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Posts with tag Business Week

Massive ad campaign aims to lift lackluster Exubera sales

Remember back in 2006 all the buzz surrounding Exubera, Pfizer's inhalable insulin product? It was much-hyped by Pfizer and, let's face, the media happily joined in too, spreading the word that (as Pfizer would have it) Exubera would be wildly successful and make squillions of dollars for investors.

It didn't work out that way at all. Sales so far have topped out at around four million dollars per quarter, far short of the two billion projected before the product was released. Now, in a bid to lift lackluster sales, Pfizer is launching a major ad campaign for Exubera. Yes, the inhaler device is extremely indiscreet. Yes, long-term use of the drug itself could cause lung damage. Oh, and health insurers may not cover prescriptions for Exubera for those diabetics who want to try it. But I guess where there's a slick selling strategy there's a way...into the pockets of consumers, that is.

Which is not to say I blame Pfizer. The company has poured so much money into this product, does it really have a choice at this point? No. Also, it's entirely possible Pfizer could turn things around. This article by Arlene Weintraub for Business Week reminds readers that the drug giant had enormous success with its clever ad campaigns for Viagra and for the incontinence drug Detrol. Writes Weintraub, this new campaign will probably cost Pfizer big-time: we're talking tens of millions of dollars, but it will be worth it for Pfizer if it can reproduce that kind of success.

Debate continues on virtues, shortcomings of inhalable insulin, Exubera

Exubera, Exubera. What will become of you? That is the big question. Pfizer's eagerly awaited inhalable insulin device is nearing the market. For anyone following this saga, there is a must-read market analysis piece on Business Week's website. With the great title to boot: "From Pfizer, Irrational Exubera?"

The article looks at the big question everyone is asking about Exubera: will it be the blockbuster drug it's been hyped as? While Pfizer says it expects billions of dollars in sales (and the company is pouring millions into promoting the product), critics say it is an overhyped, overpriced product that could put some diabetics in danger of lung damage. Not to mention the device is the size of a county fair prize-winning squash! Who wants to suck on that in public?! Let alone tote it around. On the other hand, let's not forget it's big selling point: no needles. Yet critics maintain so-called needle phobia is not as widespread as Pfizer would have you believe.

If you check out this article, also take a look at the readers' comments at the end. There seems to be a fairly even split in opinion on this thing.

Nestlé developing new products aimed at health market, diabetics

When I hear the word Nestlé I think "hmm, I could use some chocolate right about now." However, Business Week is reporting that Nestlé is branching out into...well, I wouldn't quite call it the health food market. The company is launching itself into the market for people concerned about their health, their weight, and diabetes. Scientists for Nestlé in Switzerland are working to develop high-tech food products that are tasty but bypass the usual harmful effects of junk food on the body.

Example? A new cereal bar that contains a fiber additive designed to avoid a surge in blood sugar after it has been eaten. Nestlé hopes to market the bar to Type 2 diabetics initially, but is also looking into the possibility of incorporating it into it's Stouffer's and Lean Cuisine brand meals.

I guess Nestlé has a shot at success if they can avoid an Olestra-type public image disaster. That's why they're sticking with using naturally occurring fats and fibers to essentially fool the body into feeling satisfied with less food.

This Business Week article contains a ton more information on the hows and whys of this shift. Check it out to learn more.

David Eddy a leading proponent of evidence-based medicine

There's an article on the website of Business Week that I'd call a "must-read" feature. It profiles the efforts of Dr. David Eddy, who is a proponent of evidence-based medical care. Eddy believes that all too often the health industry is ignorant about which treatments actually work better than others. Not only that, Eddy says that physicians too often pass over cheap and effective treatments in favor of fancy high-tech options when there is sometimes no evidence that they work better than the old treatments. It was Eddy who lead arguments a few years ago that conventional methods of treating diabetes did not help prevent common complications of the disease, primarily heart attacks and strokes. He urged physicians to put at-risk diabetics on simple and inexpensive regimens of aspirin and generic drugs. The result? A dramatic improvement in the incidence of heart attack and stroke amongst diabetics. Eddy is still working on the diabetes problem, helping to develop a major initiative designed to get a million diabetics on these drugs. But this is just the tip of the iceberg - one aspect of a remarkable career. Read this article!

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