N. Donnelly et al., Impact of increasing the re-supply interval on the seasonality of subsidised prescription use in Australia, AUS NZ J PU, 24(6), 2000, pp. 603-606
Citations number
10
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science
Journal title
AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Objective: To evaluate the impact of increasing the minimum resupply period
for prescriptions on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) in November
1994. The intervention was designed to reduce the stockpiling of medicines
used for chronic medical conditions under the PBS safety net.
Methods: Interrupted times series regression analyses were performed on 114
months of PBS drug utilisation data from January 1991 to June 2000. These
analyses assessed whether there had been a significant interaction between
the onset of the intervention in November 1994 and the extreme levels of dr
ug utilisation in the months of December (peak utilisation) and January (lo
west utilisation) respectively. Both serial and 12-month lag autocorrelatio
ns were controlled for.
Results: The onset of the intervention was associated with a significant re
duction in the December peak in drug utilisation; after the introduction of
the policy there were 1,150,196 fewer proscriptions on average or that mon
th (95% Cl 708,333-1,592,059). There was, however, no significant change in
the low level of utilisation in January. The effect of the policy appears
to be decreasing across successive postintervention years. though the odds
of a prescription being dispensed in December remained significantly lower
in 1999 compared to each of the pre-intervention years (11% vs. 14%)
Conclusion: Analysis of the impact of increasing the re-supply period for P
BS prescriptions showed that the magnitude of peak utilisation in December
had been markedly reduced by the policy, though this effect appears to be d
ecreasing over time. Continued monitoring and policy review is warranted in
order to ensure that the initial effect of the intervention be maintained.