Abstract

Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) aims to promote strategies that ensure efficacy, safety, suitability, and cost-effectiveness of medicine prescription. Health systems should design effective mechanisms to monitor prescription and rational use of medicines at all healthcare settings. This study aimed to determine and analyze prescription patterns of general practitioners and specialists in Kerman/Iran from 2005 to 2015. Methods: This is an explanatory mixed method study. Data were gathered during two phases. At the first phase, prescriptions issued by physicians during 2005-2015 were reviewed to extract information required to develop eight main prescription indicators. In the second phase, the indicators trends were presented to experts participating in expert panel to have their opinions and analyses on the data obtained in the first phase. Experts were selected based on their experience and expertise in medicine and/or health policy and/or experience in implementation of polices to promote rational use of medicines. Some experts attending the panel were a sample of physicians whose prescriptions were included in the first phase. Results: Findings revealed that two indicators of the average price of prescriptions and the maximum number of medicines in each prescription had an increasing trend over the study period. Reasons including unprecedented devaluation of the Iranian Rial and willingness of young physicians to prescribe more medications were proposed as the primary contributors to the observed increasing trends. However, other indicators including types of prescribed medicines, average number of medicines per prescription, the percentage of prescriptions with more than four medications, a percentage of encounters with a corticosteroid prescribed, a percentage of encounters with an antibiotic prescribed, and a percentage of encounters with an injection prescribed decreased in the study period. Reasons of controlling initiatives adopted by the Ministry of Health, the higher responsibility of physicians, adoption of continued medical education (CME) programs, and improved knowledge of pharmacists, physicians, and patients about irrational use of medicines were proposed by participants as the main reasons for the decreasing trend. Conclusion: Findings indicated that prescription indicators were better in Kerman than those of country average over the study period based on comparing the results of this study and others in Iran. However, they were non-desirable when compared to the international average. The number of factors contributes to the irrational use of medicines, including lack of knowledge among healthcare providers and patients, patients’ misunderstanding about the efficacy of some particular medicines, the high cost of drug development and manufacturing, and unavailability of effective medicines.

Highlights

  • Establishment of an effective pharmaceutical management system is one of the most important goals of health systems worldwide.[1]

  • Two phases of data collection and analysis were undertaken: Gathering Quantitative Data and Analyzing Indicators Trends During this phase, prescriptions written by physicians during 2005-2015 were reviewed to extract information required to develop the eight main indicators of (1) average price of prescriptions, (2) types of prescribed medicines, (3) average number of medicines per prescription, (4) maximum number of medicines per prescription, (5) percentage of prescriptions with more than four medicines, (6) percentage of encounters with a corticosteroid prescribed, (7) percentage of encounters with an antibiotic prescribed, and (8) percentage of encounters with an injection prescribed

  • Average Price of Prescriptions The following figure shows that the trend of prescriptions price has risen over the 10-year period that has intensified since 2011

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Summary

Introduction

Establishment of an effective pharmaceutical management system is one of the most important goals of health systems worldwide.[1]. Medicine is a strategic product of concern to all countries in such a way that a large proportion of discretionary health expenditures in both developed and developing countries allocate to procurement, distribution and consumption of medicines.[2,3] Considering their functions, health systems are responsible for providing equitable access to medicines, and they should

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