eHealth for the Pharmaceutical Industry


What companies need to know about trends in physicians and consumers' use of the Internet

Pages: 45

Publisher: Datamonitor

Date Published: February 2007

Format: PDF, Data-Pack

Price: $3800

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Overview

Introduction

An understanding of the present and future market trends surrounding eHealth is vital in order for the pharmaceutical industry to develop effective multi-channel marketing strategies. It is advisable for stakeholders to invest in targeted initiatives that meet the specific information needs and support the decision making processes of the large numbers of physician and consumer groups online.

Scope

Insight into key characteristics of those who use or would be willing to use eHealth applications and services Identification of the most commonly used sources of online health information and how end users navigate to these sources Analysis of opportunities to better meet the needs of physicians and consumers online Recommendations for industry based on lessons learned from physicians’ and consumers’ experiences with eHealth applications and services

Highlights

Physicians are primarily using the Internet to access educational resources and high quality information. Pharmaceutical companies that provide online resources that help physicians practice medicine more efficiently and effectively will attract return site users and foster brand loyalty. It is important to identify how often consumers access the Internet. Marketing initiatives can be developed to accommodate varying levels of usage. For example, tools such as risk-assessment surveys or dosing calendars, and disease and product information can be offered in a printable format so frequent Internet access is not necessary. A promising trend towards gaining voice among prescribers is to reach them online, though not through Internet-enabled mobile technologies but instead through their home computer. One-half of physicians in the US and the EU and one-third of physicians in Japan access the Internet for work-related purposes from home at least 50% of the time.

Reasons to Purchase

Identify how pharma companies can work with physicians to reach consumers who would benefit from online disease management and compliance programs Understand how when and where physicians are most likely to access information online should affect approaches to detailing and website design Assess opportunities to better meet physicians and consumers’ needs online through tailored information portals and Internet-enabled tools

Table of Contents

DATAMONITOR VIEW

CATALYST

SUMMARY

METHODOLOGY

TABLE OF CONTENTS

ANALYSIS

Introduction

Market landscape

Consumers in key pharmaceutical markets have the access, but not always the inclination, to look for healthcare information online

Physicians should be targeted outside of office hours, although not necessarily through mobile technologies

Market drivers

The number of physicians and consumers who are accessible online continues to grow

Consumerism within the healthcare market is redefining what it means to be a patient

Recommendations for industry based on eHealth trends for consumers

How consumerism is changing the patient-physician relationship

Disease management and compliance as tools of relationship management

Pharmaceutical companies should work with physicians to develop consumer-focused disease management and compliance programs

Recommendations for industry based on eHealth trends for physicians

eDetailing: a model for how the pharmaceutical industry gets reaching physicians online wrong?

Online marketing initiatives may be failing because physicians view current approaches as too structured and intrusive

Medical professional websites as relationship building tools

APPENDIX

List of figures

Definitions and abbreviations

References

Extended methodology

Datamonitor eHealth Physician Insight Survey 2005

Datamonitor eHealth Consumer Insight Survey 2005

Ask the analyst

List of Figures

Figure 1: The most promising markets for investment in online channels are those with Internet penetration rates greater than 50%

Figure 2: The percentage of online Americans who believe the Internet has improved the way they get information about healthcare grew by only 15% from 2001 to 2005

Figure 3: Approximately 8 out of every 10 surveyed consumers have looked for health information in the past 6 months

Figure 4: A significant and growing percentage of consumers use the Internet to look for health information for individuals in their care

Figure 5: The majority of surveyed individuals in the US, Western EU and Japan access the Internet for personal reasons more than 10 hours per week

Figure 6: Consumers would regularly return to websites that provide access to disease, drug and non-pharmacological treatment information

Figure 7: In markets where DTC advertising is permitted, consumers are highly likely to use search engines to look for information on specific brands

Figure 8: Search engines websites are the most frequently accessed source of online health information, highlighting the ongoing importance of search engine optimization for the pharmaceutical industry

Figure 9: Consumers in the Western EU and Japan access websites that are intended for US audiences to look for information on healthcare and prescription drug treatments

Figure 10: The relevance of online content and personal privacy are the most important factors consumers consider when deciding whether to access a particular website

Figure 11: Physicians from the US and Western EU access the Internet for work-related purposes more often than their peers in Japan

Figure 12: Physicians’ adoption of mobile technologies continues to grow, albeit slowly as opportunities to access work-related and educational applications improve

Figure 13: The use of handhelds for ePrescribing may decrease the influence of pharmaceutical marketing by reducing prescribing decisions to a matter of formulary compliance

Figure 14: Approximately one-half of physicians in the US and Western EU and one-third of physicians in Japan access the Internet for work-related purposes from home at least 50% of the time

Figure 15: Physicians are generally willing to use a wide-variety of online resources, as long as they meet their needs for relevant information and support services

Figure 16: Physicians rate patient requests for specific medications as having an impact that is equal to that of an office visit from sales representative and more influential than an eDetail

Figure 17: Increase access to information resources, particularly online resources, cause more consumers to ask their physicians about specific products or treatments

Figure 18: Pharmaceutical companies can recruit physicians as an ally in driving consumers to online resources for further information on pharmaceutical drug treatment

Figure 19: The demand for disease management tools goes largely unmet across all markets surveyed

Figure 20: Disease management and compliance programs in which healthcare professionals play an active role are most likely to be seen as valuable by consumers

Figure 21: Surveyed physicians are most interested in using online disease management and compliance tools that are solely patient-focused

Figure 22: Despite demand from consumers, few physicians offer either access to, or information about, disease management and compliance tools through their practices

Figure 23: Physicians would like to make better use of disease management and compliance tools, but do not have the time or money to implement such programs through their independent practices

Figure 24: Low awareness among both patients and healthcare professionals is the most significant barrier to greater use of online disease management and compliance tools

Figure 25: Although most physicians have participated in an eDetailing session at least once, comparatively few have participated within the last year

Figure 26: Few physicians believe that eDetails have no value, therefore an opportunity exists to improve access to physicians through technology-enabled details

Figure 27: For an eDetail to have value it has to serve as a channel through which a physician’s access to information or services is expedited

Figure 28: The types of eDetailing that is used by most physicians (e.g., online slideshow presentations and interactive websites) are not necessarily the types of details that physicians report to be of the highest quality or most ideal mode of delivery

Figure 29: Physicians are most likely to regularly return to a website that offers them greater or easier access to a variety of information resources, such as drug and disease information, links to CME opportunities and clinical trial results

Figure 30: Pharmaceutical sponsorship is not likely to prevent physicians from using a particular website to look for health information or services