Effectiveness of three interventions on primary care physicians' medication prescribing in Riyadh city, Saudi Arabia

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Abstract

A number of strategies have been shown to improve the quality of drug prescriptions. The objective of this study was to implement and assess the effectiveness of 3 interventions on physicians' prescribing and cost containment: training physicians about quality prescribing; regulatory and administrative measures to improve rational drug prescribing; and a multi-faceted approach using 2 these strategies plus additional elements. Three public health centres, 1 for each intervention, were randomly selected; 61 physicians were trained in drug prescribing and completed a pre- and post-training questionnaire; and 100 post-intervention prescriptions from each centre were compared. All 3 interventions effectively improved the quality of drug prescriptions and the notation of drug-related information and trainees returned positive evaluations of the training course. Whether or not physicians' improvement in prescribing will be sustained is unclear and therefore subsequent follow-up evaluations are needed.

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Qureshi, N. A., Neyaz, Y., Khoja, T., Magzoub, M. A., Haycox, A., & Walley, T. (2011). Effectiveness of three interventions on primary care physicians’ medication prescribing in Riyadh city, Saudi Arabia. Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 17(2), 172–179. https://doi.org/10.26719/2011.17.2.172

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