| Literature DB >> 17942000 |
Christina Edward1, Anders Himmelmann, Susanna M Wallerstedt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To provide doctors with producer-independent information to facilitate choice of treatment is an important task. The objective of the present study was to evaluate if an e-mail with a drug information attachment has effects on sales of prescribed drugs and if the design of the attachment is of importance.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17942000 PMCID: PMC2203966 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6904-7-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 1472-6904
Figure 1Absolute change in percentage rizatriptan (after intervention minus baseline) depending on randomization group and baseline percentage. Regression lines are indicated in the figure, broken black line denotes attachment I, solid black line denotes attachment II and solid grey line denotes control.
Percentage rizatriptan of prescribed and sold triptans before (May – July 2004) and after (May – July 2005) the intervention and absolute change in percentage rizatriptan (after minus before).
| Percentage rizatriptan before the intervention | Percentage rizatriptan after the intervention | Absolute change | Relative change | P-value | |
| Control | 6 (2 – 13) | 7 (2 – 11) | 0 (-7 - 5) | -29 (-69 – 83) | - |
| Attachment I | 3 (1 – 10) | 8 (3 – 14) | 3 (-2 – 8) | 42 (-51 – 222) | 0.071 |
| Attachment II | 7 (1 – 13) | 8 (2 – 17) | 1 (-4 – 6) | -1 (-59 – 70) | 0.052 |
| Attachment I + II | 5 (1 – 12) | 8 (3 – 16) | 2 (-3 – 7) | 20 (-54 – 140) | 0.031 |
Mantel's test was used for comparison of absolute change vs control. Values are presented as median percentage (25th – 75th percentile).