Publication | Open Access
Effectiveness of three interventions on primary care physicians' medication prescribing in Riyadh city, Saudi Arabia
15
Citations
22
References
2011
Year
Family MedicinePrimary Care PhysiciansSaudi ArabiaMedication PrescribingQuality PrescribingPharmacotherapyPrimary CarePreventive MedicinePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchPharmaceutical EducationHealth PolicyOutcomes ResearchPharmacoeconomicsPrimary Health CareIntervention StrategiesPharmacoepidemiologyDrug PrescribingMedicineRational Drug Prescribing
A number of strategies have been shown to improve the quality of drug prescriptions. The objective of this study was to implement and assess the effectiveness of 3 interventions on physicians' prescribing and cost containment: training physicians about quality prescribing; regulatory and administrative measures to improve rational drug prescribing; and a multi-faceted approach using 2 these strategies plus additional elements. Three public health centres, 1 for each intervention, were randomly selected; 61 physicians were trained in drug prescribing and completed a pre- and post-training questionnaire; and 100 post-intervention prescriptions from each centre were compared. All 3 interventions effectively improved the quality of drug prescriptions and the notation of drug-related information and trainees returned positive evaluations of the training course. Whether or not physicians' improvement in prescribing will be sustained is unclear and therefore subsequent follow-up evaluations are needed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1