Study of drug prescription pattern and adverse drug reaction monitoring in patients with hypertension and diabetes visiting outpatient department in a government tertiary care hospital in Maharashtra, India

Authors

  • Rucha M. Shinde Insurance Medical Officer, ESIS, Nagpur, Maharashtra, India
  • Anand S. Kale Department of Pharmacology, S.R.T.R., Government Medical College, Ambajogai, Maharashtra, India
  • Mahadeo P. Sawant Department of Pharmacology, S.R.T.R., Government Medical College, Ambajogai, Maharashtra, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18203/2319-2003.ijbcp20192215

Keywords:

Defined daily dose, Drug utilization, Essential medicines, Generic drugs, Overdosing, Prescribed daily dose

Abstract

Background: Drug utilization study is an important tool to study the clinical use of drugs and its impact on healthcare system. DUS in patients with HTN and DM is essential to observe the changing prescribing attitude of physicians with the aim to promote rational use of drugs and to minimize the adverse drug reactions.

Methods: A cross sectional observational study was conducted on randomly selected patients attending medicine outpatient department in a tertiary care hospital. Drug prescription sheets of 600 patients were studied for 18 months from January 2016 to June 2017 and the prescribing pattern was analysed using the World Health Organization basic drug indicators.

Results: Total 2029 drugs were prescribed to 600 patients that belonged to various classes. The average number of drugs prescribed per encounter was 3.4. Majority (61.5%) drugs were prescribed using generic names. Percentage encounters with the antibiotics and injections were 6.3 and 11.5 per cent respectively. 38% drugs were prescribed from the 20th edition of WHO Model List of Essential Medicines. PDD in the current study was found to be significantly less than WHO DDD in all drugs. All of the prescriptions in the present study conformed to WHO guidelines and majority of them with JNC VIII guidelines.

Conclusions: The findings of this study are comparable to those of other studies. However, there is a scope of improvement in areas such as overdosing, prescribing more by generic names instead of brand names and from WHO Model List of Essential Medicines.

References

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Published

2019-05-23

How to Cite

Shinde, R. M., Kale, A. S., & Sawant, M. P. (2019). Study of drug prescription pattern and adverse drug reaction monitoring in patients with hypertension and diabetes visiting outpatient department in a government tertiary care hospital in Maharashtra, India. International Journal of Basic & Clinical Pharmacology, 8(6), 1430–1436. https://doi.org/10.18203/2319-2003.ijbcp20192215

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Original Research Articles