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Specialist physician perspectives on non-medical switching of prescription medications

Authors :
Aarti A Patel
Jennifer Voelker
Ann Cameron
Brahim Bookhart
Craig I Coleman
Tabassum Salam
Olivia S. Costa
Amy Duhig
Source :
Journal of Market Access & Health Policy, Vol 8, Iss 1 (2020), Journal of Market Access & Health Policy
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

Abstract

Introduction: A non-medical switch is a change to a patient’s medication regimen for reasons other than lack of clinical response, side-effects or poor adherence. Specialist physicians treat complex patients who may be vulnerable to non-medical switching. Objectives: To evaluate specialist physicians’ perceptions regarding the frequency of non-medical switch requests, and the impact on their patients’ outcomes and healthcare utilization. Methods: An online survey of randomly sampled physicians spending ≥10% of time providing patient care and having received ≥1 non-medical switch request during the prior 12-months. Results: Among 404 specialist physicians surveyed, non-medical switch requests were reported as very frequent or frequent by 35.0% of oncologists (for injectable cancer agents) and up to 80.3% of endocrinologists (for injectable anti-hyperglycemics). Respondents reported decreased medication effectiveness (25.0% of oncologists to 75.0% of dermatologists) and increased side-effects (32.5% of oncologists to 66.7% of psychiatrists). Most specialists reported very frequent or frequent increases in non-office visits (52.5% of oncologists to 75.3% of endocrinologists) and calls with pharmacies (57.5% of oncologists to 80.5% of rheumatologists) due to non-medical switching. Conclusions: Receipt of non-medical switching requests were common among specialist physicians. Non-medical switching may lead to negative effects on patient care and require increased healthcare utilization.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20016689
Volume :
8
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Market Access & Health Policy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ee9d4c0fff4c1a96ea80370f15a76e3a