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    Older pills often safer; many think new is better

    CHICAGO (AP) — Many consumers mistakenly believe new prescription drugs are always safer than those with long track records, and that only extremely effective drugs without major side effects win government approval, according to a new study.

    A national survey of nearly 3,000 adults finds that about 4 in 10 wrongly believe the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approves only "extremely effective" drugs. One in 4 mistakenly believes the FDA allows only drugs that don't have serious side effects.

    That means consumers "may not get the benefit from drugs they think they're getting, or they may expose themselves to more harm than they think" said study co-author Dr. Steven Woloshin of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice and the VA Outcomes Group

    In truth, the FDA approves a new drug when its benefits outweigh any known risks. FDA approval doesn't mean the drug's benefits are large compared to drugs already on the market. And risks for some drugs appear only after they've been used by millions of people and long after FDA approval. For instance, Merck & Co. withdrew the FDA-approved arthritis pill Vioxx after its heart risks surfaced.

    The new survey, appearing in Monday's Archives of Internal Medicine, revealed a partial solution to consumer confusion: Simply worded cautions can make a difference in which drugs people choose.

    To test that idea, the researchers dreamed up two fictional drugs for heart disease and two for heartburn. The survey posed a question: Which drug would you choose?

    Participants were told both heart disease drugs were free and both lowered cholesterol, but only one was known to reduce heart attacks.

    Seventy-one percent of people chose the better drug that reduced heart attacks, when they were reminded in a warning the other one only lowered cholesterol levels. "It is not known whether it will help patients feel better or live longer," the warning said. Fewer people, 59 percent, made the better choice when they weren't given the added caution.

    The make-believe heartburn drugs worked equally well and were free, consumers were told. The difference? One was approved by the FDA in 2009, the other in 2001.

    This time, 53 percent chose the older drug when given a warning about the newer one. The caution said: "As with all new drugs, rare but serious side effects may emerge after the drug is on the market — when larger numbers of people have used the drug."

    Fewer people, 34 percent, chose the older — and perhaps safer — drug when they didn't get that warning.

    "One of the reasons doctors tend to prescribe newer, expensive drugs is there's a widespread perception that newer is better," said Dr. Michael Steinman of San Francisco VA Medical Center, who wrote a commentary about the study in the journal. "That's sometimes true, but many times it's not true. So much of what doctors learn about new drugs is somehow affected by drug company marketing."

    The survey was conducted in 2009 by the Internet research firm Knowledge Networks, and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.4 percentage points. Participants were recruited using telephone and mail sampling and given free Internet access if they needed it.

    Woloshin said simple cautions would help doctors, too, and should be part of drug advertising and labeling. He and co-author Dr. Lisa Schwartz have been working with the FDA to improve its guidance to drug makers on writing labels, he said.

    They also are promoting the idea of drug fact boxes, similar to the nutrition fact boxes on packaged foods. The fact boxes, written in plain English, would tell consumers how well a drug works compared to other drugs and include side effects.

    Last year's national health care law required the Department of Health and Human Services to report to Congress on the evidence for drug fact boxes. The department's report said it needed at least three more years to study the idea.

    Drug fact boxes could help consumers and doctors, Steinman said, and patients can question their doctors about prescriptions. He suggested these questions for starters: "Is this drug recommended by the guidelines for my disease? Is there a drug that's equally effective but has a longer track record of safety? Has this drug been shown to help people like me live longer or feel better?"

    ___

    Online:

    Archives: http://www.archinternmed.com

    ___

    AP Medical Writer Carla K. Johnson can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/CarlaKJohnson

     

    19 comments

    • Brandon  •  8 mths ago
      Another expensive study that states the obvious. People are stupid.
    • Alan  •  8 mths ago
      The average physician uses 12 medications in their practice. The wiser ones use meds that are older because more is known about them and their side effects.
    • PaulH  •  8 mths ago
      I for one am completely satisfied with the several "tried and true" meds I take. I never had a moment's trouble with metformin for my diabetes - it has been on the market for decades and is made as a generic by several firms. There was an issue with my insurance recently when I needed to refill the prescription, so I ended up paying full price out of pocket: less than $10. I see some pharmacies providing it free to customers in financial difficulty. I also take generic lisinopril for blood pressure - same price point.

      I take a medication for prostate hyperplasia, which is still under patent until the end of the year (with insurance, a 3 month supply costs as much as most of my other meds do for the year). I look forward to its entry into the generic marketplace.

      I observe reports on assorted latest-and-greatest meds for these conditions - type II diabetes, moderate high blood pressure, and benign prostatic hyperplasia - and all seem to run to far greater risks than the old war horses do. As long as this generation of medications continues to work for me (along with things like proper diet and sufficient exercise) then I am thoroughly content to stay with them.
    • Me  •  8 mths ago
      It's the FDA's way of doing human drug testing!!! Approve it and see what happens.
    • commentator  •  8 mths ago
      A story a few months back dealt with a study that showed that the "Average" drug had 70 side effects!! The worst has something like 600! FDA doesn't care about side effects, that's why there are many drugs whose side effects are worse than the disease they're trying to treat. I was advised to go on a statin drug. No one ever advised me as to side effects, and several doctors told me they were completely safe. Until I wound up with mysterious, sharp pains in my legs, sides and arms. Then I looked up the meds and found that about 5% of folks have this type of reaction to statins, and if they stay on them long enough they can suffer permanent nerve damage. I came off and within one week, no pain.
      Now I never take a med without researching on the web to see what other patients are experiencing. Askapatient.com is a good place where you can see reported side effects, the sex of the patient, age, condition prescribed for, dosage, and you can make some comparisons/interpolations. There's a belief among doctors and patients that drugs are a one-size-fits-all situation. That's not true, what works for one patient might not work for another. And I'd hate to be a woman taking prescription drugs when most of the research is on males, yet they prescribe them, at same dosages, for women.
      Someone else has also mentioned big pharma and kickbacks. True. Personally know a drug rep, whose company allows her to spend up to $10,000 per doctor (!) to "win" them over: dinners, sporting events, medical books, whatever. Doctors should be forced to disclose the gifts they take from big pharma and then the public would know what a sham all of it is.
    • VC  •  8 mths ago
      It should be illegal for drug companies to ADVERTISE it's drugs on television as that is drug pushing. Children who are constantly bombarded with anti-depressant drugs on TV will believe they are depressed and need the drugs. And then there is the erection pill commercials making children want to be more sexual. Discusting how noone has done anything about this and are all sheep.
    • Taxi  •  8 mths ago
      Best example of this: Every new generation of antidepressants developed in the SSRI group has a shorter half life; and consequently, every generation has become even more difficult, if not impossible to get off. You better believe the drug companies love this.
      • Stephen 8 mths ago
        Foe those with pure "blue-funk" depression Prozac (fluoxetine) available for $4 a month from Walmart, is still one of the best treatments out there. If you have some anxiety with it, citalopram (AKA Celexa) or sertraline (AKA Zoloft) are very helpful - also for a mere $4. Now - as the ad says: "For those whose antidepressant isn't helping enough, ask your doctor about Abilify".... oh yeah - $450 a month and a weight gain of 50 pounds and your gonna be REALLY depressed!
    • Hurley  •  8 mths ago
      For starters we should end advertising of Prescription only drugs. Too many people are self-diagnosing themselves thinking they need an advertised prescription when they don't. That drives up costs for everyone and necessarily puts countless people at risk of some pretty serious side-effects.
      • Me 8 mths ago
        That's the whole point. Drug companies don't really have the well being of others on their minds. They have the dollar signs is their eyes and the more ppl they make think they need drugs the bigger their paychecks are in the end.
    • My opinion  •  8 mths ago
      If you watch the cyle of drugs, you'll see tons of ads for them on TV. A couple of years later you'll see "If you took X drug, you may be eligible for compensation". New drugs may be awesome but only time will tell if it's a drug that truly helps.
    • KF  •  8 mths ago
      Duh, Big PHARMA spends $$ millions in advertising so people think this way. So another no surprise, useless study paid for by taxpayers eventually, probably thru a NIH grant.
    • Angie  •  8 mths ago
      It is all about the money when it comes to prescription drugs. If you want good medical care, with effective drugs that work and are cheap....... go to Canada, or Europe, but the U.S.A. is not the place for you. It is all about the CEO's, HMO's, and Drug companies making the money. In the U.S.A., unless you are wealthy you will NOT get good, or even adequate health care and meds.
    • Glenn Hoffman  •  8 mths ago
      I STAY AWAY FROM SO CALLED MYSTERY DRUGS
    • forestgump  •  8 mths ago
      kickbacks, kickbacks, it's all a game.
    • Wnt  •  8 mths ago
      When a drug is first introduced, it has to be the greatest thing since sliced bread. When it is ten years old, it must be reliable and dependable. And when the patent is about to expire, it has to be too dangerous for further sales to be allowed. Generally pharma companies accomplish all these goals.
    • Nathan  •  8 mths ago
      I stay away from pharmaceuticals altogether. For most conditions, there are natural remedies. If you do your research, and then couple those remedies with a good diet and exercise you will be far better off. Seriously. Big Pharma is bad for you health.
    • arcfinn  •  8 mths ago
      A doctor I used to go to once told me don't ever use any drug that hasn't been on the market at least five years (and preferably ten), advice I've always stuck to. He said "I let other doctors make the mistakes".
      • Nascar girl 8 mths ago
        I agree. That is the guideline for meds I follow.
    • Amy  •  8 mths ago
      Unfortunately this is all about money, not safety and the well-being of patients. The FDA has been trying to get natural dessicated thyroid hormones (T3/T4), which many patients prefer, off the market to undergo 'testing & approval' for years, in favor of synthetic T4 only drugs b/c of Synthroid's leverage. I guess that they don't like that patients prefer drugs like Armour Thyroid which predate the FDA and have been used safely and effectively for years by millions of people and are inexpensive. It is frightening that so many new drugs are approved by this governmental beast that turn out to cause more problems, side effects, and serious complications (like death). I would much prefer to take a drug with a proven track record than anything put on market recently. There's money shifting hands somewhere on this subject.
      • Pasta Mon 8 mths ago
        The FDA does not care if ALL those options are on the market IF they meet standards. Once on the market, the choice is made by you or you and your physician.

        " I guess that they don't like that…" ……… Exactly, you're guessing. In reality you do not have a clue.
      • Pasta Mon 8 mths ago
        "It is frightening that so many new drugs are approved by this governmental beast that turn out to cause……"

        That has always been the case since no humans have perfect foresight regardless of how hard they try. Most of the older ones are fine simply because the bad ones have been weeded out over time. the same process that goes on today.
      • Anna C 8 mths ago
        Actually, big pharma is completely out of control. The entire FDA and CDC are in bed with them. I don't use any drug anymore (OTA or otherwise)...
    • Deena  •  8 mths ago
      Of course, if everyone chooses the older drugs then we'll never find out if the newer one is better or not. Or we'd find out much later if there are any side effects (because you need a large enough sample to draw conclusions from). But who wants to be the guinea pig?
      • Pasta Mon 8 mths ago
        Well said. Regardless of how hard we might try, no human has perfect foresight. There will always be a small chance of error.
    • ca2000  •  8 mths ago
      I have twice tried the "new and better", and ended up going back to the tried and proven with my diabetes. Either bad side effects or no effects. I'll stick with the "oldies" I guess.
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