Pretest, Physicians

Study of Clinical Efficacy Information in Professional Labeling and Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) Print Advertisements for Prescription Drugs

Physician Pretest Questionnaire_051311

Pretest, Physicians

OMB: 0910-0692

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Last updated 5/13/11

Physician Pretest


Sample: Primary care physicians


N = 50


• Half will see the treatment claim; half will see the prevention claim (random assignment)

• Half will see a small difference between drug and placebo rate; half will see a large difference between drug and placebo rate (random assignment)




Type of Claim



Treatment Claim

Prevention Claim

Difference between Drug and Placebo

Small Difference

n = 12

n = 13

Large Difference

n = 13

n = 12


Total N = 50

*Administer informed consent*


Pretest Questionnaire:


[PROGRAMMER: Record time in milliseconds spent on each screen (including questions) throughout protocol.]


[PROGRAMMER: Randomly assign participants to conditions as described above.]


Introductory language on at least three screens (to obtain baseline reading speeds).


Thank you for taking time from your busy schedule to contribute to this research. Your answers will remain confidential.


This study is about alternative methods of presenting prescription drug information. You will review information on a new (fictitious) product and make prescribing decisions as well as answer questions about the information you saw.


[PROGRAMMER: New screen]


On the next screen you will see the highlights section of the prescribing information for a fictitious new drug, Milarix (lexisalicylic acid and milaristatin calcium). The document contains hyperlinks. This means you will be able to read the important information in the highlights section and explore each section in further detail by clicking on the section that interests you.


[PROGRAMMER: New screen]


Please read through this prescribing information as you would if you were learning about any new prescription-only product for the first time.


[PROGRAMMER: Display highlights section that will have hyperlinks to further information about each section. Record time spent on highlights section, time spent on each section, and order of sections chosen.]



[PROGRAMMER: Randomize the order of Q1 and Q2]


Q1. How thoroughly did you read the PI? (check all that apply)


___I did not read any of it

___I skimmed the highlights section

___I read the highlights section thoroughly

___I clicked on and skimmed a few links

___I clicked on and read only a few links, but I read those links thoroughly

___I clicked on and skimmed many links

___I clicked on and read many links thoroughly

___I clicked on and read every link


Q2. How similar is this to how much information you usually read about a new drug?


___I read more information than I usually read about a new drug

___I read about the same amount of information

___I read less information than I usually read about a new drug


Q3. How easy or difficult was it for you to find the information you were interested in?


1

2

3

4

5

Very Easy

Somewhat Easy

Neither Easy nor Difficult

Somewhat Difficult

Very Difficult



Q4. How believable was the information in this PI?


1

2

3

4

5

Not at all believable


Somewhat believable


Very believable


Q4a. What made you answer the previous question as you did? (open-ended)


Possible Codes:


Drug not realistic

Sections of PI not realistic

Was told it was fictitious

Formatting

Other


[PROGRAMMER: New screen]


Now you will see the same prescribing information that you saw earlier. Please refer to this prescribing information again, this time focusing specifically on how effective this drug is.


[PROGRAMMER: Display highlights section that will have hyperlinks to further information about each section. Record time spent on highlights section, time spent on each section, and order of sections chosen.]


Please answer the following specific questions based on what you learned from the Milarix (lexisalicylic acid and milaristatin calcium) prescribing information.


Q5. How easy or difficult was it to find information about the effectiveness of the drug?


1

2

3

4

5

Very Easy

Somewhat Easy

Neither Easy nor Difficult

Somewhat Difficult

Very Difficult


Q6. How easy or difficult was it to distinguish your task in the second viewing of the PI from your task in the first viewing of the PI?


1

2

3

4

5

Very Easy

Somewhat Easy

Neither Easy nor Difficult

Somewhat Difficult

Very Difficult



[PROGRAMMER: New screen]


Now you will see four different versions of a magazine ad directed at patients. The ad is for another drug, a fictitious drug for high cholesterol, Votrea (trevastatin calcium). These four different versions represent different ways to present the data from the prescribing information to patients.


[PROGRAMMER: New screen]


Q7. There are many ways to present scientific data. Some are better than others. After looking at each of the four versions, please rank them from best to worst in terms of how well the ad represents the scientific information. In other words, your first selection will be the one you believe best represents the data, your second choice will be the one you believe is the second-best, and so forth.


To view each version in more detail, please click on the page and it will enlarge. You will be able to zoom in and out for your ease of viewing.


[PROGRAMMER:

1. Display all four versions of Votrea ad on screen. As participants click on a version, bring that version to a full screen view. Maintain some sort of zoom capacity so that participants can enlarge sections for ease of reading. Please adjust instructions to participants as appropriate, depending on the procedure you put in place.

2. Please arrange a format whereby participants can then select each version in their chosen order.

3. A randomly selected half of the participants will see treatment claim versions of the ad:

Version name 1

Version name 2

Version name 3

Version name 4


A randomly selected half of participants will see prevention claim versions of the ad:

Version name 5

Version name 6

Version name 7

Version name 8

]


Q7a. (open-ended) What about the different versions caused you to rank them this way?


Possible Codes:


Format

Visuals

Numbers

Colors

Other


Q8. How easy or difficult was this task?


1

2

3

4

5

Very Easy

Somewhat Easy

Neither Easy nor Difficult

Somewhat Difficult

Very Difficult


Q9. How clear were the instructions for this task?


1

2

3

4

5

Very Clear

Somewhat Clear

Neither Clear nor Unclear

Somewhat Unclear

Very Unclear




Q10. Now, looking at the same four versions, please rank these in order of ease of understanding for the typical patient. In other words, your first selection will be the version you think the typical patient will most readily understand, your second selection will be the second-most understandable version, and so forth.


[PROGRAMMER: Execute the same procedure as above. Participants will see the same versions in Q16 and Q17.]


Q10a. (open-ended) What about the different versions caused you to rank them this way?


Possible Codes:


Format

Visuals

Numbers

Colors

Other


Q11. How easy or difficult was this task?


1

2

3

4

5

Very Easy

Somewhat Easy

Neither Easy nor Difficult

Somewhat Difficult

Very Difficult


Q12. How clear were the instructions for this task?


1

2

3

4

5

Very Clear

Somewhat Clear

Neither Clear nor Unclear

Somewhat Unclear

Very Unclear


Q13. Now here are some questions that require you to use numbers to solve the problem. Some are easy and others are more difficult. No calculators please- we’d like you to answer on your own.


[PROGRAMMER: DO NOT randomize Q20a-c]


  1. Imagine that you flip a fair coin 1,000 times. What is your best guess about how many times the coin would come up heads in 1,000 flips?


___ times out of 1,000 [PROGRAMMER: set acceptable range from 0 to 1,000]



  1. In the BIG BUCKS LOTTERY, the chance of winning a $10 prize is 1%. What is your best guess about how many people would win a $10 prize if 1,000 people each buy a single ticket to BIG BUCKS LOTTERY?


________ people [PROGRAMMER: set acceptable range from 0 to 1,000]



  1. In ACME PUBLISHING SWEEPSTAKES, the chance of winning a car is 1 in 1,000. What percent of tickets to ACME PUBLISHING SWEEPSTAKES will win a car?


___ percent


Q14. How did you feel about being asked the previous three questions? (open-ended)


Possible codes:


Positive

Negative

Other


Now please answer the following questions for classification purposes.


Q21. What year were you born? ______________


Q22. How many years have you been in practice? _________



Q23. About what percentage of your patients are you treating for chronic pain?


_____%


Q24. About what percentage of your patients are you treating for cardiovascular risk factors?


_____%


Q25. How would you rate your familiarity with prescription treatments for chronic pain?


Very familiar

Somewhat familiar

Somewhat unfamiliar

Not familiar at all


Q26. How would you rate your familiarity with prescription treatments for improving cardiovascular outcomes?


Very familiar

Somewhat familiar

Somewhat unfamiliar

Not familiar at all



Q27. How many hours in a typical week do you use the internet for work purposes, if at all?


_____ hours


Q28. How many hours in a typical week do you use the internet for personal use, if at all?


_____ hours


Q29. Overall, how would you say direct-to-consumer advertising has affected your patients and your practice?


Very positively

Somewhat positively

Has not affected the quality at all

Somewhat negatively

Very negatively

Q30. What caused you to answer as you did in the previous question? (open-ended)


Possible codes:


Helps dialog

Hinders dialog

Takes too much time

Creates false expectations

Other


Q31. Do you have any thoughts or comments on this study? (open-ended)



Thank you for taking the time to participate in this study. This study has been designed by the Food and Drug Administration to develop materials to explore the ways physicians use approved prescription drug labels in an attempt to improve these documents for future use. Your participation has been valuable.


This concludes the study. Thank you for your time.






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File Typeapplication/msword
File TitlePhysician Pretest
AuthorBRAMANA
Last Modified ByBRAMANA
File Modified2011-05-13
File Created2011-05-13

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