Experts Warn About Growing Use of Prescription Sleeping Pills

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With 42 million sleeping pill prescriptions filled last year — up some 60 percent since 2000 — experts are warning that the drugs are being overused and may be encouraging doctors to overlook other causes of sleeplessness, such as depression. Behind the increased use of sleeping pills are advertising campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars.

An International Herald Tribune article carried by APA’s PsycPort attributes much of the increased use of prescription sleeping pills to an advertising blitz costing pharmaceutical manufacturers hundreds of millions of dollars:

Fully 10 percent of Americans report that they regularly struggle to get to sleep or to stay asleep throughout the night. And more and more are turning to a new generation of sleep aids like Ambien, the bestseller, and its newest competitor, Lunesta. In the last year, much of the advertising surge has been a result of competition from Lunesta, which the drug maker Sepracor introduced last April to compete with Ambien. Through November Sepracor led the sleeping pill advertising field, spending more than $185 million, according to figures from TNS Media Intelligence, which did not have final figures for December.

In response, Sanofi-Aventis, marketing both Ambien and its controlled-release version, Ambien CR, spent $107 million from last January through November, according to TNS. That was nearly double its ad spending on Ambien in 2004.

Even the most infrequent U.S. television viewers would have trouble missing the Lunesta ads, which feature a Luna moth fluttering around the bed of a peaceful sleeper. Jacobs says that in one hour of primetime television the other night, he saw three ads for sleeping pills.

“You’ve got the patient population being bombarded with advertising on TV,” Jacobs says. “You’ve got increased advertising to physicians. You’ve got a formula for sales going up dramatically.”

Apart from the sheer financial drain, the article also highlights the risks represented by the growth in prescription sleeping pill use:

But some experts worry that the drugs are being oversubscribed without sufficient regard to known, if rare, side effects or the implications of long-term use. And they fear doctors may be ignoring other conditions, like depression, that might be the cause of sleeplessness.

Also see our section on sleep disorders.

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About the Author: With an educational background in philosophy and mathematics, as well as in counselling, Dr Mulhauser enjoys publishing CounsellingResource.com, providing online counselling and therapy services, and spending time with his family.

This article was last reviewed by Dr Greg Mulhauser, Managing Editor on Thursday, 9th February 2006. You can leave a response below.

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