FDA DOCUMENTATION FOR THE GENERIC CLEARANCE,
“Testing
Communications on Drugs”
(0910-0695)
.
TITLE OF INFORMATION COLLECTION: Rapid Message Testing with Consumer Panel—Public Service Announcement (PSA) Video about Generic Drugs
DESCRIPTION OF THIS SPECIFIC COLLECTION
Statement of need:
The purpose of this project is to conduct timely message testing of an FDA public service announcement video that aims to increase awareness that generic drugs are as safe, effective, and high quality as name brand drugs. The 30-second video is available for viewing at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=juJGnd0owOM.
FDA conducted literature reviews, social media analysis, and consulted subject matter experts to understand their target audience for this video. FDA wants to target populations that have higher rates of distrust of, or nonadherence issues with, generic drugs. These populations include the elderly, minorities, and lower socio-economic status consumers, as stated in Sewell et al (2011). In a study by Shrank et al (2009), those age 65 and older were three times less likely than younger patients to agree with the statement “generics are safer than brand-name drugs”; those with incomes less than $30,000 were almost twice as unlikely than those with incomes above $100,000 to agree that they would “rather take a generic than a brand name drug.”. The communication objectives of the video are to increase confidence in generic drugs and to encourage these populations to talk with their health care providers about whether generic versions of their prescription drugs are available and efficacious for them.
Communications science tells us that we must test messages with our intended audiences before communicating them. Thus, FDA plans to test this communication using online cognitive interviews with a small sample of 15 U.S. adults drawn from a diverse consumer panel.
This data collection is the third in a series of FDA rapid message testing projects. These projects are part of FDA’s effort to make consumer testing part of its routine communication development processes.
Project # |
Communication Tested |
OMB approval date |
1 |
Clinical Trials Brochure |
August 4, 2017 |
2 |
Caregiver Tipsheet |
September 26, 2017 |
This project is in keeping with the spirit of the 2015 Executive Order to improve how information is presented to consumers by applying behavioral science insights, and it meets repeated calls from FDA’s Risk Communication and Advisory Committee to conduct message testing with targeted samples of the general public. In June 2016, OMB agreed to FDA flagging these projects for immediate OMB attention that reduces even the shortened generic clearance timeline.
Intended use of information:
FDA’s contractor Westat will test the video with a small sample of target audience members to ensure the message meets its objectives without causing unintended negative effects. FDA will use the collected interview data to refine its messaging by improving the comprehensibility, enhancing the cultural appropriateness and sensitivity, and improving the personal relevance for a higher public health impact.
The data collected will not be statistically representative of the target audience population. Therefore, the data will not be used for making policy or regulatory decisions.
Description of respondents:
We will conduct 15 30-minute interviews with U.S. adults. Westat has partnered with Research Now Group, Inc., a global leader in digital data collection, to recruit respondents from its general population research panel and avoid “professional” panelists through proprietary recruitment and enrollment techniques.
We will use a participant screener to only recruit adults who currently take prescription drugs to treat a health condition. To help ensure the video is understandable to those with lower health literacy, we will only recruit those with a high school education or less. To match FDA’s target audience, we will test the video with those whose yearly household income is less than $75,000, primarily with senior citizens age 60 and over, and with an oversampling of African Americans, Hispanics, and Asians. The participant pool will be regionally diverse.
Date(s) to be Conducted:
We plan to conduct interviews in October 2017.
How the Information is being collected:
We will conduct all interviews remotely using telephone and screen sharing technology with participants on web-enabled devices such as desktop computers, laptops, tablets or mobile phones. We will ensure that any materials provided to the participants for the test are compatible with all devices.
For each 30-minute interview, a trained interviewer will lead the discussion using a semi-structured interview guide that ensures consistency in major topics but allows flexibility in probing each participant on particular questions.
Note takers will chart their findings into a standardized reporting template so that all notes are organized in a consistent manner. Interviewers will review the notes to ensure accuracy. With the consent of participants, we will audio record each interview.
FDA staff will have the ability to listen to the interview sessions, and this will be made known to participants as part of the informed consent.
Confidentiality of Respondents:
We will provide all respondents with informed consent language that ensures they understand the project purpose, that their participation is voluntary, and that their responses will be kept confidential. As part of the consent procedure, respondents will be asked to allow audio recording of the interview. Recording will not begin before participants have had the opportunity to ask for any clarification and provide consent. Participants will be asked to again confirm their consent when recording begins.
No participant’s identifiable information such as name will be included in the interview notes. All interview materials will be stored on a secure network drive, which will only be accessible to individuals granted access to work on the project. Interview notes will be zipped electronically and password-protected for email or secure file transfer delivery. Prior to forwarding any data to FDA, Westat will destroy all names and contact information of participants to protect their personal identity. Additionally, the interview notes and interpretive report delivered to FDA after message testing will omit all information that could be used to identify respondents.
All electronic data storage media that contain confidential, private, or proprietary information will be maintained within secure areas. Data collected in hard copy will be kept in locked cabinets when not in use.
Amount and justification for any proposed incentive
We will provide $35 incentives to participants at the end of each 30-minute interview in the form of virtual currency. The virtual currency is redeemable for a wide range of award items, vouchers, and publications. Research Now’s incentive scale is based on set time increments and panelist profiles and is applied equally across all study topics, sponsors, and data collection modes. These rates are also in line with those used by government agencies conducting cognitive testing studies documented in the QBANK5 at CDC.
Questions of a Sensitive Nature
We do not anticipate asking any sensitive questions in the interviews. Instead, the questions will focus on individuals’ experience with prescription drugs and their reactions to the messages and material.
Nevertheless, respondents will be told that they may skip any question that they do not want to answer or may stop participating at any time.
Description of Statistical Methods
We do not plan to use formal statistical methods in this study but rather qualitative analysis methods. Our analysis approach is based on the Framework method, as described in Spencer et al (2003). Framework is a matrix-based approach to data management, which facilitates both case and theme based analysis. The Framework method allows for data reduction through summarization and synthesis yet retains links to original data, in this case the interview notes. We will use the qualitative analysis software NVivo, which has included a Framework functionality since 2011. The software will allow us import interview notes, create links between the notes and the Framework matrices, and develop new queries or matrices as needed.
The Framework method will allow us to recognize patterns within the data. Findings will be supported with verbatim participant quotes and grounded in accepted principles of health communications.
References:
Sewell, K., Andreae, S., Luke, E., & Safford, M. M. (2012). Perceptions of and Barriers to Use of Generic Medications in a Rural African American Population, Alabama, 2011. Preventing Chronic Disease, 9, E142. http://doi.org/10.5888/pcd9.120010
Shrank, W. H., Cox, E. R., Fischer, M. A., Mehta, J., & Choudhry, N. K. (2009). Patients’ perceptions of generic medications. Health affairs, 28(2), 546-556.
Spencer, L., Ritchie, J., & O’Connor, W. (2003). Analysis practices, principles and processes. In J. Ritchie & J. Lewis (Eds.), Qualitative research practice. London: Sage Publications.
BURDEN HOUR COMPUTATION (Number of responses (X) estimated response or participation time in minutes (/60) = annual burden hours):
Type/Category of Respondent |
No. of Respondents |
Participation Time (minutes) |
Burden (hours) |
Screener |
250 |
3 |
12.5 |
Interviews |
15 |
30 |
7.5 |
|
Total |
20 |
REQUESTED APPROVAL DATE: October 9, 2017
NAME OF PRA ANALYST & PROGRAM CONTACT:
Ila S. Mizrachi
Paperwork Reduction Act Staff
(301)796-7726
Brian Lappin
Office of Planning
(301)796-9126
FDA CENTER: Office of Planning (Office of the Commissioner)
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
File Title | OMBMemoMERCPtP |
Subject | MERC OMB MEP |
Author | Hillabrant |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-01-21 |