scholarly journals DIRECT COST OF DRUG AND PRESCRIBING PATTERN IN THE OUTPATIENT SERVICES OF A TEACHING HOSPITAL IN MALAYSIA

Author(s):  
Sit Wai Lee ◽  
Syed Mohamed Aljunid

Objective: This study aims to impute the direct drug cost and to assess the prescribing pattern on patients getting dyslipidemia drugs at outpatients’ Pharmacy Department in Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Medical Centre (UKMMC).Methods: Patients receiving at least one dyslipidemia drug were randomly selected from UKMMC pharmacy electronic prescribing system from January 2012 to December 2012. The patients’ gender, age, and ethnic, and all the drugs received by the patients during the visits were recorded. The brand name of the drugs and the cost was recorded for the calculation of generic drug prescription rate (GDPR) and direct drug cost.Results: A total of 380 patients were randomly selected from the system. There were 829 prescriptions with the total amount of 5512 drugs prescribed. From the total of drugs, the number of generic drugs prescribed was 3967 (72%). The percentage of patients with GDPR of more than 75% for this study was 48% (n=183). The total drug cost for all 380 patients was RM240,244. The mean cost for each patient was RM637 (Range: RM1.20– RM27,972.30) and the median cost was RM233. The total formulary dyslipidemia drugs cost was RM11,003. The mean formulary dyslipidemia drugs cost for each patient was RM38 (Range: RM1.20–RM810), and the median cost was RM13.50. Predictors of high drug cost were GDPR of ≤75% and a number of drugs per prescription of >10.Conclusion: This study could contribute toward short- and long-term strategies to reduce the drug cost expenditure of dyslipidemia drugs in the hospital.

Pharmacy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 39
Author(s):  
Marie Caucat ◽  
Alice Zacarin ◽  
Vanessa Rousseau ◽  
Jean-Louis Montastruc ◽  
Haleh Bagheri

Introduction: As of 2019, people older than 65 years represent 20% of the French population. Despite several guidelines suggesting to avoid potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) use in elderly, the prevalence of their prescription remains high (25%). Furthermore, PIM could lead to preventable adverse drug reactions (ADRs). The main objective of this study was to determine the direct cost of PIM in older persons living in residential care homes for the elderly (nursing homes). A secondary objective was to assess the potential impact of PIM deprescribing on drug-related health care costs. Methods: We undertook a multicenter, retrospective study in 19 care homes for the elderly including 1240 residents. The analysis of prescriptions was carried out according to the European EU(7) PIM list. The cost of each drug was estimated according to the French Medication Insurance database. Furthermore, patient’s comorbidities were studied using Charlson’s comorbidity index. In order to estimate the economic impact of PIM, we used the list of alternative appropriate drugs suggested by EU(7) PIM list and French National Health Authority. An incremental cost per patient was calculated by the difference in costs between PIMs and alternative drugs. Results: A total of 7768 lines of drug prescriptions were analyzed. The mean age was 87.6 ± 7.6 years. About 70% (n = 872) of residents received more than five drugs. We identified 959 residents (77.3%) with at least one PIM. The mean cost of PIM was 0.58 euros versus 0.48 euros for alternatives. PIM substitution by alternatives led to save 12 centimes/resident/day. The mean cost of prescription with PIM was 2.8 euros per resident per day (28% of the overall cost of prescription). According to these results, more than 25 million euros can be overall saved for aged persons living in nursing homes for the older people in France per year. Conclusion: The prevalence of PIMs among the elderly in nursing homes is high and leads to a significant cost. Deprescribing of these medications could decrease both drug misuse and cost of drug prescription. Further research is needed to estimate the overall cost of PIM exposure outcomes, taking into account the ADRs leading to hospitalization.


1972 ◽  
Vol 9 (02) ◽  
pp. 257-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Gani ◽  
D. Jerwood

This paper is concerned with the cost Cis = aWis + bTis (a, b > 0) of a general stochastic epidemic starting with i infectives and s susceptibles; Tis denotes the duration of the epidemic, and Wis the area under the infective curve. The joint Laplace-Stieltjes transform of (Wis, Tis ) is studied, and a recursive equation derived for it. The duration Tis and its mean Nis are considered in some detail, as are also Wis and its mean Mis . Using the results obtained, bounds are found for the mean cost of the epidemic.


BMJ Open ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. e033979
Author(s):  
Easter Elizabeth Olwanda ◽  
James G Kahn ◽  
Yujung Choi ◽  
Jessica Yasmine Islam ◽  
Megan Huchko

ObjectivesTo estimate the cost of human papillomavirus (HPV)-based screening through community health campaigns (CHCs) and home-based testing.SettingCHCs and home-based testing in six communities in rural Western Kenya.ParticipantsCHCs and home-based screening reached 2297 and 1002 women aged 25–65 years, respectively.Outcome measuresOutcome measures were overall cost per woman screened achieved through the CHCs and home-based testing and the cost per woman for each activity comprising the screening intervention.ResultsThe mean cost per woman screened through CHCs and home-based testing were similar, at $37.7 (range $26.4–$52.0) and $37.1 (range $27.6–$54.0), respectively. For CHCs, personnel represented 49% of overall cost, supplies 25%, services 5% and capital goods 23%. For home-based testing, these were: personnel 73%, supplies 25%, services 1% and capital goods 2%. A greater number of participants was associated with a lower cost per participant.ConclusionsThe mean cost per woman screened is comparable for CHC and home-based testing, with differences in type of input. The CHCs generally reached more eligible women in the six communities, whereas home-based strategies more efficiently reached populations with low screening rates.Trial registration numberNCT02124252.


Plant Disease ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. Johnson ◽  
T. F. Cummings ◽  
P. B. Hamm ◽  
R. C. Rowe ◽  
J. S. Miller ◽  
...  

The cost of managing late blight in potatoes during a severe epidemic caused by new, aggressive strains of Phytophthora infestans in the Columbia Basin of Washington and Oregon in 1995 was documented. The mean number of fungicide applications per field varied from 5.1 to 6.3 for early- and midseason potatoes, and from 8.2 to 12.3 for late-season potatoes in the northern and southern Columbia Basin, respectively. In 1994, a year when late blight was not severe, the mean number of fungicide applications per field made to early- and midseason potatoes was 2.0; whereas late-season potatoes received a mean of 2.5 applications. The mean per acre cost of individual fungicides applied varied from $4.90 for copper hydroxide to $36.00 for propamocarb + chlorothalonil. Total per acre expenses (application costs plus fungicide material) for protecting the crop from late blight during 1995 ranged from $106.77 to $110.08 for early and midseason potatoes in different regions of the Columbia Basin and from $149.30 to $226.75 for lateseason potatoes in the northern and southern Columbia Basin, respectively. Approximately 28% of the crop was chemically desiccated before harvest as a disease management practice for the first time in 1995, resulting in an additional mean cost of $34.48/acre or $1.3 million for the region. Harvested yields were 4 to 6% less than in 1994. The total cost of managing late blight in the Columbia Basin in 1995 is estimated to have approached $30 million.


1970 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 192-196
Author(s):  
Devindra Sood ◽  
Alka Pandey ◽  
Rajeev Sood ◽  
Nagesh Gupta ◽  
Ravinder Kumar Bajaj ◽  
...  

Aim: To study the medication costs of various topical glaucoma medications using data collected from real world use by patients.Methods: Patients with primary open angle glaucoma treated at glaucoma clinics in 5 hospitals (1 rural and 4 urban) in northern India from 1 January to 30 June 2008 were enrolled. The number of days each bottle of medication lasted was recorded, and the mean cost per day was computed from the maximum retail price and mean number of days each medication lasted.Results: 790 of 801 eligible patients completed the study. The mean number of days that a bottle of medication lasted was found to be highest for Xalatan® and Xalacom® at 35.23 days and 35.00 days, respectively. The brand name prostaglandin analogues all lasted for a mean of more than 30 days: Xalatan, 35.23 days (SD, 4.14 days); Lumigan®, 31.37 days (SD, 5.31 days); and Travatan®, 34.84 days (SD, 6.51 days), while the generic eye drops lasted for about 21 days: latanoprost, 20.69 days (SD, 3.69 days) and bimatoprost, 21.39 days (SD, 4.34 days). The cost of the generic medication was less than the brand name medication in all groups (for example, bimatoprost, Indian rupees 9.76 versus Indian rupees 12.33) except for brimonidine/timolol (Indian rupees 8.73 versus Indian rupees 8.66). Further analysis in 2009 showed that, for latanoprost, brimonidine and brimonidine/timolol, the difference between the brand name and generic medications decreased in 2009 over 2008 (in the latanoprost group, the cost difference over the year reduced from Indian rupees 592 in 2008 to Indian rupees 523 in 2009); the cost difference for bimatoprost increased from 2008 to 2009.Conclusion: When both cost and number of days a bottle lasts were considered over the long term, use of generic medications might not minimise the cost of glaucoma medical management by much when compared with the brand name medication.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shanzi Huang ◽  
Jason Ong ◽  
Wencan Dai ◽  
Xi He ◽  
Yi Zhou ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: HIV self-testing (HIVST) is effective in improving the uptake of HIV testing among key populations. Complementary data on the cost-effectiveness of HIVST is critical for planning and scaling up HIVST. This study aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of a community-based organization (CBO)-led HIVST model implemented in China. Method: A cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) was conducted by comparing a CBO-led HIVST model with a CBO-led facility-based HIV rapid diagnostics testing (HIV-RDT) model. The full economic cost, including fixed and variable cost, from a health provider perspective using a micro costing approach was estimated. We determined the cost-effectiveness of these two HIV testing models over a two year time horizon (i.e. duration of the programs), and reported costs using US dollars (2020). Results: From January 2017 to December 2018, a total of 4,633 men tested in the HIVST model, and 1,780 men tested in the HIV-RDT model. The total number of new diagnosis was 155 for HIVST and 126 for the HIV-RDT model; the HIV test positivity was 3.3% (95% confidence interval (CI): 2.8-3.9) for the HIVST model and 7.1% (95% CI: 5.9-8.4) for the HIV-RDT model. The mean cost per person tested was $14.57 for HIVST and $24.74 for HIV-RDT. However, the mean cost per diagnosed was higher for HIVST ($435.52) compared with $349.44 for HIV-RDT.Conclusion: Our study confirms that compared to facility-based HIV-RDT, a community-based organization led HIVST program could have a cheaper mean cost per MSM tested for HIV in China. Better targeting of high-risk individuals would further improve the cost-effectiveness of HIVST.


2007 ◽  
Vol 23 (suppl 3) ◽  
pp. S402-S413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heloisa Helena de Sousa Marques ◽  
Bernard François Couttolenc ◽  
Maria do Rosário Dias de Oliveira Latorre ◽  
Maria Zilda de Aquino ◽  
Maria Ignez Garcia Aveiro ◽  
...  

The objective of this study was to estimate and analyze the costs of treating children with HIV/AIDS at a university hospital in São Paulo, Brazil. The study collected and analyzed data from 291 medical records of children treated at the hospital as of March 2002. The costs of treatment were estimated for each category of patient (exposed and infected) and severity, based on the quantity of inputs and procedures used in treating each child, based on the cost accounting system used at the hospital. The total cost of treatment for children exposed to the HIV was R$ 956.41 and for those infected with HIV R$ 8,092.71 per year. The mean cost of ambulatory care was R$ 6,047.28 for children with severe conditions, R$ 3,714.45 for those with light/moderate conditions, and R$ 948.63 for the exposed. Hospitalized children had annual costs of R$ 19,353.34, R$ 18,823.16, and R$ 871.03, respectively. The medication was a major factor in the cost of treatment. Our estimates are comparable to the findings from other studies, but lower than corresponding findings from the international literature.


1988 ◽  
Vol 51 (7) ◽  
pp. 581-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
EWENC. D.TODD

Type E botulism occurs regularly in scattered locations in the Canadian Arctic and northern coastal British Columbia from the consumption of improperly fermented fish and marine mammal products by native peoples, with an average of eight cases and 1.5 deaths each year. Local treatment at nursing stations is often followed by the evacuation of the patients to the main northern hospitals, e.g. Iqaluit and Inuvik with subsequent intensive care, if necessary, in Montreal, Winnipeg, Edmonton or Vancouver. Estimates of costs of six incidents in these northern regions showed that the evacuation of patients was the most expensive component (mean, 31.2%), followed by hospitalization (23.8%) and investigation of the illnesses (19.4%). The mean cost per incident was over $70,000, or $7,200 per case. If these figures are extrapolated, the cost of botulism in these areas is about $2 million each year, with $1.5 million being considered the value of the lives lost. Current and future health care practices in northern regions should be evaluated in relation to these and other costs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bhanu Prasad ◽  
Maryam Jafari ◽  
Joanne Kappel ◽  
Julie Toppings ◽  
Linda Gross

Abstract Background and Aims Erythropoiesis stimulating agents (ESA’s) were introduced in the treatment of anemia in 1989 and it immediately led to a marked decline in the number of blood transfusions and improved quality of life in patients across the spectrum of chronic kidney disease. Several studies from the mid 1990s have shown that the required doses of Epoetin alpha were lower when administered subcutaneously (SQ). These studies led to guidelines by NKF (1997) and KDOQI (2001) recommending the use of SQ over intravenous (IV) as considerable cost savings could be achieved without compromising care. The rise in the reported cases of pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) led to a change in guidelines in 2006 and led to units changing exclusively to IV route. It was subsequently identified that polysorbate 80 from uncoated rubber stoppers in pre-filled syringes rather than the route of administration was the most plausible cause of PRCA. However, higher doses of ESAs, have been associated with adverse health outcomes across all hematocrit categories in hemodialysis patients. While the current practice is to administer ESAs to patients through IV route, SQ ESAs achieve the same target hemoglobin level at a reduced dose and cost. Given the dose -sparing advantages of SQ Epoetin alpha administration, we decided to gradually transition our patients to SQ and examined the cost of IV versus SQ treatment. The objective of our study was to determine the economic benefit of the change in the route of administration from IV to SQ ESA in hemodialysis patients. Method We conducted a retrospective cohort study in 215 hemodialysis patients who transitioned from IV Epoetin alfa to SQ at four hemodialysis sites in the province of Saskatchewan, Canada from September 2014 to July 2017. The dose and cost of different routes of Epoetin alfa administration per patient per month was calculated. Also, blood hemoglobin, markers of erythropoiesis (transferrin saturation and Ferritin), IV iron dose and cost were determined in relation to route of Epoetin alfa administration. The dependent t-test was used to compare mean variables between pre-switch and post-switch period. Differences in variables across three serum hemoglobin ranges (<95, 95-115, >115 gram/liter) were assessed using the independent t-test. Results The mean Epoetin alfa doses per patient per month (47,327.9±33,133.0 international unit) during pre-switch (IV) period were greater than of post-switch (SQ) period (34,253±24,858.1), a decrease of 27.62% (p<0.001). The mean hemoglobin concentration for patients in both periods remained stable (103.3±9.2 versus 104.3±13.3, p=0.34) and within the target range. The reduction in the dose of Epoetin alfa per patient per month (IU± standard deviation) upon conversion remained similar (IV versus SQ) in all the subcategories: hemoglobin <95 g/L (65,941 versus 52,717), hemoglobin 95-115g/L (42,120 versus 29,619) and (35,289 versus 17,651) for hemoglobin >115 g/L. There were no significant differences in transferrin saturation, Ferritin and IV iron dose and cost between the two study periods. The mean cost (CAD± SD) of Epoetin alfa per patient per month decreased from 674.4±477.4 pre-switch to 484.8±354.3 post-switch (p<0.001), a decrease of 28.11%; whereas, the cost of IV iron remained similar in pre- and post-switch period. Conclusion The (mean) cost of Epoetin alfa per patient per year in our study when given IV was $ 8,088 (CAD) and once converted to SQ was $ 5,817 (CAD) while achieving equivalent hemoglobin levels, a saving of $ 2271 (CAD) per year. Based on these values, if we extrapolate our savings to 900 prevalent patients to SQ Epoetin alfa we can realize a cost saving of $2,043,900 per year. Conversion of Epoetin alfa from IV to SQ led to substantial cost savings at our hemodialysis units.


2015 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy P. Bailey ◽  
Amanda L. Scott ◽  
Rickey D. Best

Academic libraries continue to face funding pressures compounded by the need to provide students with access to electronic resources, both in journal and book formats. With space constraints and the need to repurpose library space to other uses, libraries must carefully examine the move to e-only formats for books to determine if the format makes reasonable economic sense.A survey conducted at Auburn University at Montgomery (AUM) has confirmed for academic libraries the work of Gray and Copeland on e-books being more expensive than print for public libraries. For AUM, the mean cost for an e-book is significantly higher than for the print counterpart of that title. The cost differentials between the two formats show e-books as being consistently higher than print in initial price. This consistency holds true across all LC classifications, regardless of whether or not the title is published by a university press or a commercial press.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document