Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine and.
James L. Winkle College of Pharmacy, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Pediatrics. 2018 Apr;141(4). doi: 10.1542/peds.2017-3402. Epub 2018 Mar 16.
Variability in primary medication nonadherence (PMN), or failure to fill a new prescription, influences disparities and widens equity gaps. This study sought to evaluate PMN across 1 metropolitan area and assess relationships with underlying zip code-level measures.
This was a retrospective observational study using data extracted from 1 regional community pharmacy market-share leader (October 2016-April 2017). Data included patient age, sex, payer, medication type, and home zip code. This zip code was connected to US census measures enumerating poverty and vehicle access, which were treated as continuous variables and within quintiles. The prescription-level outcome was whether prescriptions were not filled within 30 days of reaching the pharmacy. The ecological-level outcome was PMN calculated for each zip code (numerator, unfilled prescriptions; denominator, received prescriptions).
There were 213 719 prescriptions received by 54 included pharmacies; 12.2% were unfilled. Older children, boys, and those with public insurance were more likely to have prescriptions not filled. Prescriptions originating from the highest poverty quintile were significantly more likely to not be filled than those from the lowest poverty quintile (adjusted odds ratio 1.60; 95% confidence interval 1.52-1.69); a similar pattern was noted for vehicle access (adjusted odds ratio 1.77; 95% confidence interval 1.68-1.87). At the ecological level, there were significant, graded relationships between PMN rates and poverty and vehicle access (both < .0001); these gradients extended across all medication classes.
Poverty and vehicle access are related to significant differences in prescription- and ecological-level PMN across 1 metropolitan area. Pharmacists and pharmacies can be key partners in population health efforts.
初级药物不依从(PMN),即未能开新处方,其变化会影响差异并扩大公平差距。本研究旨在评估一个大都市地区的 PMN,并评估其与潜在邮政编码水平措施的关系。
这是一项回顾性观察性研究,使用从 1 个区域社区药房市场份额领导者(2016 年 10 月至 2017 年 4 月)提取的数据。数据包括患者年龄、性别、付款人、药物类型和家庭邮政编码。该邮政编码与美国人口普查措施相关联,这些措施包括衡量贫困和车辆通行的情况,这些因素被视为连续变量并分为五分位数。处方水平的结果是处方在到达药房后 30 天内是否未被填写。生态水平的结果是为每个邮政编码计算的 PMN(分子为未填写的处方;分母为收到的处方)。
54 家参与药房共收到 213719 张处方;12.2%的处方未被填写。年龄较大的儿童、男孩和有公共保险的人更有可能有未填写的处方。来自贫困程度最高五分位数的处方比来自贫困程度最低五分位数的处方更有可能未被填写(调整后的优势比 1.60;95%置信区间 1.52-1.69);对于车辆通行情况也观察到类似的模式(调整后的优势比 1.77;95%置信区间 1.68-1.87)。在生态水平上,PMN 率与贫困和车辆通行之间存在显著的、分级关系(均<0.0001);这些梯度跨越了所有药物类别。
贫困和车辆通行与一个大都市地区的处方和生态水平 PMN 存在显著差异相关。药剂师和药房可以成为人口健康工作的重要合作伙伴。