Beran Mary Sue, Laouri Marianne, Suttorp Marika, Brook Robert
Park Nicollet Institute, Health Research Center, Minneapolis, MN 55416, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2007 Jan;55(1):102-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2006.01011.x.
To determine how often primary care physicians discuss medication costs with their senior patients and what cost-reducing strategies they employ.
Cross-sectional, random-sample mail questionnaire.
State of California.
Six hundred seventy-eight of 1,098 (62%) internal medicine and family practice physicians selected from the American Medical Association Masterfile.
Main outcomes included frequency of cost discussions with senior patients in the previous 30 days and choice of cost-reducing strategy when a senior expresses financial difficulty with medication costs.
Forty-three percent of physicians reported discussing medication cost with at least half of their senior patients in the previous 30 days. Patients initiated most of these discussions. Forty percent reported that, at least one time in the previous 30 days, they had not discussed cost but wished they had. The most common reason given was "I ran out of time" (36%). Physicians with high perceived knowledge of medication costs were more likely to discuss cost (odds ratio (OR)=3.49, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.66-7.3) versus low perceived knowledge, but this trend was not seen in physicians who scored high on actual knowledge of medication costs (OR=0.78, 95% CI=0.43-1.43) versus low actual knowledge. The most common cost-reducing strategies were generic substitution (33%) and offering samples (25%).
The frequency of medication cost discussions between physicians and senior patients is low, and when it occurs, is often initiated by patients. Physicians' perception of their knowledge of medication costs may be an important factor in initiating cost discussions.
确定基层医疗医生与老年患者讨论药物费用的频率,以及他们采用的降低费用策略。
横断面随机抽样邮寄问卷调查。
加利福尼亚州。
从美国医学协会主档案中选取的1098名内科和家庭医生中的678名(62%)。
主要结果包括过去30天与老年患者讨论费用的频率,以及当老年患者表示药物费用有经济困难时所选择的降低费用策略。
43%的医生报告在过去30天里与至少一半的老年患者讨论过药物费用。这些讨论大多由患者发起。40%的医生报告说,在过去30天里至少有一次他们没有讨论费用,但希望自己讨论过。给出的最常见原因是“我没时间了”(36%)。与药物费用认知程度低的医生相比,自认为对药物费用了解程度高的医生更有可能讨论费用(优势比(OR)=3.49,95%置信区间(CI)=1.66 - 7.3),但在药物费用实际知识得分高的医生与得分低的医生相比时,未发现这种趋势(OR = 0.78,95% CI = 0.43 - 1.43)。最常见的降低费用策略是使用通用替代药物(33%)和提供样品(25%)。
医生与老年患者之间讨论药物费用的频率较低,且讨论通常由患者发起。医生对自身药物费用知识的认知可能是发起费用讨论的一个重要因素。