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The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice, Vol 15, Issue 4 285-289, Copyright © 2002 by American Board of Family Practice
ARTICLES |
K. J. Mukamal, L. J. Markson, S. R. Flier and D. Calabrese
Division of General Medicine and Primary Care, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
BACKGROUND: Although medication costs make up a large and growing portion of health care costs, few interventions have successfully encouraged physicians to alter prescribing patterns. METHODS: To promote the use of an open formulary, we altered the contents of the sample closets of five primary care practices in eastern Massachusetts. In these practices, we removed all nonformulary drugs in five drug classes and restocked with purchased generic samples. We performed a time series analysis of formulary compliance, before and during an 8-month intervention, with five concurrent control practices for comparison. RESULTS: Although providers in both the intervention and control practices complied well with the formulary, we found no incremental effect of the sample closet intervention on absolute formulary compliance (P = .46) or on the secular trend in formulary compliance (P = .60). We also found no effect on these measures in any of the individual drug classes studied. CONCLUSIONS: This sample closet intervention did not appear to improve further the good formulary compliance in these practices. In such settings, better ways are needed to guide prescribing behavior.
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A. R. Miesner, D. P. Allen, C. F. Koenigsfeld, and G. C. Wall Effect of Sample Medication Restrictions on Prescribing at a Private Clinic Arch Intern Med, July 13, 2009; 169(13): 1241 - 1242. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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