Literature DB >> 30054889

Time to Filling of New Prescriptions for Chronic Disease Medications Among a Cohort of Elderly Patients in the USA.

Jessica M Franklin1, Mufaddal Mahesri2, Alexis A Krumme2, Julie Barberio2, Michael A Fischer2, Gregory Brill2, Caroline McKay3, Heather Black3, Niteesh K Choudhry2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Data on primary nonadherence remains sparse, due to a lack of data resources that combine information on medication prescribing and dispensing. In addition, previous work on primary nonadherence has used follow-up periods ranging from 30 days up to 18 months, making results difficult to compare.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the prevalence and predictors of primary nonadherence by measuring time until filling in a cohort of elderly patients.
DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study of new prescription episodes. PATIENTS: Data comes from a linked database of electronic health records and claims for patients aged ≥ 65 years enrolled in Medicare Parts A, B, and D during 2007-2014. We identified patients receiving a new prescription for a chronic disease medication with continuous Medicare enrollment for 180 days prior to the index prescription order and no fills or orders for the medication during this period. MAIN MEASURES: Time until filling of the index prescription for up to 1 year. KEY
RESULTS: In 32,586 new medication orders, the majority (75%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 74-75%) of new prescriptions were filled within 7 days, 81% (81-82%) were filled within 30 days, and 91% (91-92%) were filled within 1 year. The rate and timing of dispensing were similar across therapeutic areas. Timing of initial filling within 7 days or within 30 days could be predicted with moderate accuracy (C-statistics = 0.70-0.74). Patients with > 5 current medications on hand at the time of the index prescription and average out-of-pocket medication costs < $5 filled 89% of prescriptions within 7 days. Patients with no current medications and out-of-pocket costs > $50 filled only 25% of prescriptions within 7 days.
CONCLUSIONS: Nearly 20% of patients do not fill a new chronic disease prescription within 30 days. Patients with fewer recent fills and higher out-of-pocket costs are at higher risk of primary nonadherence.

Entities:  

Keywords:  electronic health records; health insurance claims; lasso; prediction; primary nonadherence

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30054889      PMCID: PMC6206334          DOI: 10.1007/s11606-018-4592-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gen Intern Med        ISSN: 0884-8734            Impact factor:   5.128


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1.  Capsule Commentary on Franklin et al., Time to Filling of New Prescriptions for Chronic Disease Medications Among a Cohort of Elderly Patients in the USA.

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