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Will Supremes hear IMS data-mining case?
Once again, a drug-related legal battle stands to change the business landscape. The Supreme Court may hear a pharma case--namely, a court fight over data-mining--that could revamp the way all sorts of businesses gather and use consumer information, BusinessWeek reports. At the heart of the case is IMS Health, that enterprising data-collector that amasses information on physician prescribing practices and sells it to drugmakers for their marketing pleasure.
State legislatures have been questioning whether IMS's data-mining is in fact constitutional. And the firm has been fighting a case in New Hampshire, which passed a law in 2006 to bar companies from collecting data on which drugs specific doctors prescribe and then using that info as a sales tool. New Hampshire's AG says that collecting scrip data endangers physician and patient privacy, even though patients' personal info is kept anonymous. IMS and fellow data-collector Verispan sued to challenge the law on First Amendment grounds.
A U.S. circuit court upheld the New Hampshire law late last year, ruling that data and speech aren't the same thing. In this case, data amounts to a product, just like beef jerky, Judge Bruce Selya said, and states have the right to govern companies' sale of goods.
Enter the Supreme Court. If the justices decline to hear the case, that Circuit Court ruling will stand, perhaps inspiring other states to restrict data collection and sales--which could have wide-ranging consequences. "This issue far transcends prescription drugs," Dan Jaffe, executive vice-president at the Association of National Advertisers, told BusinessWeek. "In a difficult economy, virtually every segment of the business community is concerned about preserving the ability to use marketing dollars in an efficient way."
- read the BusinessWeek article
Related Articles:
RealAge backed by Big Pharma
Court supports data privacy law
VT to revise data-mining law
Comments
Many of the comments and implications made in this article are frivolous. Most of the IMS data derived brings no pleasure to the Pharmaceutical Industry but, rather, is used to measure and predict performance, and to benchmark future growth trends. Wall Street is also a major user of IMS for predicting financial performance, and monitoring product success, to help shareholder evaluation, and impact financial market performance and trends.
IMS also can help protect the public from counterfeit drugs and serious health problems. Data is derived by measuring specific product codes provided IMS by distributors. These distributors represent wholesale drug companies and other distributors throughout the globe. Within the U.S. the FDA has beenlargely successful in helping prevent criminal entry of these counterfeit drugs. Other countries have not been so lucky. (In Africa estimates show that 300,00 per year die due to counterfeit medicines.) IMS is one way to measure and deter entry of counterfeit drugs.
In closing, politicians, legal system representatives, and journalists need to fully appreciate situations before commenting or changing law. They can create detrimental unbalance and substantial health risk by not understanding the impact of their decisions. They need to act more responsibily and widen their understanding of the impact their decisions make. They did not do this in New Hampshire. This is quite dangerous and may negatively effect the public well-being.
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