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Rapid prescribing change, how do patients respond?

Author

Listed:
  • Dowell, Jon S.
  • Snadden, David
  • Dunbar, James A.

Abstract

The cost of prescribed medication is an increasing burden on health care systems. British general practitioners have been encouraged to reduce their prescribing costs through financial incentives within the fundholding scheme. This study reports on one general practice which reduced prescribing expenditure as part of the move to fundholding. Interviews performed with practice staff and patients were analysed and combined with prescribing statistics and questionnaire data to give a picture of the balance between the experience of patients and practitioners. Fifty-three interviews with 17 patients revealed that most were willing to try cheaper treatments and that dissatisfaction was primarily with the communication they received rather than the change itself. Each patient had to decide how to respond to the change in their medication. The decision-making process and the main factors involved are described and discussed. The experience of having long-standing treatment changed can have an impact on the doctor-patient relationship. This was not found to be a large problem and, it is suggested, can be guarded against. Large-scale economies in prescribing are feasible for some practices, and patients will tolerate such changes if attention is paid to sensitive communication.

Suggested Citation

  • Dowell, Jon S. & Snadden, David & Dunbar, James A., 1996. "Rapid prescribing change, how do patients respond?," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 43(11), pages 1543-1549, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socmed:v:43:y:1996:i:11:p:1543-1549
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    Cited by:

    1. Paraponaris, A. & Verger, P. & Desquins, B. & Villani, P. & Bouvenot, G. & Rochaix, L. & Gourheux, J. C. & Moatti, J. P. AU -, 2004. "Delivering generics without regulatory incentives?: Empirical evidence from French general practitioners about willingness to prescribe international non-proprietary names," Health Policy, Elsevier, vol. 70(1), pages 23-32, October.
    2. Pound, Pandora & Britten, Nicky & Morgan, Myfanwy & Yardley, Lucy & Pope, Catherine & Daker-White, Gavin & Campbell, Rona, 2005. "Resisting medicines: a synthesis of qualitative studies of medicine taking," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 61(1), pages 133-155, July.

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