Electronic Notifications about Drug Substitutes Can Change Physician Prescription Habits: A Cross-Sectional Observational Study

Allon Zuker, Tsipi Heart, Y. Parmet, N. Pliskin, J. Pliskin
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

A health maintenance organization (HMO) provides physicians with electronic notifications regarding HMO-recommended drug substitutes. Objective: Investigating factors affecting physicians' compliance and evaluating associated cost savings. Design: A cross-sectional observational study of all physicians in the HMO's clinics from June 2005 to February 2006. Setting: Recording physician ID, initial drug choice, final drug choice, elapsed time between initial and final choices, and pharmacological details. Participants: Out of 2120 physicians, 647 physicians met the inclusion criteria. They prescribed 1.21 million prescriptions. Intervention: Transparently recording physicians’ response to HMO-recommended drug substitutes within a drug-prescription sub-system of an electronic medical record. Measurements: Compliance pattern, factors affecting compliance, and cost savings associated with compliance. Results: Thirty percent of prescriptions did not comply with substitute recommendations. Compliance was most strongly affected by the substitute type, whether generic or therapeutic. Physician workload and age were found second and third in effect magnitude. Compliance was found to be non-automatic, selective and deliberate, suggesting that maintaining quality of care guides physicians in the prescription process. At least 4% of costs for prescribed drugs were saved as a result of compliance with substitute recommendations. Conclusions: Physicians selectively complied with electronic recommendations to substitute less costly for more costly drugs. Compliance was neither automatic nor thoughtless and entailed cost containment with possibly marginal compromise on quality of care or none at all, as compliance mostly involved substituting generic for patent drugs. We strongly feel that the results can be generalized to other HMOs as well.
健康维护组织(HMO)向医生提供关于HMO推荐的药物替代品的电子通知。目的:调查影响医生依从性的因素并评估相关的成本节约。设计:从2005年6月至2006年2月对HMO诊所的所有医生进行横断面观察研究。设置:记录医生ID、初始药物选择、最终药物选择、初始和最终选择之间的时间间隔以及药理学细节。参与者:在2120名医生中,647名医生符合纳入标准。他们开了121万张处方。干预措施:在电子病历的药物处方子系统中透明地记录医生对hmo推荐的药物替代品的反应。度量:法规遵循模式、影响法规遵循的因素,以及与法规遵循相关的成本节约。结果:30%的处方不符合替代建议。依从性受替代类型的影响最大,无论是通用型还是治疗型。医生工作量和年龄在影响程度上分别排在第二和第三位。依从性被发现是非自动的,选择性的和故意的,这表明保持护理质量指导医生在处方过程中。由于遵守替代建议,至少节省了4%的处方药费用。结论:医生有选择地遵守电子建议,以更便宜的药物替代更昂贵的药物。遵守规定既不是自动的,也不是轻率的,需要控制成本,可能在护理质量上做出微小的妥协,或者根本不妥协,因为遵守规定主要是用仿制药代替专利药。我们强烈地认为,这些结果也可以推广到其他hmo。
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