Another Thing The Doctor Ordered
Burt Helm
Business Week
March 17, 2008
Flat-screen TVs that
deliver child-care advice—and ads—are popping up in
pediatricians’ offices. Tampa’s KidCare TV uses a
broadband connection to transmit two-to-five-minute
segments—on proper feeding techniques and sleep
positions for infants, for instance. Interspersed among
the segments: 30-second spots for Capri Sun juice,
Gerber Life Insurance, and other brands. KidCare TV,
which was officially launched in late November, has
installed LCD screens in about 1,000 U.S. doctors’
offices.
Pediatricians who have put in the free service seem to
like what they’ve seen so far. Bernard Berchin, who
practices in New York, says the health-care segments are
“an adjunct to what I try to accomplish here in the
office,” though he’s keeping an eye on the types of ads
that run. Because the commercials are delivered
digitally, KidCare TV can withdraw any that prompt
complaints at specific offices, says company CEO Philip
Cohen, adding that all the advertisers are vetted by the
company’s advisory panel of seven board-certified
pediatricians.
American Academy of Pediatrics spokesman Donald Shifrin,
however, is skeptical about KidCare TV’s waiting-room
broadcasts. “It seems to be more of a service for
advertisers than for parents,” he says, adding that it’s
“rather odd that we’d talk to parents about the
appropriate amount of ‘screen time’ for their youngsters
and then have a 32-inch screen in our waiting rooms.”
