Healthy Skepticism Library item: 12874
Warning: This library includes all items relevant to health product marketing that we are aware of regardless of quality. Often we do not agree with all or part of the contents.
 
Publication type: Journal Article
Bramstedt KA.
Recruiting healthy volunteers for research participation via internet advertising.
Clin Med Res 2007 Jun; 5:(2):91-7
http://www.clinmedres.org/cgi/content/full/5/2/91
Abstract:
OBJECTIVE: The Internet is frequently used as a tool to recruit research subjects, and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) provides general guidance regarding such advertising. The goal of this study was to explore the incidence and nature of ethically inappropriate recruiting advertisements on the Internet and to provide descriptive guidance to researchers for responsible Internet recruiting. METHODS: In this study, 119 advertisements recruiting health volunteers and listed on the CenterWatch Clinical Trials Listing Service website were reviewed for content as well as text style and visual effects. RESULTS: The majority of advertisements satisfied FDA guidance. However, 21 (18%) were ethically troubling with regard to font size, font style, and/or verbiage. In many advertisements, it was unclear if “medication” meant “investigational drug,” “over-the-counter medication” or US FDA approved “prescription medication.” Nearly 30% of the 119 advertisements used the terms “free,” “no charge” or “no cost” as lures. CONCLUSION: Ethically problematic recruiting advertisements can be coercive and misleading. Descriptive guidance provided in this paper can help clinical researchers create ethically appropriate recruiting advertisements.
Keywords:
Adult
Advertising as Topic/ethics
Advertising as Topic/standards*
Child
Clinical Trials as Topic/ethics
Clinical Trials as Topic/standards
Databases, Factual
Guideline Adherence*
Humans
Internet*
Patient Selection/ethics*
United States
United States Food and Drug Administration/standards*