Unexpected increase in benzodiazepine prescriptions related to the introduction of an electronic prescribing tool: Evidence from multicenter hospital data

3Citations
Citations of this article
37Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Electronic Prescribing tools (e-prescribing) have shown several benefits in terms of prescribing process adequacy and health care quality in hospital settings. We hypothesize however, that an undesired effect of digitalisation, due to the easier and faster prescribing process allowing patients to skip face-to-face conversations with patients and nurses, is that it could facilitate the prescription of medications at high risk of overuse or abuse, such as benzodiazepines (BZDs). We conducted a panel data study to investigate, the impact of the introduction of an e-prescribing system on new BZD prescriptions in hospitalised patients in a network of five teaching hospitals. During the observation period 1 July 2014-30 April 2019, 43,320 admissions were analysed. A fixed-effects model was adopted to estimate the effect of e-prescribing on new BZD prescriptions. E-prescribing implementation was associated with a significant increase of new BZD prescriptions: Absolute +1.5%, and relative +43% (p < 0.001). The effect was similar in males and females (respectively, absolute +2.3%, relative +65% (p < 0.001); absolute +1.8%, relative +58% (p = 0.01)) and in patients ≥70 years old (absolute +1.6%, relative +59% (p < 0.001)). After controlling for time-varying explanatory variables, the implementation of the e-prescribing tool showed similar significant effects. E-prescribing implementation was associated with a significant increase of new in-hospital BZD prescriptions. For classes of drugs at risk of overuse or abuse, e-prescribing should be used cautiously, to minimize the risk of over-prescriptions. Further research in other settings and countries is needed to analyse causal interactions between e-prescribing and BZD prescriptions in the hospital setting, and to promote the ultimate goal of high-value care.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Del Giorno, R., Schneiders, C., Stefanelli, K., Ceschi, A., Gyoerik-Lora, S., Aletto, I., & Gabutti, L. (2019). Unexpected increase in benzodiazepine prescriptions related to the introduction of an electronic prescribing tool: Evidence from multicenter hospital data. Diagnostics, 9(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics9040190

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free