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Pharmacologically inappropriate prescriptions for elderly patients in general practice: How common? Baseline data from The Prescription Peer Academic Detailing (Rx-PAD) study. Scandinavian journal of primary health care [Scand J Prim Health Care] Journal article

 
Brekke M, Rognstad S, Straand J, Furu K, Gjelstad S, Bjørner T, Dalen I 
Pharmacologically inappropriate prescriptions for elderly patients in general practice: How common? Baseline data from The Prescription Peer Academic Detailing (Rx-PAD) study. [Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't]
Scand J Prim Health Care 2008 Jun; 26(2):80-5.


OBJECTIVE: To assess Norwegian general practitioners' (GPs') level of potentially harmful drug prescribing for elderly patients.
DESIGN: Prescription data for 12 months were retrospectively retrieved from the Norwegian Prescription Database (NorPD). Data were assessed in relation to 13 prescription quality indicators.
SETTING: General practice.
SUBJECTS: A total of 454 GPs attending continuous medical education (CME) groups in Southern Norway, 85,836 patients >or=70 years who received any prescription from the GPs during the study period.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Number of prescriptions assessed in relation to pharmacological inappropriateness based on a list of 13 explicit prescription quality indicators.
RESULTS: Some 18.4% of the patients (66% females with mean age 79.8 years, 34% males with mean age 78.7 years) received one or more inappropriate prescriptions from their GP. An NSAID in a potentially harmful combination with another drug (7%) and a long-acting benzodiazepine (4.6%) were the most frequent inappropriate prescriptions made. Doctor characteristics associated with more inappropriate prescribing practice were old age and working single-handed with many elderly patients.
CONCLUSION: The study reveals areas where GPs' prescribing practice for elderly patients can be improved and which can be targeted in educational interventions.



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