The Ethics Of Marketing Cancer Treatments

The Ethics Of Marketing Cancer Treatments lead image
Medical/Surgical Operative Photography via flickr | http://bit.ly/1IIgvW6
(Inside Science) — A group of doctors clad in white lab coats smiles beneath the heading: “Standing behind your cancer care with nationally recognized excellence.”
The advertisement
Some cancer centers and hospitals focus on an individual patient’s success story for a more emotional approach. Cancer-related marketing strategies vary wildly and spark discussion about what tactics are ethical.
“Cancer is a bad word,” said Randall Holcombe
It’s also a big business — the National Institutes of Health estimated
Now, a new report published in the Journal of Cancer Policy
The Food and Drug Administration keeps pharmaceutical companies accountable by requiring that every claim on the advertisement be backed up by scientific evidence. But nothing regulates nonprofit entities, such as hospitals and cancer centers, which could mislead patients about their cancer care, according to the report.
“The report highlights those things that we need to be cautious about when we’re marketing cancer services because patients are fearful,” said Holcombe, the author of the report.
First, marketing should follow the strict guidelines
Additionally, when promoting new research, the advertisement should explicitly state that not all patients may be eligible for the clinical trial. Such advertisements rarely include this information, according to the report.
In fact, most cancer centers avoid using data and statistics on their advertising, according to the report. Instead, many use personal testimonies.
“They make a very good basis for a marketing campaign,” said Holcombe. “People are very interested in personal stories.”
The problem with these advertisements is that they could be misinterpreted to be the average outcome for the treatment, when in fact the story is the exception. These advertisements could be omitting information that says the results are not typical, said Holcombe.
“It’s an important conversation to have and be thinking about,” said Yael Schenker
“Cancer is a big business and advertising is common, but regulation and oversight of cancer-related marketing is minimal – some people don’t realize that,” said Schenker.
In 2014, Schenker and colleagues published a study
“It’s more interesting to hear about someone who survived cancer and beat the odds than looking at a table of risks,” but using personal testimonials could promote false hope, which might not be the average outcome, Schenker said. “It’s not the same as sitting down with your doctor and discussing the pros and cons of treatments.”
“It’s not inherently wrong to market to vulnerable populations,” said Trevor Hedberg, a PhD candidate at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville who co-authored an article
The main challenge is implementing oversight to keep cancer centers and hospitals accountable, said Holcombe.
“It’s a self-regulated industry. I think that most people do that pretty well, but probably not everybody,” said Holcombe. “I don’t want to propose regulation to medical centers necessarily, but it might be nice to have some sort of oversight agency.”
The report suggests that The Joint Commission
While pharmaceutical research has received scrutiny regularly, advertisements for cancer treatment have rarely been studied, said Schenker. “In some ways, it’s a discussion that’s just getting started.”
Lisa Marie Potter is a science writer based in San Francisco, California. She tweets at @Lisa_M_Potter