Abstract

BackgroundSichuan Province is an agricultural and economically developing province in western China. To understand practices of prescribing medications for outpatients in rural township health centers is important for the development of the rural medical and health services in this province and western China.MethodsThis is an observational study based on data from the 4th National Health Services Survey of China. A total of 3,059 prescriptions from 30 township health centers in Sichuan Province were collected and analyzed. Seven indicators were employed in the analyses to characterize the prescription practices. They are disease distribution, average cost per encounter, number of medications per encounter, percentage of encounters with antibiotics, percentage of encounters with glucocorticoids, percentage of encounters with combined glucocorticoids and antibiotics, and percentage of encounters with injections.ResultsThe average medication cost per encounter was 16.30 Yuan ($2.59). About 60% of the prescriptions contained Chinese patent medicine (CPM), and almost all prescriptions (98.07%) contained western medicine. 85.18% of the prescriptions contained antibiotics, of which, 24.98% contained two or more types of antibiotics; the percentage of prescriptions with glucocorticoids was 19.99%; the percentage of prescriptions with both glucocorticoids and antibiotics was 16.67%; 51.40% of the prescriptions included injections, of which, 39.90% included two or more injections.ConclusionsThe findings from this study demonstrated irrational medication uses of antibiotics, glucocorticoids and injections prescribed for outpatients in the rural township health centers in Sichuan Province. The reasons for irrational medication uses are not only solely due to the pursuit of maximizing benefits in the township health centers, but also more likely attributable to the lack of medical knowledge of rational medication uses among rural doctors and the lack of medical devices for disease diagnosis in those township health centers. The policy implication from this study is to enhance professional training in rational medication uses for rural doctors, improve hardware facilities for township health centers, promote health education to rural residents and establish a public reporting system to monitor prescription practices in rural township health centers, etc.

Highlights

  • Sichuan Province is an agricultural and economically developing province in western China

  • It consists of village clinics, township health centers (THCs), and county hospitals

  • The THCs play an important role in the national health services system for controlling infectious diseases, improving the quality of health services and guaranteeing people’s health in rural areas of China, and were regarded as one of the “three magic weapons (Rural Cooperative Medical Schemes, barefoot doctors and township health centers)” of the rural health services of China by WHO [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Sichuan Province is an agricultural and economically developing province in western China. The three-tier network is composed of community health service centers, district hospitals, and city hospitals In rural areas, it consists of village clinics, township health centers (THCs), and county hospitals. In 2001, a new policy, titled “The Guidelines on Rural Health Sector Reform and Development” and promulgated by the central government (State Council 2001), emphasized that each township should have the ownership of one health center supported by the local government. This policy gives the THCs government-owned status with responsibility of providing basic health services for hundreds of millions of rural residents. The THCs play an important role in the national health services system for controlling infectious diseases, improving the quality of health services and guaranteeing people’s health in rural areas of China, and were regarded as one of the “three magic weapons (Rural Cooperative Medical Schemes, barefoot doctors and township health centers)” of the rural health services of China by WHO [3]

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