Boy, was that
long! It was like I couldn’t stop
myself. Can you believe it? Nearly eight years of doing this and I have
not learned the difference between a title and a blog post.
Besides that, I’m tired.
Oh, well.
Moving on.
With the energy I have left.
A while back, I offered a post in the form of a contest,
which failed miserably because it was impossible to actually participate in
it. Making it not a real contest or a contest devised by a person unfamiliar with the
meaning of the word.
Or me.
Who believed it
was a contest but later realized it wasn’t.
Where did I get the idea for that abomination of a
contest? From watching TV. Specifically the stations whose programs I
prefer, which apparently appeal to my entire age cohort, as the commercials on
them are primarily for prescription medicines – interspersed with ads for “Class
Action” lawsuits targeting prescription
medicines that could seriously injure or kill you – my admittedly idiosyncratic
attention was drawn to the bizarre names
these prescription medicines were provided.
What seemed increasingly odd to me was that the product
names they were given provided no indication of the illnesses those prescription
medicines were intended to treat.
From an advertising perspective, this obscuring strategy
seemed inexplicable to me. Do you not
want the name you give it to remind you of the product?
Lifesavers.
They look like the thing on the boat. You remember the thing, it reminds you what
to ask for.
“Booyah!”, right?
Prescription medicines manufacturers do not do that.
And it seems like it’s deliberate.
And pervasive – every
pharmaceutical company does exactly the same thing.
Although admittedly not all-inclusive, of all the prescription
remedies – thirteen from the original “contest” and the new batch I am adding
today – not one of them has a product
name that is not entirely…
Meaningless.
Triggering two questions in my ever-curious thinking place:
One – “Why do they do that?”
And Two –
“‘A’: How do they
come up with these names?
And “B”: “If the prescription
medicines’ names are, in fact, meaningless, how do the pharmaceutical companies
determine exactly which meaningless name to apply to which product?
The product names – reflecting nothing that I am aware of – appear to be totally…
Interchangeable.
Which was the point of my original “contest”, wherein the readers
were challenged to match a list of currently marketed prescription medicines
with the maladies they were developed to alleviate.
A challenge which, the prescription medicines’ names being
notoriously unrevealing unless you are personally familiar with them – cannot
possible be performed.
Making it, as was previously mentioned, in a hopefully
apologetic manner…
An unworkable contest.
Whose screaming insufficiency I shall refrain from
duplicating today.
I shall instead simply supplement the earlier list with some
recently discovered product names,
all of them deserving to be enshrined in – if their were such an institution and
there is no reason there should be – “The Hall of Fame of Inexplicable Labeling”:
Stelara
Otezla
Harvoni – (Possibly inspired by a guy named
Harvey who cleans the ice at hockey games.)
Latuda
Januvia
Gjelina – (No,
that’s an upscale restaurant close to our house. You can see how I could get them confused.)
Pradaxa
Novolog – (Not to
be confused with Vovolog, which is
apparently a website offering photographss of amateur sex.)
Tougeo
Bravecto (Wait!
Did I make that one up? No. Bravecto
is flea and tick medicine. As if you
needed to be told.)
Victoza
Trezia (Okay, I
made that one up. But don’t tell me it doesn’t fit.)
And Xeljanz
And there you have it, not a single medicine name making the
tiniest effort at mnemonic assistance.
Do they not want
us to remember the names?
Ex-Lax – it’s a
laxative. They got it right. Ditto for
Dulcolax. Byepoopia – not a real thing, but at
least you know what it helps you with. Aleve
– scrambling back to the tonal high ground – “allev”-iates pain. Remember Geritol? It made geriatrics stand tall. Or something.
Prescription medicines?
It’s like a masquerade ball. Only
the obscuring camouflage is their labels.
Why do they do that?
There must be a
reason.
Maybe that should be my new contest.
A bucket of tar – as the headmaster of the school I taught
in in England used to say – for the best – or most imaginative – explanation.
3 comments:
As much as I need a bucket of tar, I don't have any idea how companies come up w/drug names. (Suppose they have internal contests w/special prizes for the winners, such as drugs that are desirable?) So I did have one idea.
Earl, there is a reason and a pretty good one. I don't know how to have you contact me if you really want a tutorial on pharmaceutical drug names, mostly because I don't want my phone number on your blog for the world to see. Also, I'm not sure that it is not a rhetorical question.
What to do?
Go to pharmatutor.org. The article is "Naming of Drug Molecules and Pharmaceutical Brands." It's a very thorough, but easily understandable, answer to your questions.-Max (a compulsive reader of Ken Levine's blog).
I hope you're fully well soon.
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