Literature DB >> 16266650

[Efficacy of educational sessions to modify the prescription of new drugs].

T Molina López1, J C Domínguez Camacho, J M Santos Lozano, A Carbonell Carrillo, J Sánchez Acevedo, M L Paz León.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy of an educational intervention to minimise the prescription of those new medicines whose therapeutic effects are of little benefit.
DESIGN: Controlled and randomised experimental study.
SETTING: 27 health centres in the province of Sevilla, Spain. PARTICIPANTS: 376 general practitioners. The 264 who worked in the same posts were randomised for the 6 pre-intervention months. 10 of them did not complete the post-intervention period.
INTERVENTIONS: Four 45-minute training sessions in a 2-month period, given by health team doctors, with a critical reading of the studies available on recently marketed drugs, plus personal feed-back on prescription and bulletins on therapeutic novelties. The control group received only the feed-back and bulletins. MAIN MEASUREMENTS: Prescription of new medication of little benefit, measured as the number of packages out of the total. Second, the amount of coxib and eprosartan measured as defined daily doses.
RESULTS: In the 6 months after the educational sessions, the doctors in the intervention group prescribed proportionately fewer therapeutic novelties of little benefit than those allocated to the control group (1.34% vs 1.62%; P<.001). The coxib and eprosartan prescribed showed only a non-significant trend towards less prescription by the intervention group.
CONCLUSIONS: The group educational sessions, run by doctors trained in aspects of evidence-based medicine and prepared jointly with the pharmacy unit, reduced discreetly the prescription of new medicines that were not very innovative.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16266650     DOI: 10.1157/13080299

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Aten Primaria        ISSN: 0212-6567            Impact factor:   1.137


  4 in total

Review 1.  Continuing education meetings and workshops: effects on professional practice and healthcare outcomes.

Authors:  Louise Forsetlund; Mary Ann O'Brien; Lisa Forsén; Liv Merete Reinar; Mbah P Okwen; Tanya Horsley; Christopher J Rose
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2021-09-15

Review 2.  Continuing education meetings and workshops: effects on professional practice and health care outcomes.

Authors:  Louise Forsetlund; Arild Bjørndal; Arash Rashidian; Gro Jamtvedt; Mary Ann O'Brien; Fredric Wolf; Dave Davis; Jan Odgaard-Jensen; Andrew D Oxman
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2009-04-15

3.  [Quasi-experimental study of an intervention on the pharmacological management of non-oncological chronic pain in Primary Care].

Authors:  Juan Antonio García Vicente; Cristina Vedia Urgell; Roser Vallès Fernández; Dolores Reina Rodríguez; Sara Rodoreda Noguerola; Daniel Samper Bernal
Journal:  Aten Primaria       Date:  2019-11-11       Impact factor: 1.137

4.  [Effectiveness of an intervention strategy in the biosimilar glargine prescription pattern in primary care].

Authors:  Carmen Saborido-Cansino; Bernardo Santos-Ramos; Carmen Carmona-Saucedo; María Victoria Rodríguez-Romero; Antonio González-Martín; Ana Palma-Amaro; Isabel María Rojas-Lucena; Carmen Almeida-González; Susana Sánchez-Fidalgo
Journal:  Aten Primaria       Date:  2018-05-31       Impact factor: 1.137

  4 in total

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