Abstract

In Thailand, the 'Rational Drug Use (RDU) policy' has been implemented in the Ministry of Public Health (MOPH) hospitals since October 2016. This study aimed to explore the effects of the RDU policy on prescribing safety indicators for elderly patients and those with common chronic diseases. Electronic outpatient databases were obtained from 15 MOPH hospitals. The selected indicators were the (1) glibenclamide prescribing in patients with diabetes mellitus who were elderly or had renal impairment; (2) duplicate prescribing of renin angiotensin system (RAS) blockers in patients with hypertension; (3) non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) prescribing in patients with chronic kidney disease stages 3-5; and (4) long-acting benzodiazepines prescribing in patients ≥65years. The policy effects in terms of changes in prescribing trends were estimated using interrupted time-series analysis based on quarterly (Q) data. The postpolicy trends (2016, Q4-2017, Q4) were compared with the prepolicy trend (2014, Q1-2016, Q3). The unsafe prescribing of glibenclamide in patients with diabetes mellitus was 19.2% in Q1, 2014 and decreased significantly due to the RDU policy to 11.0% in Q4, 2017 (-4.23 percentage points quarterly, P<0.001). The unsafe prescribing of RAS blockers and long-acting benzodiazepines was relatively low in Q1, 2014 (1.0% and 1.1%, respectively) and did not decrease further after the RDU policy. The unsafe prescribing of NSAIDs was 4.2% in Q1, 2014, increased abruptly one quarter after the policy and decreased afterwards. The RDU policy seemed to be a contributing factor that decreased the unsafe prescribing of glibenclamide, while the policy effect was minimal for the other indicators.

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