CHANGES IN DRUG PRESCRIBING UNDER THE PUBLIC-HEALTH REFORM LAW - A SURVEY OF GENERAL-PRACTITIONERS ATTITUDES IN EAST AND WEST-GERMANY

Citation
W. Himmel et al., CHANGES IN DRUG PRESCRIBING UNDER THE PUBLIC-HEALTH REFORM LAW - A SURVEY OF GENERAL-PRACTITIONERS ATTITUDES IN EAST AND WEST-GERMANY, International journal of clinical pharmacology and therapeutics, 35(4), 1997, pp. 164-169
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Pharmacology & Pharmacy
ISSN journal
09461965
Volume
35
Issue
4
Year of publication
1997
Pages
164 - 169
Database
ISI
SICI code
0946-1965(1997)35:4<164:CIDPUT>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
The aim of the study was to examine general practitioners' attitudes t owards drug prescribing in times of economic pressure, and to determin e the relevance of different factors for changed prescribing behavior. A random sample of general practitioners in Eastern Germany and in We stern Germany was surveyed, after the Public Health Reform Law, a budg etary initiative to reduce prescribing costs in Germany, had come into effect. Multiple logistic regression was performed to analyze the ass ociation between self-reported prescribing behavior and covariates (su ch as sex and age, level of certification, doctors' prescribing costs, criteria of prescribing, sources of drug information). Response rates had been 53.4% (n = 550) in Eastern Germany and 56.8% (n = 579) in We stern Germany respectively. About two thirds of the doctors (East: 60. 4%, West: 73%) believed that they had changed their prescribing behavi or under the new law. They used generic drugs more often (East: 29.5%, West: 52.3%) and often used more generic drugs (East: 29.5%, West: 52 .3%) and were less liberal in meeting patients' wishes (61.0% and 72.8 %, respectively). Doctors whose total prescribing costs were above the average of their colleagues, more frequently reported change in presc ribing behavior in response to the new law (OR: 3.11, 95% CI: 1.63, 5. 91 for Eastern doctors and OR: 5.90, 95% CI: 2.49, 13.98 for Western d octors). This was also true for doctors who considered the price of a drug to be a very important criterion for drug selection (OR: 4.34, 95 % CI: 2.69, 7.01 and OR: 3.23, 95% CI: 1.9, 5.49, respectively). ''Pri ce-oriented'' and ''cost-concerned'' doctors were also more likely to handle patient prescription wishes less liberal and to prescribe gener ic rather than original brand name drugs more often. We conclude that budgetary initiatives, such as the German Public Health Reform Law, se em to influence general practitioners towards a more economic prescrib ing behavior. Doctors concerned about their prescribing costs or about drug costs may be more responsive to such administrative regulations.