Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine the influence on drug expenditures by reformed primary care services of factors relative to the personal characteristics of prescribers, their training and training activities, their professional practice, organizational factors, and characteristics of the patient population attended. Material and methodsThis cross-sectional, observational study was carried out in the Sabadell Primary Care Directorate, Vallés Occidental region (Barcelona, Spain). This primary care directorate is responsible for the health-care needs of 9 municipalities (with a total population of 254,971 inhabitants). It has 12 Basic Health Areas, 8 of which have Primary Care Teams. The area of study included these 8 primary care teams and the unit of analysis contained 68 of 80 staff physicians.The quantitative prescription indicators (dependent variables) were: total annual drug expenditure, drug expenditure per user and year (users being understood as patients with an open medical record), drug expenditure per visit and year, mean cost per prescription, prescription/user ratio, and prescription/visit ratio.Descriptive, bivariate, and multiple linear regression analyses were made. ResultsThe variables predictive of greater drug expenditures were: patient age, visits, frequentation, referrals to primarycare specialists, urban municipality, physicians with primary care and hospital practice, time on staff, and physician age. Participation in training activities was predictive of drug savings, with each primary-care training session attended producing a mean annual savings in drug expenditures of 50 ptas and 15 ptas per user and visit, respectively. Every hour dedicated to training in the community produced a savings of almost 60,000 ptas in annual drug expeditures. For each rational-druguse session, the mean price of prescriptions decreased by 52 ptas. In the multiple linear regression models obtained, the variables that most frequently helped to explain variations between prescribers in relation to drug expenditures were: patient age, urban municipality, and primary-care-team training activities (as factors in drug savings). ConclusionsThis study confirmed that patient age, frequentation, and type of municipality increased drug expenditures. Urban municipalities, as opposed to rural or semirural municipalities, were associated with a significantly greater expense, in contrast with prevailing opinion. Our results suggested that drug expenditures increase with referrals to specialists. An interesting new finding is that physicians with simultaneous primary care and hospital practice generated more drug expenditures. Finally, we emphasize the importance of training the primary-care team in promoting drug savings (four models: drug expenditures by users, drug expenditures per visit, prescriptions per user, and prescriptions per visit), rational-druguse activities, which tended to reduce the mean cost of prescriptions, and community training activities, which clearly reduced annual total drug expenditures.

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.