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Evaluation of prescriptions from tertiary care hospitals across India for deviations from treatment guidelines & their potential consequences.

Authors :
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
Kshirsagar N
Source :
The Indian journal of medical research [Indian J Med Res] 2024 Feb 01; Vol. 159 (2), pp. 130-141. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Apr 04.
Publication Year :
2024

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.<br />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'.<br />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).<br />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.<br /> (Copyright © 2024 Copyright: © 2024 Indian Journal of Medical Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0971-5916
Volume :
159
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Indian journal of medical research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38528817
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4103/ijmr.ijmr_2309_22