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By admitting he is shy, an American football
player has become the latest star to promote disease
and
drug
awareness
part two
United States professional football sensation Ricky
Williams last week sparked a blaze of publicity when he revealed that he had social anxiety disorder and was benefiting from both therapy and
Paxil (Seroxat/paroxetine), the drug that earned GlaxoSmithKline global
sales last year of US$2.7bn (£1.7bn; Items appeared on the front page of the New York Times
sports section, in the prestigious Los Angeles Times, and a
host of other papers, as well as broadcast media including NBC. Stories described a serious psychiatric condition affecting between 5 and 10 million Americans. Some reports revealed that GlaxoSmithKline was
paying the sports celebrity, some didn't.
Williams joins a stellar cast of characters now using the mass media to
promote awareness of a whole suite of medical conditions and diseases.
In May Camilla Parker Bowles spoke out about osteoporosis at an
international meeting in Portugal (BMJ 2002;324:1342) At about the same time Hollywood star Kathleen Turner was talking
publicly of rheumatoid arthritis, and promoting a website funded by the
company selling a new drug for the condition. And another Hollywood
actress, Cybill Shepherd, has educated American consumers about the
menopause on behalf of a menopause supplement manufacturer, and
presidential hopeful Bob Dole has raised awareness about erectile
dysfunction, courtesy of a drug maker with a new pill for the condition.
Without in any way questioning the effects these conditions have on
these celebrities, their families, or others in the broader community,
it is not hard to tell what is wrong with this picture. Celebrity
selling is just one more way in which pharmaceutical companies are
indirectly shaping public perceptions about conditions and diseases in
which they have an interest. Self evidently, the more severe and/or
widespread the condition is perceived to be, the bigger the potential
market for the latest drug.
In an interview on NBC TV last week, Ricky Williams said, "I've
always been a shy person." His comments prompt questions about whether raising awareness of social anxiety disorder may in fact be
medicalising shyness. "It's an important point, but I don't think
so," said a GlaxoSmithKline spokesperson, who added that there was a
big difference between shyness and social anxiety disorder, which he
said was under-diagnosed and under-treated. "We're very pleased to
be working with Ricky. He's got an important message, he's got an
inspirational story, encouraging others who might have the symptoms of
social anxiety disorder to seek treatment."
2.7bn).

(Credit: WILFREDO LEE/AP PHOTO)
Williams: "I've always been a shy person"
The next day on NBC, in a segment providing tips for shy people, a psychiatrist said that for "social anxiety disorders or even a public speaking problem, medication may be helpful . . ." Although the GlaxoSmithKline spokesperson said of Williams, "He's not hired to sell product," it seems an increase in drug sales may be an incidental outcome.
Social anxiety disorder is another name for "social phobia."
As has been already reported in this journal, some in the
pharmaceutical marketing industry have described awareness raising for
this condition as a "classic example" where corporate sponsored
campaigns help "establish a need" for a new drug by reinforcing
"the actual existence of a disease and/or the value of treating it"
(BMJ 2002;324:886-91)
The other obvious problem with such widespread media coverage is that there is often no genuine attempt to explain the actual benefits or harms of a medication.
A quick check of the prescribing information about paroxetine for social anxiety disorder on the website of the Food and Drug Administration is sobering. Key trials are short term and side effect rates, as for other new antidepressants, are not insignificant. Data suggest sexual side effects are common: 5% of those taking the drug experienced impotence, compared with 1% with placebo, 9% experienced "female genital disorder," compared with 1% with placebo, and 28% experienced abnormal ejaculation, compared with 1% on placebo (all gender adjusted). The prescribing information also recommends a gradual reduction in dose when stopping the drug rather than abrupt discontinuation, and states: "Symptoms associated with discontinuation of Paxil have been reported."
GlaxoSmithKline confirmed that the company was paying Williams, who
currently plays with the Miami Dolphins, but the spokesperson would not
reveal the size or length of the deal. With publicity like that
generated last week, it is unlikely that the contract will be abruptly discontinued.
Ray Moynihan ray_128{at}hotmail.com
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What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+