Drug utilization and prescription pattern study in the outpatient department of a tertiary care hospital: A cross-sectional study.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51168/sjhrafrica.v6i12.2340Keywords:
Drug utilization, Prescription pattern, WHO prescribing indicators, Antibiotics, Generic prescribing, Essential Medicines List, Outpatient departmentAbstract
Background:
Drug utilization studies using WHO prescribing indicators help identify irrational prescribing and guide corrective interventions.
Objectives:
To evaluate outpatient drug utilization and prescription patterns in a tertiary care teaching hospital using WHO core prescribing indicators and to highlight key gaps affecting rational drug use.
Methods:
A hospital-based cross-sectional study was conducted in the outpatient department of a tertiary care teaching hospital. A total of 464 prescriptions were selected through systematic sampling. Data were collected using a pretested structured proforma and analyzed for WHO prescribing indicators, including average number of drugs per encounter, proportion of drugs prescribed by generic name, encounters with antibiotics and injections, use of fixed-dose combinations (FDCs), and adherence to the National Essential Medicines List (EML). Descriptive statistics were used for data analysis.
Results:
Among 464 encounters, 248 (53.4%) prescriptions were for males and 216 (46.6%) for females; the mean age was 42.8 ± 16.3 years, with most patients in the 21–40-year group (38.4%). A total of 1,322 drugs were prescribed (mean 2.85 ± 0.92 drugs/encounter). Generic prescribing was 47.2% (624/1,322), and EML adherence was 77.3% (1,022/1,322). Antibiotics were prescribed in 30.6% of encounters (142/464), while injections were used in 8.2% (38/464). FDCs were present in 27.5% of prescriptions (128/464). Among antibiotics (n = 188), cephalosporins were predominant (58/188; 30.8%), followed by fluoroquinolones (42/188; 22.3%). Gaps indicating irrational use included higher-than-ideal drug count per prescription, suboptimal generic prescribing, frequent FDC use, and incomplete diagnosis/clinical notes in 17.3% of prescriptions.
Conclusion:
OPD prescribing showed low injection use and moderate EML adherence, but persistent gaps in polypharmacy tendency, generic prescribing, antibiotic exposure, and FDC use remain.
Recommendations:
Regular prescription audits, strengthening antimicrobial stewardship, continuous prescriber education, promotion of generic prescribing, and periodic revision of hospital formularies are essential to enhance rational drug use in outpatient settings.
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