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- Usman Ahmad Raza, Tayyeba Khursheed, Muhammad Irfan, Maryam Abbas, and Uma Maheswari Irfan.
- Dr. Usman Ahmad Raza, MS, Assistant Professor in Community Health Sciences, Peshawar Medical College, Peshawar, Pakistan.
- Pak J Med Sci. 2014 May 1; 30 (3): 462-5.
ObjectivesTo find out prescription patterns of general practitioners in Peshawar.MethodsCross-sectional survey of drug prescriptions was done at six major hospitals and pharmacies of Peshawar between April and May 2011. A total of 1097 prescriptions that included 3640 drugs, were analyzed to assess completeness, average number of drugs, prescription frequency of various drug classes, and number of brands prescribed.ResultsNo prescription contained all essential components of a prescription. Legibility was poor in 58.5% prescriptions. Physician's name and registration number were not mentioned in 89% and 98.2% prescriptions respectively. Over 78% prescriptions did not have diagnosis or indication mentioned. Dosage, duration of use, signature of physician and directions for taking drugs were not written in 63.8%, 55.4%, 18.5% and 10.9% of prescriptions respectively. On average each prescription included 3.32 drugs. Most frequently prescribed drug classes included analgesics (61.7%), anti-infective agents (57.2%), multi-vitamins (37.8%) and gastrointestinal drugs (34.4%). We found 206, 130, 105 and 101 different brands of anti-infective agents, gastrointestinal drugs, analgesics and multivitamins being prescribed.ConclusionWe observed a high number of average drugs per prescription mostly using brand names, and over-prescription of analgesics, antimicrobials, multivitamins and anti-ulcer drugs. Quality of written prescriptions was poor in terms of completeness.
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