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Trends and variation in prescribing of low-priority treatments identified by NHS England: a cross-sectional study and interactive data tool in English primary care
Objectives NHS England recently announced a consultation seeking to discourage the use of treatments it considers to be low-value. We set out to produce an interactive data resource to show savings in each NHS general practice and to assess the current use of these treatments, their change in use ov...
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Published in: | Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 2018-06, Vol.111 (6), p.203-213 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Objectives
NHS England recently announced a consultation seeking to discourage the use of
treatments it considers to be low-value. We set out to produce an interactive data
resource to show savings in each NHS general practice and to assess the current use of
these treatments, their change in use over time, and the extent and reasons for
variation in such prescribing.
Design
Cross-sectional analysis.
Setting
English primary care.
Participants
English general practices.
Main outcome measures
We determined the cost per 1000 patients for prescribing of each of 18 treatments
identified by NHS England for each month from July 2012 to June 2017, and also
aggregated over the most recent year to assess total cost and variation among practices.
We used mixed effects linear regression to determine factors associated with cost of
prescribing.
Results
Spend on low-value treatments was £153.5 m in the last year, across 5.8 m prescriptions
(mean, £26 per prescription). Among individual treatments, liothyronine had the highest
prescribing cost at £29.6 m, followed by trimipramine (£20.2 m). Over time, the overall
total number of low-value prescriptions decreased, but the cost increased, although this
varied greatly between treatments. Three treatment areas increased in cost and two
increased in volume, all others reduced in cost and volume. Annual practice level
spending varied widely (median, £2262 per thousand patients; interquartile range £1439
to £3298). Proportion of patients over 65 was strongly associated with low-value
prescribing, as was Clinical Commissioning Group. Our interactive data tool was deployed
to OpenPrescribing.net where monthly updated figures and graphs can be viewed.
Conclusions
Prescribing of low-value treatments is extensive but varies widely by treatment,
geographic area and individual practice. Despite a fall in prescription numbers, the
overall cost of prescribing for low-value items has risen. Prescribing behaviour is
clustered by Clinical Commissioning Group, which may represent variation in the
optimisation efficiency of medicines, or in some cases access inequality. |
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ISSN: | 0141-0768 1758-1095 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0141076818769408 |