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Information from Pharmaceutical Companies and the Quality, Quantity, and Cost of Physicians' Prescribing: A Systematic Review
Journal article   Open access  Peer reviewed

Information from Pharmaceutical Companies and the Quality, Quantity, and Cost of Physicians' Prescribing: A Systematic Review

Geoffrey K. Spurling, Peter R. Mansfield, Brett D. Montgomery, Joel Lexchin, Jenny Doust, Noordin Othman and Agnes I. Vitry
PLoS medicine, Vol.7(10), pp.e1000352-e1000352
01/10/2010
PMCID: PMC2957394
PMID: 20976098

Abstract

Bioethics Clinical Decision-Making Evidence-Based Healthcare Health Economics Health Policy Medical Journals Non-Clinical Medicine Quality and Safety in Medical Practice
Geoff Spurling and colleagues report findings of a systematic review looking at the relationship between exposure to promotional material from pharmaceutical companies and the quality, quantity, and cost of prescribing. They fail to find evidence of improvements in prescribing after exposure, and find some evidence of an association with higher prescribing frequency, higher costs, or lower prescribing quality.
url
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1000352View
Published (Version of record) Open

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