物支持的工作,并促进围绕在公共资助的卫生系统中依赖行业资助的护理的政策影响的讨论。与会者肯定了专科、整体、以人为本的护理的价值,但认为公共卫生系统在慢性病患者护理的可得性和提供方面存在差距。因此,与会者描述制药业通过赞助或直接提供与药物有关的护理来解决卫生系统差距,但认识到护理取决于商业利益。与会者强调了一些伦理和政策方面的关切,这些关切来自于工业资助的对开特殊药物的人的护理,涉及患者安全、护理的连续性、开处方的诱因和卫生公平。这一分析表明,将必要的药物相关护理外包给制药公司,对卫生系统和公平、可持续的药物政策具有深远的影响,远远超出了护理的范围。
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来源期刊
Policy, Politics, and Nursing Practice
Policy, Politics, and Nursing Practice Nursing-Leadership and Management
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.60%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Policy, Politics & Nursing Practice is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal that explores the multiple relationships between nursing and health policy. It serves as a major source of data-based study, policy analysis and discussion on timely, relevant policy issues for nurses in a broad variety of roles and settings, and for others outside of nursing who are interested in nursing-related policy issues.
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