scholarly journals Examining Online Traffic Patterns to Popular Direct-To-Consumer Websites for Evaluation and Treatment of Erectile Dysfunction

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 100289
Author(s):  
Joel J. Wackerbarth ◽  
Richard J. Fantus ◽  
Annie Darves-Bornoz ◽  
Marah C. Hehemann ◽  
Brian T. Helfand ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 203 ◽  
pp. e613
Author(s):  
Richard Fantus* ◽  
Anne Darves-Bornoz ◽  
Marah Hehemann ◽  
Brian Helfand ◽  
Mary Keeter ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Janelle Applequist

Pfizer, manufacturer of the erectile dysfunction prescription treatment Viagra, has been a staple in the pharmaceutical advertising arena since broadcast versions of such ads became legally permissible in the United States in 1997. Given that the patent for Viagra is soon set to expire, it is important that research take a look back in an attempt to contextualize the brand’s place in shaping medicinal marketing culture. Of particular interest is the period beginning in 2014, when Viagra’s most unconventional campaign yet began using a tactic that was the first of its kind for the pharmaceutical industry. By removing the actual consumer of the medication from these ads (males), Viagra has paved the way for pharmaceutical advertising to target the medicinal partner. This manuscript reviews the first use of the medicinal partner in the pharmaceutical advertising sector, conducting a textual analysis of Viagra’s use of this mediated relationship. The medicinal partner is the pharmaceutical industry’s attempt to target a patient’s social circle in an effort to promote a discourse that suggests a medicinal remedy for a problem. This analysis describes how social meaning and relationships underlie the market transaction of obtaining a prescription, as has been previously established through the processes of medicalization and pharmaceutical fetishism. These advertisements create belief in the larger sense, meaning Pfizer is infiltrating upon the patient’s process of choice and consumption of medicinal remedies. Viagra is simultaneously encouraging male consumers to celebrate the brand while using female ambassadors to influence the decision to request medicinal intervention.


Urology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 143 ◽  
pp. 165-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert H. Shahinyan ◽  
Arash Amighi ◽  
Alson N. Carey ◽  
Dar A. Yoffe ◽  
Devyn C. Hodge ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. S27-S28
Author(s):  
R. Shahinyan ◽  
A. Amighi ◽  
A. Carey ◽  
D. Yoffe ◽  
M. Pollard ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 44 (5) ◽  
pp. 765-787
Author(s):  
Denis G. Arnold ◽  
James L. Oakley

Abstract Context: Spending on direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA) for prescription pharmaceuticals has risen to record levels, five times as much as in 1996 in inflation-adjusted dollars. Major health care provider organizations have called for additional regulation of DTCA. These organizations argue that the negative impact of such advertising outweighs the informational value claimed by the pharmaceutical industry. The industry maintains that further restrictions on DTCA are not warranted because it is successfully self-regulating via “guiding principles” for DTCA as certified by firm executives. Methods: The authors measured recent industry spending on DTCA and used regression models of Nielsen Monitor-Plus data to assess pharmaceutical firm self-regulation after the public disclosure of noncompliance with industry self-regulatory principles, specifically regarding the exposure of children and adolescents to broadcast advertisements for erectile dysfunction drugs. Findings: Public disclosure of noncompliance with self-regulatory DTCA standards did not bring advertising into compliance. Results demonstrate that firms failed to meet the industry standard during every quarter of the six-year period of this study. Conclusions: Results support previous research findings that pharmaceutical self-regulation is a deceptive blocking strategy rather than a means for the industry to police itself. Policy recommendations include broadcast restrictions on adult content and deincentivizing DTCA via tax reform.


2003 ◽  
Vol 108 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tiina Vares ◽  
Annie Potts ◽  
Nicola Gavey ◽  
Victoria M. Grace

Viagra (known generically as sildenafil citrate) was released in New Zealand in 1998. Direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertisements represented Viagra as a panacea for men's sexual difficulties. The Research Medicines Industry Association of New Zealand (2000) claims that the Viagra DTC campaign removed the stigma associated with erectile dysfunction. However, in this paper we analyse participants' views that the advertisements also transform cultural anxieties in ways that proliferate ‘performance’ (and other) anxieties in new forms and for increasingly broad groups of people. This paper draws on material from a reception study of male viewers' readings/interpretations of popular cultural representations of Viagra in Christchurch, New Zealand in 2002. The participants frame both the advertisements and the television program My Family as ‘peddling fear’ about sexual performance, and thus potentially ‘establishing a need ‘for a new drug. As one participant said: ‘Pfizer wants young men to start worrying about these things, stress creates erectile dysfunction, off you go.’ This indicates a need to consider how the critical responses of viewers/readers to advertising, particularly DTC drug advertising, may reflect the ‘exploitation’ of advertising by its audience in a way that simultaneously critiques a commodity (Viagra) and its associated cultural practices (creating erections through a pharmacological ‘solution’), as suggested by recent arguments in the media/cultural studies literature.


2020 ◽  
Vol 203 ◽  
pp. e613
Author(s):  
Walter Hsiang* ◽  
Eric Elftmann ◽  
Stanton Honig ◽  
Michael Leapman

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