Make us your homepage



  Top100  


  Classifieds  


  News  


  Help  


  Contacts  

Search: 

 



News

News category


Free drug samples for children a safety risk: study

07.10.2008 00:00 Health - Source: cbc.ca

Giving children free prescription drug samples is a marketing tool that may be unsafe, according to a study published Monday.

In the journal Pediatrics, researchers analyzed the results of a 2004 survey by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

'Free samples encourage the casual use of medications in our children before enough is known about potential harm.'— Lead author Dr. Sarah Cutrona

They found more than 500,000 children in the U.S. received samples of four medicines that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration later issues safety warnings for:

  • Fluticasone/salmeterol sold as Advair, for asthma.
  • Amphetamine/dextroamphetamine sold as Adderall; and atomoxetine sold as Strattera, both for attention deficit disorder.
  • Pimecrolimus, sold as Elidel, for eczema.

"New medications are frequently released before their safety profile is fully understood, and samples tend to be newer medications," said the study's lead author, Dr. Sarah Cutrona, a physician at Cambridge Health Alliance and an instructor at Harvard medical school.

"Free samples encourage the casual use of medications in our children before enough is known about potential harm. As a mother of young children, I find that very concerning."

'Unappreciated risk'

The two medications for attention deficit disorder have high potential for abuse, but doctors, nurses, office staff, pharmaceutical representatives and occasionally even patients may have unsupervised access to sample closets, the researchers said.

The samples may lack child-safety seals, and could be given out without proper directions on how to take it, or warnings about side-effects and potential reactions, according to the study. The samples bypass the safety step offered by pharmacists, the study's authors noted.

"Previous findings in adults [a study on free samples in adults showed rofecoxib or Vioxx, which was pulled over cardiovascular concerns, was commonly given as a free sample] strongly suggest that free drug samples serve as a marketing tool," said the study's senior author, Dr. Neal LeLeiko, director of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition at Hasbro Children's Hospital in Providence, R.I. , and a professor of pediatrics at Brown University.

"Our study shows that samples can pose a serious and unappreciated risk to our children."

Few samples to poor

Parents of more than 38,000 children under the age of two said they were given samples of the eczema medication, the researchers found. The FDA later received reports of skin cancer in patients taking the medication and its safety warning was boosted, along with a reminder that it is not approved for use in children under two.

The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, which represents the pharmaceutical industry, has said that free samples help uninsured, low-income people to get medicines.

But the researchers found few of the samples went to poor children, and more than 80 per cent of children receiving samples were insured all year.

"Poor and uninsured children are not the main recipients of free drug samples," the study concluded. "Free samples do not target the neediest children selectively."

  •  
Story Tools: E-MAIL | PRINT | Text Size: SMLXL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Related

Internal Links

Pharmacies suspected of selling free samples

External Links

Abstract of free drug sample study, Pediatrics

(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)

Health Headlines

Pneumonia vaccine halves heart attack risk: studyThe pneumonia vaccine not only prevents the bacterial infection but the shot also seems to dramatically lower the risk of heart attacks in adults, a new Canadian study suggests.Policy change delayed alarm signal over listeria, inspectors sayInspectors with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency say their hands-on role at meat plants changed with a CFIA policy introduced three months before the listeriosis outbreak.Fans may help prevent SIDSUsing a fan or opening a window could reduce the risk of sudden infant death syndrome by improving ventilation, researchers suggest.Calgary study links appendicitis with air qualityNew research from the University of Calgary suggests high levels of air pollution may increase the risk of appendicitis.Traumatic brain injury common among homeless, study findsMore than half of the people who are homeless in Toronto are suffering from a traumatic brain injury, according to a new study that suggests early diagnosis and treatment may help stem the number of homeless people in major cities.  

Health Features

IN DEPTHNobel PrizeFrom Alfred's willIN DEPTHFood additivesPreservation with a risk?HEALTHPsychologyInside the endurance athlete's mindVIEWPOINTHeather MallickOn controversy, democracy and e-mailHEALTHTuberculosisAnatomy of a killerCHILD PSYCHOLOGYPoliticians' behaviourHow do we explain it to our kids?

People who read this also read …

  Add comment

Name: 
E-Mail: 
Comment: 
Enter code: 



« November 2008
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Last added news

Rapid treatment best for infants infected with HIV: study 20.11.2008 22:52 Treating babies infected with HIV rapidly with drug treatments dramatically reduces their risk of death, according to a study that has already prompted officials to recommend immediate treatment.

More research needed into food-borne diseases, WHO says 20.11.2008 22:51 Food-borne diseases appear to be on the rise in both rich and poor countries, officials with the World Health Organization said on Thursday.

Manitoba's Opposition wants review of ER services after Sinclair death 20.11.2008 22:51 Manitoba's Conservative Opposition is demanding an independent external review into the death of Brian Sinclair, who was found dead after waiting 34 hours in a hospital emergency waiting room in September.

Lawyers, CEOs named to run Alberta's health services 20.11.2008 22:50 Fifteen people were officially named to the Alberta Health Services Board on Thursday, the authority that oversees all health-care delivery in the province.

Doctors allege intimidation in raising drug warnings, investigation shows 19.11.2008 22:59 Two physicians who tried to warn about the high risk of serious side-effects of the Type 2 diabetes drug Avandia allege they were intimidated by the company that sells it, a CBC investigation revealed Wednesday.

South Carolina teen survives 4 months without heart 19.11.2008 22:58 A teenager in the U.S. said she felt like a "fake person" living for 118 days without a heart beating in her chest in-between heart transplants.

Kids, teens chugging 20% of daily calories: StatsCan 19.11.2008 22:58 Water is the drink of choice for most Canadians but children and teens are sipping a significant proportion of their daily calories, Statistics Canada suggested in a report released Wednesday.

Prescription powers being expanded 19.11.2008 22:57 P.E.I. will spread out the power to prescribe drugs in response to a report released Tuesday reviewing health-care services on the Island.

Waiting list too long for mentally ill youth: Eastern Health 19.11.2008 17:33 Eastern Health admits there are gaps in services for Newfoundland and Labrador teens who are depressed, suicidal or feeling lost in the health-care system.

Woman first to have trachea transplanted from own stem cells 19.11.2008 17:33 A Colombian woman has received the world's first tailor-made transplanted trachea, grown by seeding a donor organ with her own stem cells to prevent her body rejecting it, an international research team reported on Wednesday.

All news | News archive | RSS feed

Home    |    Add your site    |    Member login    |    Lost id    |    Contact Us    |    Help   |    Advertise    |    Privacy Policy

© Top100biz Inc., 2004-2005. This site is powered by AlphaStoreDesign.com