4 results on '"Badyal, Dinesh Kumar"'
Search Results
2. Authors' response.
- Author
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Shetty Y, Kamat S, Tripathi R, Parmar U, Jhaj R, Banerjee A, Balakrishnan S, Trivedi N, Chauhan J, Chugh PK, Tripathi CD, Badyal DK, Solomon L, Kaushal S, Gupta K, Jayanthi M, Jeevitha G, Chatterjee S, Samanta K, Desai C, Shah S, Medhi B, Joshi R, Prakash A, Gupta P, Roy A, Chandy S, Ranjalkar J, Bright HR, Dikshit H, Mishra H, Roy SS, and Kshirsagar N
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Evaluation of prescriptions from tertiary care hospitals across India for deviations from treatment guidelines & their potential consequences.
- Author
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Shetty Y, Kamat S, Tripathi R, Parmar U, Jhaj R, Banerjee A, Balakrishnan S, Trivedi N, Chauhan J, Chugh PK, Tripathi CD, Badyal DK, Solomon L, Kaushal S, Gupta K, Jayanthi M, Jeevitha G, Chatterjee S, Samanta K, Desai C, Shah S, Medhi B, Joshi R, Prakash A, Gupta P, Roy A, Chandy S, Ranjalkar J, Bright HR, Dikshit H, Mishra H, Roy SS, and Kshirsagar N
- Subjects
- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Tertiary Care Centers, India epidemiology, Anti-Bacterial Agents adverse effects, Drug Prescriptions, Prescriptions, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
- Abstract
Background Objectives: Irrational prescribing practices have major consequences on patient safety and also increase the economic burden. Real-life examples of impact of irrational prescription have potential to improve prescribing practices. In this context, the present study aimed to capture and evaluate the prevalence of deviations from treatment guidelines in the prescriptions, potential consequence/s of the deviations and corrective actions recommended by clinicians., Methods: It was a cross-sectional observational study conducted in the outpatient departments of tertiary care hospitals in India wherein the 13 Indian Council of Medical Research Rational Use of Medicines Centres are located. Prescriptions not compliant with the standard treatment guidelines and incomplete prescriptions with respect to formulation, dose, duration and frequency were labelled as 'prescriptions having deviations'. A deviation that could result in a drug interaction, lack of response, increased cost, preventable adverse drug reaction (ADR) and/or antimicrobial resistance was labelled as an 'unacceptable deviation'., Results: Against all the prescriptions assessed, about one tenth of them (475/4838; 9.8%) had unacceptable deviations. However, in 2667/4838 (55.1%) prescriptions, the clinicians had adhered to the treatment guidelines. Two thousand one hundred and seventy-one prescriptions had deviations, of which 475 (21.9%) had unacceptable deviations with pantoprazole (n=54), rabeprazole+domperidone (n=35) and oral enzyme preparations (n=24) as the most frequently prescribed drugs and upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) and hypertension as most common diseases with unacceptable deviations. The potential consequences of deviations were increase in cost (n=301), ADRs (n=254), drug interactions (n=81), lack of therapeutic response (n=77) and antimicrobial resistance (n=72). Major corrective actions proposed for consideration were issuance of an administrative order (n=196) and conducting online training programme (n=108)., Interpretation Conclusions: The overall prevalence of deviations found was 45 per cent of which unacceptable deviations was estimated to be 9.8 per cent. To minimize the deviations, clinicians recommended online training on rational prescribing and administrative directives as potential interventions., (Copyright © 2024 Copyright: © 2024 Indian Journal of Medical Research.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Impact of regulatory spin of pioglitazone on prescription of antidiabetic drugs among physicians in India: A multicentre questionnaire-based observational study.
- Author
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Goyal A, Singh H, Sehgal VK, Jayanthi CR, Munshi R, Bairy KL, Kumar R, Kaushal S, Kakkar AK, Ambwani S, Goyal C, Mazumdar G, Adhikari A, Das N, Stephy DJ, Thangaraju P, Dhasmana DC, Rehman SU, Chakrabarti A, Bhandare B, Badyal DK, Kaur I, Chandrashekar K, Singh J, Dhamija P, Sarangi SC, and Gupta YK
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Carcinoma chemically induced, Carcinoma epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 complications, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 drug therapy, Female, Humans, India epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Physicians psychology, Pioglitazone, Prescriptions standards, Surveys and Questionnaires, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms chemically induced, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 epidemiology, Hypoglycemic Agents adverse effects, Physicians ethics, Thiazolidinediones adverse effects
- Abstract
Background & Objectives: Pioglitazone was suspended for manufacture and sale by the Indian drug regulator in June 2013 due to its association with urinary bladder carcinoma, which was revoked within a short period (July 2013). The present questionnaire-based nationwide study was conducted to assess its impact on prescribing behaviour of physicians in India., Methods: Between December 2013 and March 2014, a validated questionnaire was administered to physicians practicing diabetes across 25 centres in India. Seven hundred and forty questionnaires fulfilling the minimum quality criteria were included in the final analysis., Results: Four hundred and sixteen (56.2%) physicians prescribed pioglitazone. Of these, 281 used it in less than the recommended dose of 15 mg/day. Most physicians (94.3%) were aware of recent regulatory events. However, only 333 (44.8%) changed their prescribing pattern. Seventeen of the 416 (4.1%) physicians who prescribed pioglitazone admitted having come across at least one type 2 diabetes mellitus patient (T2DM) who had urinary bladder carcinoma, and of these 13 said that it was in patients who took pioglitazone for a duration of more than two years. Only 7.8 per cent of physicians (n=58) categorically advocated banning pioglitazone, and the rest opined for its continuation or generating more evidence before decision could be taken regarding its use in T2DM., Interpretation & Conclusions: Majority of the physicians though were aware of the regulatory changes with regard to pioglitazone, but their prescribing patterns were not changed for this drug. However, it was being used at lower than the recommended dose. There is a need for generating more evidence through improved pharmacovigilance activities and large-scale population-based prospective studies regarding the safety issues of pioglitazone, so as to make effectual risk-benefit analysis for its continual use in T2DM., Competing Interests: None
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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