We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
The Cost of Inadequate Prescriptions for Hypolipidaemic Drugs.
- Authors
Ballesteros, Luisa Cabello; San Martin, M. Isabel Fernández; Cuesta, Teresa Sanz; Mayor, Esperanza Escortell; Bilbao, Carmen López
- Abstract
Background: The high consumption of hypolipidaemic agents warrants the study of the costs caused by these medicines being inadequately prescribed. Objective: To quantify the economic cost generated in 1 year in primary care by inadequate (or unnecessary) prescriptions for hypolipidaemic drugs. Methods: A cross-sectional study based on hypolipidaemic drug prescriptions for a population of pensioners ordered during 1 year by 49 family physicians from 4 health areas in Madrid, Spain. Each doctor completed a data collection sheet for each patient for whom a hypolipidaemic agent was prescribed. The adequacy of each prescription was evaluated according to 2 quality levels: for level 1, it was necessary to have knowledge of the following parameters: total cholesterol level at the start of treatment, low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level, whether dietary intervention preceded pharmacological treatment, patient age and risk factors; for level 2, it was not necessary to have knowledge of either diet before pharmacological treatment or LDL-C levels. Inadequate expenditure was quantified by physician, by type of doctor who initiated the pharmacological treatment (the family physician, specialist, other doctor), therapeutic group and agent. Study perspective: Primary healthcare management of 4 public health areas. Results: The cost of inadequate prescriptions for hypolipidaemic drugs reached 116 480.60 US dollars ($US; 1997 values) for quality level 1 and $US37 893.37 for level 2. 12.3% of the health professionals ordered all their prescriptions inadequately (level 1). Of the total inadequate prescription expenditure, 20.4% represented treatments initiated by family physicians and 35.3% by specialists (level 1). Statins made up 78.2% of the total cost; the inadequate expenditure for this therapeutic group reached $US88 797 (level 1). Of the prescriptions for fibrates, 88% were inadequate (level 1). Conclusions: In this study, 67% of prescriptions for hypoli...
- Subjects
SPAIN; MADRID (Spain); DRUG prescribing; HYPOLIPEMIA; DRUG therapy; COST
- Publication
PharmacoEconomics, 2001, Vol 19, Issue 5, p513
- ISSN
1170-7690
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2165/00019053-200119050-00006