Rather than a detailed analysis, I'm just going to offer a few bullet points as to why I can't stand these things:
- The "patients" in the commercials always seem to have super duper fantastic medical insurance and they get to go to huge, super clean modern medical clinics and speak to doctors in large wood paneled offices with a huge bookcase on one wall.
- I know there's a legal reason for it, but the phrasing they use in the spoken words drives me nuts: "My doctor put me on Xanadrine and it significantly improved my joint pain in less than 2 hours." No one ever talks like that.
- Again, required by law but funny: The side effects are oftentimes just as bad or even worse than whatever the medicine is supposed to help you with. I once saw an ad for an anti-nausea medication and one of the potential side effects was, you guessed it, nausea.
- "I got my first prescription free!" - Yes and everyone thereafter will cost you a bucketload, especially if you don't have insurance.
- I really dislike the fact that it shows people hiking through mountains, canoeing on a river, walking a dog, etc. all in magically PERFECT HEALTH thanks to whatever medicine is being promoted. Drugs seldom work that well regardless of what condition is being treated.
- No doctor I've ever met in real life smiles as much as the doctors in these commercials.
I don't think drugs should be advertised period.
- The "patients" in the commercials always seem to have super duper fantastic medical insurance and they get to go to huge, super clean modern medical clinics and speak to doctors in large wood paneled offices with a huge bookcase on one wall.
- I know there's a legal reason for it, but the phrasing they use in the spoken words drives me nuts: "My doctor put me on Xanadrine and it significantly improved my joint pain in less than 2 hours." No one ever talks like that.
- Again, required by law but funny: The side effects are oftentimes just as bad or even worse than whatever the medicine is supposed to help you with. I once saw an ad for an anti-nausea medication and one of the potential side effects was, you guessed it, nausea.
- "I got my first prescription free!" - Yes and everyone thereafter will cost you a bucketload, especially if you don't have insurance.
- I really dislike the fact that it shows people hiking through mountains, canoeing on a river, walking a dog, etc. all in magically PERFECT HEALTH thanks to whatever medicine is being promoted. Drugs seldom work that well regardless of what condition is being treated.
- No doctor I've ever met in real life smiles as much as the doctors in these commercials.
I don't think drugs should be advertised period.
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