Abstract

The current study examined response forms returned by physicians in response to a Medicaid retrospective therapeutic intervention on the long-term use of sedatives. The educational intervention was designed to notify physicians about their patients' long-term use of sedatives and suggest that they reevaluate the patient's need for sedative hypnotic medication and decrease or discontinue prescribing the medication and/or suggest non-pharmacological alternatives if deemed appropriate. Forty=seven percent of physicians responded to the educational intervention. Nineteen percent of responding physicians planned to change the patient's medication in some way. The most common planned change was to decrease the dose. Physicians also stated that they would recommend one or more non-pharmacological alternatives to 17% of patients. Thirty-eight percent of physicians planned to monitor and/or counsel the patient. Over 40% of physicians reported planning no action after receiving the intervention. Twenty-six percent of physicians planned no action because of patient demand for the sedatives. The study concludes that physicians need to be better trained on how to: (1) discuss non-pharmacological treatments with patients and (2) deal with and respond to patients who demand controlled substances.

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