Anagaw Yeniewa Kerie, Limenh Liknaw Workie, Geremew Derso Teju, Worku Minichil Chanie, Dessie Misganaw Gashaw, Tessema Tewodros Ayalew, Demelash Teshome Bitew, Ayenew Wondim
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, School of Pharmacy, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Gondar, Gondar, Ethiopia.
Department of Pharmaceutics, School of Pharmacy, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Gondar, Gondar, Ethiopia.
J Pharm Policy Pract. 2023 Oct 20;16(1):124. doi: 10.1186/s40545-023-00607-3.
Healthcare systems in both developing and developed countries were not free from prescription errors. One of the effects of prescription errors is irrational prescribing. According to the estimation of the World Health Organization (WHO), greater than 50% of medicines are prescribed and dispensed irrationally. On the other hand, research on drug use patterns in the private healthcare sector is scarce. This study aimed to assess prescription Completeness and Drug use Pattern using WHO prescribing indicators in Private Community Pharmacies in Lemi-Kura sub-city.
Based on the WHO prescribing indicators, a retrospective cross-sectional technique was employed to examine the completeness and drug-prescription patterns. The study was conducted from April to May 2021. Prescriptions, kept for 1 year that was prescribed from March 2020 to March 2021, by private healthcare sectors, were analyzed. A systematic random sampling technique was employed to select prescriptions obtained from private health facilities. Data were analyzed using SPSS version 26.0 software.
Of a total of 1000 prescriptions, 1770 drugs were prescribed and the average number of drugs per prescription was 1.77. Prescriptions for two drugs account for 38% of these, while prescriptions for three drugs account for 15%. Age, sex, and card number were written on 99.0%, 99.2%, and 41.8% of prescriptions, respectively. The patient's name was written on every prescription. Even though the availability of other therapeutic information on the prescription made it appear greater, only 44.2% of prescriptions included the dosage form of medications. The generic name was used for the majority of the medications (67.8%). Furthermore, assuming that each prescription was for a single patient, 71% of patients received antibiotics, and 2% received injectable medicines. The National List of Essential Medicines-Ethiopia was used in 99.6% of the prescriptions.
On the basis of the finding of this study, the prescribing and prescription completeness indicator showed deviation from the standard recommended by WHO. This situation could be critical since a similar pattern is reported from public healthcare sectors, which might imply the extent of non-adherence to WHO core drug use standards. Consequently, it could play a considerable role in increasing prescription errors in Ethiopia. Hence, in-service training for prescribers should be provided to improve adherence to basic prescription writing.
发展中国家和发达国家的医疗保健系统都存在处方错误。处方错误的影响之一是不合理用药。据世界卫生组织(WHO)估计,超过50%的药物在处方和配药时存在不合理情况。另一方面,关于私立医疗保健部门药物使用模式的研究较少。本研究旨在使用WHO处方指标评估莱米-库拉次市私立社区药房的处方完整性和药物使用模式。
基于WHO处方指标,采用回顾性横断面技术来检查完整性和药物处方模式。该研究于2021年4月至5月进行。分析了私立医疗保健部门在2020年3月至2021年3月开具的保存了1年的处方。采用系统随机抽样技术从私立卫生机构中选取处方。使用SPSS 26.0软件进行数据分析。
在总共1000份处方中,共开出了1770种药物,每份处方的平均药物数量为1.77种。两种药物的处方占这些处方的38%,而三种药物的处方占15%。年龄、性别和卡号分别出现在99.0%、99.2%和41.8%的处方上。每份处方上都写有患者姓名。尽管处方上其他治疗信息的存在使其看起来比例更高,但只有44.2%的处方包含药物剂型。大多数药物(67.8%)使用的是通用名。此外,假设每份处方针对一名患者,71%的患者接受了抗生素治疗,2%的患者接受了注射用药物治疗。99.6%的处方使用了《埃塞俄比亚基本药物清单》。
根据本研究的结果,处方和处方完整性指标显示偏离了WHO推荐的标准。这种情况可能很严重,因为公共医疗保健部门也报告了类似模式,这可能意味着未遵守WHO核心药物使用标准的程度。因此,这可能在增加埃塞俄比亚的处方错误方面发挥相当大的作用。因此,应该为开处方者提供在职培训,以提高对基本处方书写的遵守情况。