- 192 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
With drug information rapidly migrating to the Web, the chronically poor standards of drug information available to consumers in the developed and the developing world are being further compromised. This book offers insight into the uncharted waters of prescription drug information and promotion on the internet and suggests how it might be transformed into an unprecedented agent for good. It traces the social and political history of prescription drug information and marketing to Western consumers, offers a social and communicative profile of prescription drug Web sites, and evaluates the most widely used sources of prescription drug information, from government organizations and information companies and TV-related sites, to health service provider sites, manufacturers' brand sites, and social media, including YouTube and Wikipedia. The focus throughout is on practical outcomes: How can information for consumer decision making be optimized and how can consumers use it responsibly?
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Chapter One: Prescription Drug Information For Consumers
- Chapter Two: Welcome to a Prescription Drug Site
- Chapter Three: Government-Sponsored Organizations
- Chapter Four: Information Companies and TV-Related Sites
- Chapter Five: Entering a Health Service Portal
- Chapter Six: In the Brandâs Den
- Chapter Seven: Social Media
- Chapter Eight: A Prescription for Change
- Chapter Nine: How to Use a Prescription Drug Website
- References
- Index