Samantha Reba
Junior Writer
Last week, the US Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) released draft guidelines addressing responsibilities of pharmaceutical
manufacturers and distributors related to real-time online communications and
interactions. The proposal outlines various levels of responsibility related to
content posted by or about a company. The guidelines cover but are not limited
to corporate blogs, microblogs, online communities, podcasts, Facebook, and
Twitter.
The guidelines limit pharmaceutical companies’
responsibility for content posted via social media where they have no control
over or ownership of the platform or content. Firms would be held increasingly
responsible in situations where they have powers of editorial review or
otherwise influence posted content. The FDA draft calls for companies to send
monthly reports of all covered online activity to the agency. If companies have
any input into posted material, it would need to be reported to the FDA.
The pharmaceutical industry has until April to
submit comments and suggestions to the FDA concerning the guidelines. Until
then, firms are being asked to file monthly reports while the debate over
user-generated content continues. The new rules should allow more flexibility
regarding interactions with patients via social media channels without
requiring an audit of every comment submitted. Many questions remain to be
answered but for now the discussion appears to be moving in the right
direction.
Pretty good post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say that I have really enjoyed reading your blog posts. Any way I'll be subscribing to your feed and I hope you post again soon.
ReplyDeletepharma analytics
Thanks for your comment and for subscribing to our feed. The proposed FDA guidelines are going to transform the way the pharmaceutical industry utilizes social media. We will continue posting updates on regulatory issues and the healthcare continuum.
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