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Comparative Study
The impact of a general practice group intervention on prescribing costs and patterns.
- Jane Walker and Nigel Mathers.
- University of Sheffield, Institute of General Practice and Primary Care, Community Sciences Centre, Northern General Hospital.
- Br J Gen Pract. 2002 Mar 1; 52 (476): 181-6.
BackgroundThe formation of primary care groups (PCGs) and trusts (PCTs) has shifted the emphasis from individual practice initiatives to group-based efforts to control rising prescribing costs. However, there is a paucity of literature describing such group initiatives. We report the results of a multilevel group initiative, involving input from a pharmaceutical adviser, practice comparison feedback, and peer review meetings.AimTo determine the impact of a prescribing initiative on the prescribing patterns of a group of general practices.Design Of StudyA comparative study with non-matched controls.SettingNine semi-rural/rural practices forming a commissioning group pilot, later a PCG, in Southern Derbyshire with nine practices as controls.MethodPractice data were collated for overall prescribing and for therapeutic categories, between the years 1997/1998 and 1998/1999 and analysed statistically. Prescribing expenditure trends were also collated.ResultsAlthough both groups came well within their prescribing budgets, in the study group this was for the first time in five years. Their rate of increase in expenditure slowed significantly following the initiative compared with that of the comparison group, which continued to rise (median practice net ingredient cost/patient unit (nic/PU) increase: Pound Sterling0.69 and Pound Sterling3.80 respectively; P = 0.03). The study group's nic/PU dropped below, and stayed below, that of the comparison group one month after the start of the initiative. For most therapeutic categories the study group had lower increases in costs and higher increases in percentage of generic items than the comparison group. Quality markers were unaffected.ConclusionWe suggest that practices with diverse prescribing patterns can work together effectively within a PCT locality to control prescribing costs.
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