An. Thomson et al., ATTITUDES OF GENERAL-PRACTITIONERS IN NEW-ZEALAND TO PHARMACEUTICAL REPRESENTATIVES, British journal of general practice, 44(382), 1994, pp. 220-223
Background. Pharmaceutical representatives are a vital component of th
e marketing of pharmaceutical products and an important source of pres
cribing information for general practitioners. Aim. A study was undert
aken to explore the attitudes of New Zealand general practitioners to
pharmaceutical representatives. Method. A questionnaire survey of 100
general practitioners was undertaken to which 67 general practitioners
responded. Results. The provision of practical prescribing advice by
representatives and gifts relevant to medicine were seen as desirable
activities by many respondents. However, gifts of value considerably g
reater than suggested acceptable in recent guidelines for general prac
titioners were also highly favoured by some practitioners. Conclusion.
Current ethical guidelines setting out the relationship between pharm
aceutical representatives and medical practitioners are inadequate and
should be based on the need for the general practitioner to become an
unbiased promoter of patient health.