TUCSON, Ariz. 3/3/2007 4:16:19 AM
News / Health & Wellness

Consumers fall for pharmaceutical parody that promotes fictitious anxiety disorder: NewsTarget.com

What happens if you create a fake disorder and offer a fake drug to treat it? You get thousands of people fooled that they might have an invented disease called Dysphoric Social Attention Consumption Deficit Anxiety Disorder. An Australian artist created an "advertising campaign" for a fictional drug called Havidol to fight the non-existent social disorder, and the response has been more than surprising.

 

The conclusion of this article appears on NewsTarget.com, the independent natural health news source for consumers. This article, along with other uncensored news on important consumer health topics, can be found at:

 

Consumers fall for Havidol pharmaceutical parody that promotes a fictitious anxiety disorder

http://www.newstarget.com/021660.html

 

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Read by over 500,000 unique readers monthly, NewsTarget is a progressive, independent natural health news site that teaches consumers how to improve their health through foods, herbs, exercise and natural therapies. The site also warns consumers about the dangers of processed foods, pharmaceuticals, chemotherapy, environmental toxins and the failure of government regulators like the FDA.