STUDY OF PRESCRIBING TRENDS AND ELEMENTS OF PRESCRIPTION IN OUTPATIENT PSYCHIATRY DEPARTMENT OF A TERTIARY CARE HOSPITAL.
Dr. Meena Nandimath*, Aarpith Kamath
Abstract
Introduction: Inappropriate use of drugs represent a potential hazard
to patients. This necessitates a periodic review of pattern of drug
utilization. All prescriptions must include the name, address, specialty
and signature of the prescriber, name, sex, and age of the patient and
the strength, quantity, dose, frequency, dosage form and instructions
for use of the medication. Psychopharmacology is a rapidly growing
field, psychiatrists are exposed to lots of newly introduced drugs The
burden of illness resulting from psychiatric and behavioral disorders is
enormous, therefore, the study was carried out to find out prescribing
trends and elements of prescriptions of psychotropic drugs.
Methodology: Institutional ethics committee approval. Prospective, Observational, noninterventional
study in OPD of Psychiatry Departmentfor 2 months, 151 prescriptions were
analyzed. Results: The principles of rational prescribing were followed except brand
names(88%).Superscription and transcription was included in all the prescriptions, in
139(92.05%) subscription was written and the signature in 137(90.7%). Registration number
was written in 77 prescriptions.The dose was written in 138(91.3%) of the total prescriptions.
The frequency was written for all the drugs in 119(78.8%) and some drugs in 20(13.2%) and
none of the drugs in 12(7.9%) of the total prescriptions.Of the total,66.7% of CNS drugs
prescribed, clonazepam was the most commonly prescribed drug at(20.1%) followed by
escitalopram (antidepressant) at 9.6% and amitriptyline (antidepressant) at 7.6%.
Conclusion: Many prescribers lack the digitized information systems that reduce prescribing
errors. To reduce these errors, some investigators have developed modified prescription
forms that prompt the prescriber to provide all the desired elements of a good prescription.
Keywords: Drug utilization, Rational, Antidepressants, Psychopharmacology.
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