AUTH/2960/6/17 - Hospital Doctor v A Menarini

Certification of company website

  • Received
    12 June 2017
  • Case number
    AUTH/2960/6/17
  • Applicable Code year
    2016
  • Completed
    09 August 2017
  • No breach Clause(s)
  • Breach Clause(s)
  • Sanctions applied
    Undertaking received
  • Additional sanctions
  • Appeal
    No appeal
  • Review
    November 2017 Review

Case Summary

​When the complainant in Case AUTH/2949/3/17 (a complaint about A Menarini's corporate website) was advised of the outcome in that case he submitted a number of comments related to the certification and approval of that website. The complainant noted the company's submission in the previous case that the web page at issue had been created and approved in 2011. The complainant stated that surely the website had been updated since then and even if not, the Code required materials to be recertified every two years. The complainant noted that the original screenshot he had saved referred to a campaign launched in 2014; the website had thus been updated since 2011 and so should have a more recent approval date.

The complainant stated that the company's submission in Case AUTH/2949/3/17 implied a very relaxed approach to patient safety and process. In particular, the complainant noted that despite knowing that a link to the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) Yellow Card Scheme was missing from its website, the company did nothing until it received a complaint about it two months later.

The detailed response from A Menarini is given below.

The Panel noted A Menarini's submission that the webpage at issue was examined and approved against the 2011 Code. The website provided information about the company's products and access to it was not limited to health professionals and other relevant decision makers; it was a source of information for the public including patients taking the company's medicines. The Panel noted that A Menarini added a link to educational material for the public in January 2014 and its submission that it failed to review its website and certify the content at that time.

The Panel noted that the Code required that, inter alia, promotional material must not be issued unless its final form, to which no subsequent amendments will be made, has been certified.

The Panel noted A Menarini's submission that neither the content of the website, nor the link to the educational material for the public added in 2014 were promotional. The Panel considered that the complainant had not established that the website was promotional and no breach of the Code was ruled.

The Panel further noted, however, that the Code required, inter alia, educational material for the public or patients issued by companies which related to diseases or medicines but was not intended as promotion for those medicines to be certified.

The Panel noted that A Menarini had failed to certify the website when it was first created in July 2011 as required by the 2011 Code and a breach of that Code was ruled.

The Panel noted A Menarini's submission that the website had not been reviewed since July 2011. The Panel noted that the current Code required, inter alia, that material which was still in use be recertified at intervals of no more than two years to ensure that it continued to conform with the relevant regulations relating to advertising and the Code. The Panel noted that A Menarini had not reviewed the website since July 2011 and as such it had not been re-certified in line with the Code and a breach was ruled.

The Code required companies to preserve certificates for material for not less than three years after the final use of the material. The Panel noted that as the website had never been certified, there was no certificate. A further breach of the Code was ruled.

The Panel noted its rulings above and considered that the failure to certify and re-certify its website meant that A Menarini had failed to maintain high standards. A robust certification procedure underpinned self-regulation. The Panel considered that A Menarini's lack of such a process and its failure to review and certify material aimed at the public or patients meant that it had brought the industry into disrepute. Breaches of the Code were ruled including of Clause 2.

The Panel noted its concern in Case AUTH/2949/3/17 in that despite discovering that the hyperlink to the MHRA Yellow Card Scheme had disappeared on 31 January 2017 and promptly notifying its parent company responsible for website maintenance, no action was apparently taken until A Menarini was notified of that complaint on 27 March 2017. This showed a disregard for patient safety issues. The Panel had ruled a breach of the Code in that case in relation to failing to maintain high standards. Noting the complainant's allegations in Case AUTH/2949/3/17 the Panel considered that patient safety was of the utmost importance and A Menarini's failures in this regard brought discredit upon and reduced confidence in the pharmaceutical industry. A further breach of Clause 2 was ruled.