Health Policy and Planning; 17(3): 288-295
© Oxford University Press
2002
Prescription habits of dispensing and non-dispensing doctors in Zimbabwe
1 Department of Social Pharmacy, Royal Danish School of Pharmacy, Copenhagen, Denmark and
2 Department of Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
The number of dispensing doctors has increased in the last decade, but the implication of this trend on the quality of health care and drug use is unknown. We present a comparative drug utilization study of 29 dispensing doctors and 28 non-dispensing doctors in Zimbabwe based on standard indicators developed by the World Health Organization.
Dispensing doctors prescribed significantly more drugs per patient than non-dispensing doctors (2.3 versus 1.7), injected more patients (28.4% versus 9.5%), and prescribed more antibiotics (0.72 versus 0.54) and mixtures (0.43 versus 0.25) per encounter. Dispensing doctors also spent significantly less time on each encounter (8.7 min versus 13.0 min) than their non-dispensing colleagues. The use of generic name, brand name and essential drugs did not differ significantly between the two groups of practitioners. Multivariate analyses controlling for gender, race, place of education, location of practice and patients seen per day showed that dispensing by doctors was associated with less clinically and economically appropriate prescribing. These findings suggest that the quality of health care as related to drug use, patient safety and treatment cost is lower with dispensing doctors than with non-dispensing doctors.
![]()
CiteULike
Connotea
Del.icio.us What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
C. D. James, J. Peabody, O. Solon, S. Quimbo, and K. Hanson An Unhealthy Public-Private Tension: Pharmacy Ownership, Prescribing, And Spending In The Philippines Health Aff., July 1, 2009; 28(4): 1022 - 1033. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Park, S. B Soumerai, A. S Adams, J. A Finkelstein, S. Jang, and D. Ross-Degnan Antibiotic use following a Korean national policy to prohibit medication dispensing by physicians Health Policy Plan., September 1, 2005; 20(5): 302 - 309. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||

