| Literature DB >> 31098566 |
Tessa Langley1, Julia Lacey2, Anthony Johnson2, Clive Newman2, Deepak Subramanian2, Milind Khare2, Rob Skelly2, Mark Norwood3, Nigel Sturrock3, Andrew W Fogarty1.
Abstract
Providing feedback on cost has been demonstrated to decrease drug demand from clinicians. We conducted a prospective study with a step-wise intervention to test the hypothesis that providing information on the cost of drugs to clinicians would modify total expenditure. Participants included individuals who were admitted to the Royal Derby Hospital from -November 2013 to November 2015 under the care of physicians. The cost of all antibiotics and inhaled corticosteroids was added to the electronic prescribing system. The main outcome was the weekly cost for antibiotics and inhaled corticosteroids in the intervention period compared to baseline costs. Mean weekly expenditure on antibiotics per patient decreased by £3.75 (95% confidence intervals [CI] -6.52 to -0.98) after the intervention from a pre-intervention mean of £26.44, and then slowly increased subsequently by £0.10/week (95% CI +0.02 to +0.18). Mean weekly expenditure on inhaled corticosteroids per patient did not substantially change after the intervention (-£0.03, 95% CI -0.06 to -0.01 after the intervention from a pre-intervention mean of £5.29 per person). New clinical guidelines for inhaled corticosteroids were associated with a decrease in weekly expenditure, but provision of feedback on drug costs resulted in no sustained change in institutional expenditure. However, clinical guidelines have the potential to modify clinical prescribing behaviour.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 31098566 PMCID: PMC6502609 DOI: 10.7861/futurehosp.5-3-198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Future Healthc J ISSN: 2514-6645