A Diversion - The AstraZeneca video

This post is a diversion from heart attacks to discuss the AstraZeneca video.

In my previous post, The Heart Attack Process (1) I included a link to a video that illustrates how most heart attacks occur. As I pointed out, the video was the product of AstraZeneca, a pharmaceutical company.

AstraZeneca did not produce the video out of the goodness of their collective heart. It is a promotional video which, so the makers hope, will contribute to the bottom line. The video ends with a segment in which viewers are urged to take their medication as directed by their doctors. Clearly the management of AstraZeneca hope that medication will be Crestor, AstraZeneca’s cholesterol reduction medication.

Judging by the comments that accompanied the video, some of those who viewed it are medical students. One viewer put it this way:

“Explains it all!!
all 3 lectures im revising , 5 mins of this just explains it even better. top vid thank u sooo much. “

I think it safe to say that this is one student who now has a positive image of AstraZeneca. If he or she is a future doctor the video may make her more receptive to other AstraZeneca promotions.

So why include an advertising video in a non-commercial website? To put it another way, why would I give AstraZeneca free publicity?

When I started searching Youtube for videos depicting the mechanism behind most heart attacks I expected to find something produced by the American Heart Association or one of the leading university medical schools. I had hoped I might find something produced by the Mayo Clinic.

I found nothing of the sort. The best, the most scientifically accurate, video I found was the AstraZeneca video. As far as it goes the video reflects what we know about the process of atheromous plaque formation and the dangers of plaque rupture.

In short I chose to link to the AstraZeneca video because nothing better was available.

I want to make that clear. I have no quarrel with AstraZeneca. As a commercial enterprise they have every right to produce a promotional video. Unlike many promotional videos I have seen this one, as far as it goes, is scientifically accurate.

But it is a sad commentary on the medical profession that they leave the education of the public to a pharmaceutical company because, as it happens, there are problems with the video. It does not go far enough.

I shall return to the topic of how the medical profession has de facto outsourced certain aspects of the education of doctors to the pharmaceutical industry and the consequences that flow from this. Drug company sponsoships was the topic of a recent edition of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s “Health Report” program. The program featured an interview with Dr Jon Jureidini of Healthy Skepticism

I have a philosophical difference with Healthy Skepticism. I think it wrong to depict the pharmaceutical industry as the great villain. The nub of the problem is that the medical profession has abdicated its responsibility to educate both to its members and the general public.

In my next post I shall discuss some of the things the AstraZeneca video leaves out.

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9 Responses to “A Diversion - The AstraZeneca video”

  1. Lee Aase says:

    I am the manager for social media at Mayo Clinic, and I’m sorry that the heart-related videos we have on our sites didn’t meet your needs. Here’s one that describes the overall circulatory system, but not what you needed in this post.

    http://mayoclinic.com/health/circulatory-system/MM00636

    We have major efforts in social media to make in-depth educational information available directly to patients and consumers. See for instance this related video from our YouTube channel, on 4 ways to prevent a heart attack:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UObRoaID6U

    I hope you will check out our News Blog, Podcast Blog, YouTube channel and other platforms for your future posts.

    If you want to contact me, I’m @leeaase on Twitter.

  2. Steven,

    I’m the founder of Healthy Skepticism. We don’t have a philosophical difference.

    Whilst we welcome a diversity of views amongst our members I am not aware that any of them would “attribute all the blame to the pharmaceutical industry”. Certainly Healthy Skepticism as a whole does not “attribute all the blame to the pharmaceutical industry”.

    On the contrary our position is:
    “Rather than on blaming individuals, or companies the Healthy Skepticism reform agenda is based on understanding that inappropriate marketing and inappropriate treatment decision making results from system problems.”

    Introduction to Healthy Skepticism Inc, our reform agenda and methods
    By: Peter Mansfield
    Healthy Skepticism International News August 2006 Vol 24 No 8
    http://healthyskepticism.org/news/InternationalAug06.php

    I will ensure that that point is made more prominently in our new website than it is in our current website.

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