1. Pharmacy switch of antipsychotic medications: patient's perspective.
- Author
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Murawiec, Slawomir, Rajewska‑Rager, Aleksandra, Samochowiec, Jerzy, Kalinowska, Sylwia, Kurpisz, Jacek, Krzyzanowska, Joanna, Sienkiewicz‑Jarosz, Halina, Kurkowska‑Jastrzebska, Iwona, Samochowiec, Agnieszka, and Bienkowski, Przemyslaw
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ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents , *DRUGS , *GENERIC drugs , *PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY , *RESEARCH funding , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *PATIENTS' attitudes ,DRUG therapy for schizophrenia - Abstract
Background and aim: Several studies have raised concerns over consequences of brand-to-generic and generic-togeneric pharmacy-generated medication substitutions in psychiatric and non-psychiatric patients. The purpose of this retrospective study was to assess behavioral and emotional responses of patients with schizophrenia to antipsychotic medication substitution performed by pharmacies. Methods: A group of Polish ambulatory patients with schizophrenia (n = 196) chronically treated with antipsychotic medications were asked whether antipsychotic medication substitution had been proposed by a pharmacist in the last 12 months. Ninety-nine patients answering positively were administered more questions addressing the patient's emotional and behavioral response to the pharmacy proposal. Results: The most important findings of the present study can be summarized as follows: (1) approximately half of the patients were confronted with a pharmacy proposal to switch their antipsychotic medications in the last 12 months, (2) one quarter of these patients did not accept the pharmacy switch, (3) a substantial proportion of patients (>40 %) did not receive any explanation from a pharmacist offering medication substitution, (4) pharmacygenerated substitution proposals were mainly associated with negative patient attitudes and negative emotional responses, (5) substitution proposals provoked an unscheduled psychiatric visit in approx. 10 % of patients, (6) despite the negative attitudes reported by patients, the pharmacy switch rarely led to treatment discontinuation, but did provoke a change in drug dosing in 7 % of patients accepting the switch. Conclusions: A pharmacy proposal to switch their antipsychotic medications is a relatively common experience of Polish ambulatory patients with schizophrenia. Pharmacy-generated substitution proposals are mainly associated with negative patient attitudes, but rarely lead to antipsychotic treatment discontinuation in this group of patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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