| Literature DB >> 23533565 |
Xiao-Min Luo1, Jin-Ling Tang, Yong-Hua Hu, Li-Ming Li, Yan-Ling Wang, Wei-Zhong Wang, Li Yang, Xiao-hui Ouyang, Guang-cai Duan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization reported in 2011 that irrational use of medicines was a serious global problem that is wasteful and harmful. The worst is use of ineffective or harmful interventions which should not be used at all. However, little is known about the changes that 20 years of evidence-based medicine has made particularly in reducing use of ineffective interventions. We surveyed clinicians in China to show how often ineffective interventions were still used in practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23533565 PMCID: PMC3606390 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0052159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of all 6,272 Surveyed Clinicians.
| Characteristics | Field Survey (n = 3246) | Online Survey (n = 3026) | Total (n = 6272) |
| Data below are either nnumber (%) or Mean±SD | |||
| Males | n = 3,179 | n = 2,951 | n = 6,130 |
| 1,780(56.0) | 2,302(78.0) | 4,082(66.6) | |
| Age (years) | 37.9±9.9 | 32.1±6.6 | 34.8±8.8 |
| Years of clinical working experience | 12.0±9.7 | 8.9±7.2 | 10.5±8.7 |
| Medical education | n = 3,156 | n = 3,026 | n = 6,182 |
| PhD or MD | 167(5.3) | 268(8.9) | 435(7.0) |
| Master degree | 895(28.4) | 898(29.7) | 1793(29.0) |
| MB | 1,756(55.6) | 1,373(45.4) | 3,129(50.6) |
| Educations below MB | 338(10.7) | 487(16.1) | 825(13.3) |
| Professional title | n = 3,195 | n = 3,026 | n = 6,221 |
| Chief clinicians ( = consultant) | 502(15.7) | 121(4.0) | 623(10.0) |
| Associate chief clinicians | 660(20.7) | 426(14.1) | 1,086(17.5) |
| Attending clinicians | 993(31.1) | 1,129(37.3) | 2,122(34.1) |
| Residents | 1,040(32.6) | 1,350(44.6) | 2,390(38.4) |
| Level of hospital | n = 3,178 | n = 3,026 | n = 6,204 |
| Level 3 (highest) | 2,624(82.6) | 1,556(51.4) | 4,180(67.4) |
| Level 2 | 457(14.4) | 1,053(30.8) | 1,510(24.3) |
| Level 1 | 73(2.2) | 417(13.8) | 490(7.9) |
| Others (unclassifiable: lowest) | 24(0.7) | 0(0.0) | 24(0.4) |
| Location of hospital | n = 3,191 | n = 3,026 | n = 6,217 |
| Municipality (e.g. Beijing) | N/A | 390(12.9) | 390(6.3) |
| Capital city of a province | 2,562(80.3) | 727(24.0) | 3,289(52.9) |
| Capital city of a prefecture | 312(9.8) | 1,005(33.2) | 1317(21.2) |
| City of a county, town or below | 317(9.9) | 904(29.9) | 1,221(19.6) |
Prescription rate by clinicians (%), frequency of use in patients (%) and their relative reduction: a summary for all 129 ineffective interventions and 68 effective interventions in 6,272 clinicians.
| Summary Indexes | Prescription rate by clinicians (%) | Frequency of use in patients (%) | |||||||
| Ineffective Interventions (PIT* = 53,268)a | Effective Interventions (PIT = 27,465)b | AR-PR*c = b-a | RR-PR*d = (b-a)/b (%) | Ineffective Interventions (PIT = 53,268)e | Effective Interventions (PIT = 27,465)f | AR-PU*g = f-e | RR-PU*h = (f-e)/f (%) | ||
| Weighted Mean±SE | 58.1±2.2 | 78.0±2.6 | 19.9±0.5 | 25.5±0.4 | 31.4±1.8 | 52.5±3.0 | 21.1±0.7 | 40.2±0.1 | |
| Simple Mean±SE | 59.0±0.2 | 81.0±0.2 | 22.0±0.3 | 27.2±0.1 | 31.2±0.2 | 56.4±0.2 | 25.2±0.7 | 44.7±0.2 | |
| Percentiles | 25th | 37 | 69.5 | 32.5 | 46.8 | 12.2 | 31 | 18.8 | 60.6 |
| Median | 63 | 86.5 | 23.5 | 27.2 | 27.4 | 49.7 | 22.3 | 44.9 | |
| 75th | 80 | 95.0 | 15.0 | 15.8 | 42.5 | 71.4 | 28.9 | 40.5 | |
Notes: PIT = clinician-intervention times; AR-PR = absolute reduction in prescription rate; RR-PR = relative reduction in prescription rate; AR-PU = absolute reduction in frequency of use in patients; RR-PU = relative reduction in frequency of use in patients.
Figure 1Relative reduction in use of ineffective interventions in the 17 departments.
Number and percentage of interventions according to the four different patterns of use defined based on the frequency of use in patients.
| Category | Ineffective interventions Total n = 128 | Effective interventions Total n = 67 | Relative Frequency (95% CI) |
| (1) Skewed to the left: rarely used | 82 (64.1%) | 19 (28.4%) | 2.26(1.27–4.04) |
| (2) Skewed to the right: always used | 11 (8.6%) | 27 (40.3%) | 0.21 (0.10–0.45) |
| (3) U-Shaped: practice sharply divided | 7 (5.5%) | 3 (4.5%) | 1.22 (0.31–4.87) |
| (4) Uniformly distributed: no clear consensus | 28 (21.9%) | 18 (26.9%) | 0.81(0.42–1.57) |
Notes: one intervention with less than 15clinicians available was excluded from both the effective interventions and ineffective interventions.
Figure 2Examples of the four patterns of the distribution of the frequency of using ineffective interventions in patients.
Panel A: Almost always used: Nitrates on top of thrombolysis in acute myocardial infarction to reduce the mortality; Panel B: Rarely used: Hormone replacement therapy in menopausal women for secondary prevention of cardiovascular events; Panel C: Use sharply divided: H pylori eradication in H pylori positive people with gastro-oesophageal reflux disease; Panel D: No consensus on use: Calcium channel blockers for secondary prevention of ischeamic cardiovascular events.
Multivariate regression analysis on factors which may be related to the frequency of patient's use of ineffective interventions: results of stepwise general linear regression.
| Effective interventions | Ineffective interventions | |||
| Odds ratio (95% CI) | P | Odds ratio (95% CI) | P | |
| 1. Male sex | 0.97 (0.91–1.04) | 0.452 | 0.85 (0.82–0.89) | <0.001 |
| 2. Less education | 0.92 (0.87–0.97) | 0.002 | 1.07 (1.03–1.10) | <0.001 |
| 3. Junior clinicians | 0.96 (0.90–1.01) | 0.129 | 1.06 (1.03–1.10) | <0.001 |
| 4. Lower level hospitals | 1.12 (1.05–1.19) | 0.001 | 1.10 (1.06–1.14) | <0.001 |
| 5. Age in years | 0.98 (0.98–0.99) | <0.001 | 0.98 (0.98–0.99) | <0.001 |
| 6. Years of clinical experience | 1.00 (0.99–1.01) | 0.567 | 1.01 (1.00–1.01) | 0.004 |