• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • My Account
  • Subscribe
  • Log In
Itemlive

Itemlive

North Shore news powered by The Daily Item

  • News
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
  • Police/Fire
  • Government
  • Obituaries
  • Archives
  • E-Edition
  • Help

Editorial: Banning those Rx ads: Why are Trump and RFK Jr. targeting pharma ads?

Guest Editorial

September 17, 2025 by Guest Editorial

Editorial written by New York Daily News Editorial Board.

There are plenty of good reasons to ban the TV advertising of prescription drugs, but coming from the anti-science, anti-medicine Trump administration and the dangerous anti-vaccine crackpot Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the motivation is suspect.

It is aimed to attack the pharmaceutical companies? Or hurt the revenues of the TV networks? Or both? We are more than skeptical that the underlying reason has much to do with the health of Americans and the concerns of their doctors.

The idea itself is a sound one, to get rid of those happy TV ads with people singing and dancing about some medication or another, while listing some side effects, like may cause immediate death. The new rule would require disclosure of all side effects, meaning that pharmaceuticals would shy away from bombarding consumers with these pitches.

There really is no reason for consumers to be marketed drugs that they cannot legally buy over the counter. Medical professionals go through a hell of a lot of study to determine how to best treat their patients, including what medicines to prescribe; this is not the type of situation where we should want patients to be pressing their doctors to write prescriptions for whatever they want.

That’s not to say that doctors are infallible or that people should not advocate for themselves and their medical needs, but hearing a jiggle or seeing an ad for some medication between “Law & Order” reruns is not an ideal way to get health information.

Bill Frist, who served as the Republican Senate majority leader until 2007, and who is also a cardiothoracic transplant surgeon, wanted the ads off the air many years ago. On the other side of the ideological aisle, Sen. Bernie Sanders introduced the End Prescription Drug Ads Now Act three months ago.

Many of us that have had friends or family visit from abroad have heard the same bewildered comment: why do your TV stations have these constant pharmaceutical ads? They’re banned in almost all of the developed world. It’s often only regarding it from that foreign perspective that we can see how unusual this ecosystem of consumer pharmaceutical marketing is globally, one more in a list of those quintessential Americanisms that confuse the rest of the world, like not being able to afford otherwise accessible medicine or casually buying a gun.

So why are the RFK Jr.-infected FDA and the Department of Health and Human Services pursuing this now? Amid all their terrible actions, did they just happen to stumble into one positive move? We don’t buy that, but that doesn’t mean that the ads should stay on TV.

As we’ve said several times before, the pharmaceutical and health delivery systems in this country, as with all massive commercial sectors, are worthy of significant regulatory scrutiny. They have at times acted in ways that are directly counter to the goals of health and the public good, and we should want leaders that are able to question and, when needed, take on these big interests in service to the public interest.

That does not and has never meant that it is a good idea to toss overboard centuries of medical practice and go with RFK’s preferred approach to health, which seems to be based on vibes and whatever his friends and allies can sell untested supplements and other products over real peer-review science (which we doubt will be the focus of this regulatory push).

  • Guest Editorial
    Guest Editorial

    View all posts

Related posts:

No related posts.

Primary Sidebar

Advertisement

Sponsored Content

Solo Travel Safety Hacks: How to Use eSIM and Tech to Stay Connected and Secure in Australia

How Studying Psychology Can Equip You To Better Help Your Community

Solo Travel Safety Hacks: How to Use eSIM and Tech to Stay Connected and Secure in Australia

Advertisement

Upcoming Events

“WIN” Wine Tasting Mixer at Lucille!

October 9, 2025
Lucille Wine Shop

11th Annual Lynn Tech Festival of Trees

November 16, 2025
Lynn Tech Tigers Den

1st Annual Lynn Food Truck & Craft Beverage Festival presented by Greater Lynn Chamber of Commerce

September 27, 2025
Blossom Street, Lynn,01905, US 89 Blossom St, Lynn, MA 01902-4592, United States

2025 Clock to the Rock 5K & Block Party

September 20, 2025
Central Sq, Lynn, MA 01901, United States

Footer

About Us

  • About Us
  • Editorial Practices
  • Advertising and Sponsored Content

Reader Services

  • Subscribe
  • Manage Your Subscription
  • Activate Subscriber Account
  • Submit an Obituary
  • Submit a Classified Ad
  • Daily Item Photo Store
  • Submit A Tip
  • Contact
  • Terms and Conditions

Essex Media Group Publications

  • La Voz
  • Lynnfield Weekly News
  • Marblehead Weekly News
  • Peabody Weekly News
  • 01907 The Magazine
  • 01940 The Magazine
  • 01945 The Magazine
  • North Shore Golf Magazine

© 2025 Essex Media Group