eHealth Solutions for Pharma
Strategies for salesforces, marketing, patient compliance and clinical trials
Pages: 138
Publisher: Business Insights
Date Published: March 2007
Format: PDF
Price: Single User $2875
Price: Global / Enterprise $16000
Overview
The online channel offers a key opportunity for pharma companies to restructure their sales and marketing model, improving their relationships with physicians and increasing compliance among patients. At the same time, patients are demanding a greater role in treatment decisions and seeking information from a range of online sources, resulting in a new age of consumerism in healthcare.
eHealth solutions for Pharma is a new report that provides an overview of the changing pharma market place, providing solutions on effective three way communication between pharmaceutical companies, patients and physicians. Online strategies such as eDetailing, eSampling, eCME and eCompliance are explored, enabling you to gain best practice advice on the opportunities offered by eHealth technologies.
Use this report to identify ways to increase productivity and improve communications between your company, physicians and patients, and implement eHealth strategies to ensure your products achieve commercial success.
Key findings of the report:
- An immediate opportunity exists for pharmaceutical companies to greatly expand eDetailing services (including technology-enabled rep visits) offered to physicians in all markets surveyed.
- There are three fundamental areas that present opportunities for pharmaceutical companies to provide value-added website features: professional development; patient resources; and clinical tools.
- Pharmaceutical companies that provide eCME activities in combination with access to expert opinions and disease information on their physician facing websites are likely to attract new and return users.
- The eCompliance market has become markedly more evolved, with novel techniques such as SMS reminders and mobile phone diagnosis tools being employed.
- An established relationship with the organization conducting the trial is commonly cited as an important factor in the decision-making process of many surveyed physicians.
Key questions answered in this report
- How can the pharmaceutical sales and marketing department effectively respond to the changing demands of physicians and patients?
- What website content strategy should pharmaceutical companies pursue in order to build effective, long-lasting relationships with patients and physicians?
- How can eCompliance solutions help companies to recruit physicians to clinical trials and promote patient compliance?
- What barriers are there to effective communication between the pharmaceutical industry, physicians and patients, and how are they best overcome?
- What website content would persuade physicians and patients to return on a regular basis?
Top five reasons to order your copy today
- Understand key challenges pharmaceutical sales and marketing teams are facing, and how eHealth technologies and best practice use of those technologies can offer significant improvement in productivity.
- Gain access to more physicians, using strategies outlined in this report including eDetailing, eSampling and websites, maximizing exposure of your products and strengthening communications with physicians.
- Identify how eCompliance solutions can be implemented to improve the clinical trials process, enabling you to recruit physicians and promote patient compliance.
- Analyze the role of blogging and the fundamental impact it is having on the management of communications between pharma companies and patients.
- Evaluate eHealth strategies and gain best practice advice on the use of each of these technologies so that you can effectively implement these into your sales and marketing process.
Table of Contents
eHealth Solutions for Pharma
Executive Summary
The changing pharmaceutical marketplace
eHealth solutions for the salesforce
eHealth tools for reaching physicians
Reaching physicians through eCME
eCompliance
eHealth solutions for clinical trials
Chapter 1 The changing pharma marketplace
Summary
Introduction
Market challenges
Greater involvement of patients in prescribing decisions
Price controls, reimbursement policies and generics
Strong competition in high profit markets
Poor public perception of the pharmaceutical industry
The changing role of sales and marketing
Chapter 2 eHealth solutions for the salesforce
Summary
Introduction
Key challenges
eHealth strategies for the salesforce
eDetailing
Physician demand for eDetailing services outstrips current supply
Strong growth is expected in the use of representative-assisted
eDetailing sessions
Word-of-mouth as a method of recruitment
eSampling
An inconsistent sample supply makes eSampling an attractive option
for many physicians
In support of ‘on demand’ sampling
Mobile capability and PDAs
Conclusions
Chapter 3 eHealth tools for reaching physicians
Summary
Introduction
Current approaches to physician-facing websites
Effective website strategies
Professional development
Product and disease information
Continuing Medical Education
Online forums
Patient resources
Patient education materials
Clinical trial information
Disease management and compliance tools
Blogging
Best advice for blogging
Blogs as a market research tool
Building a blogsite
Conclusions
Websites
Blogging
Chapter 4 Reaching physicians through eCME
Summary
Introduction
Europe
US
Online CME versus traditional CME programs
eCME activity
Geographical differences
Pharmaceutical industry sponsorship of eCME
Meeting the needs of physicians
Moving services from offline to online
Reduction in real-time CME events
Building effective eCME services
Success factors
eCME website visibility
Advertise
Organize
Deliver
Physicians have been disappointed in the quality of many eCME
activities
Conclusions
A continuing role for pharmaceutical companies in CME
Does pharmaceutical sponsorship factor into physicians’ decisions to
use eCME?
Working with the eCME providers to develop educational
opportunities
Chapter 5 eCompliance
Summary
Introduction
Barriers to effective communication in the EU
Barriers to effective communication in the US
Effective communication with patients
Disease management and compliance tools
Text messages and email reminders are the most popular consumer
channels
Compliance programs
Technology to enable eCompliance
Main eCompliance channels
Online channels
Product websites can help boost compliance
Email reminders can work in some patient populations
PDA’s – mobile access to online compliance tools
SMS messages provide a direct, personal reminder
Rapid answers to individual questions
Mobile phones as disease monitors
Mobile technology – increasing the options
Other tools
Key considerations for eCompliance tools
Using the right channel to relay the message
The age effect
eCompliance recommendations
eCompliance incentives
Demographic differences
Target conditions for ecompliance
eCompliance services
Chapter 6 eHealth solutions for clinical trials
Summary
Introduction
Market challenges
Clinical trial websites
Physician-facing clinical trial websites
Keeping physicians current
Use branded clinical trial websites to leverage existing relationships
Physicians need an online database for clinical trial outcome data
Conclusions
Index
List of Figures
Figure 2.1: Prescribing decisions of physicians survey
Figure 2.2: How popular is eDetailing among physicians?
Figure 2.3: To what extent should detailing be made available online?
Figure 2.4: Have you used eDetailing in the last 12 months?
Figure 2.5: How frequently do you use eSampling?
Figure 2.6: How effective are detailing sessions?
Figure 2.7: What type of sampling method do physicians prefer?
Figure 2.8: The use of PDAs among physicians
Figure 3.9: What types of websites do physicians use to look for health information?
Figure 3.10: How do physicians rate current online healthcare resources?
Figure 3.11: Adequacy of online information provided in physicians’ native languages
Figure 3.12: Factors influencing physicians decision to use a healthcare website
Figure 3.13: How often do physicians participate in online forums?
Figure 3.14: What role should the Internet play in the physician-patient relationship?
Figure 3.15: What clinical trial information should appear on a healthcare website?
Figure 3.16: Would physicians like to use the Internet to monitor patients?
Figure 3.17: Preferred sources of health information for consumers
Figure 3.18: Driving traffic to blogsites and online forums
Figure 3.19: The involvement of healthcare professionals can drive participants to blogsites
Figure 3.20: What features dictate whether consumers participate in a blog discussion?
Figure 4.21: CME requirements in the US and EU
Figure 4.22: Would pharmaceutical sponsorship of eCME deter physicians from accessing it?
Figure 4.23: Doctors.net.uk
Figure 4.24: Provide a well-organized and searchable interface for eCME
Figure 4.25: Engaging eCME formats
Figure 4.26: Financial support for eCME from pharmaceutical companies
Figure 5.27: Barriers to effective communication in the EU
List of Tables
Table 3.1: Key guidelines for blogging
Table 4.2: AMA identified subject areas in which CME is needed 102
