Determinants of Primary Nonadherence to Medications Prescribed by General Practitioners Among Adults in Hungary: Cross-Sectional Evaluation of Health Insurance Data

Background: Primary nonadherence to prescribed medications occurs when patients do not fill or dispense prescriptions written by healthcare providers. Although it has become an important public health issue in recent years, little is known about its frequency, causes, and consequences. Moreover, the...

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Main Authors: Nouh Harsha, László Kőrösi, Anita Pálinkás, Klára Bíró, Klára Boruzs, Róza Ádány, János Sándor, Árpád Czifra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Pharmacology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphar.2019.01280/full
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spelling doaj-7d612f5b51bc4e4ca53701410af950e12020-11-25T00:04:55ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Pharmacology1663-98122019-10-011010.3389/fphar.2019.01280467095Determinants of Primary Nonadherence to Medications Prescribed by General Practitioners Among Adults in Hungary: Cross-Sectional Evaluation of Health Insurance DataNouh Harsha0László Kőrösi1Anita Pálinkás2Klára Bíró3Klára Boruzs4Róza Ádány5János Sándor6Árpád Czifra7Department of Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Public Health, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, HungaryDepartment of Financing, National Health Insurance Fund, Budapest, HungaryDepartment of Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Public Health, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, HungaryDepartment of Health Systems Management and Quality Management in Health Care, Faculty of Public Health, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, HungaryDepartment of Health Systems Management and Quality Management in Health Care, Faculty of Public Health, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, HungaryDepartment of Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Public Health, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, HungaryDepartment of Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Public Health, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, HungaryDepartment of Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Public Health, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, HungaryBackground: Primary nonadherence to prescribed medications occurs when patients do not fill or dispense prescriptions written by healthcare providers. Although it has become an important public health issue in recent years, little is known about its frequency, causes, and consequences. Moreover, the pattern of risk factors shows remarkable variability across countries according to the published results. Our study aimed to assess primary nonadherence to medications prescribed by general practitioners (GPs) and its associated factors among adults in Hungary for the period of 2012–2015.Methods: Data on all general medical practices (GMPs) of the country were obtained from the National Health Insurance Fund and the Central Statistical Office. The ratio of the number of dispensed medications to the number of prescriptions written by a GP for adults was used to determine the medication adherence, which was aggregated for GMPs. The effect of GMP characteristics (list size, GP vacancy, patients’ education provided by a GMP, settlement type [urban or rural], and geographical location [by county] of the center) on adherence, standardized for patients’ age, sex, and eligibility for an exemption certificate, were investigated through generalized linear regression modeling.Results: A total of 281,315,386 prescriptions were dispensed out of 438,614,000 written by a GP. Overall, 64.1% of prescriptions were filled. According to the generalized linear regression coefficients, there was a negative association between standardized adherence and urban settlement type (b = -0.099, 95%CI = -0.103 to -0.094), higher level of education (b = -0.440, 95%CI = -0.468 to -0.413), and vacancy of the general practices (b = -0.193, 95%CI = -0.204 to -0.182). The larger GMP size proved to be a risk factor, and there was a significant geographical inequality for counties as well.Conclusions: More than one-third of the written prescriptions of GPs for adults in Hungary were not dispensed. This high level of nonadherence had great variability across GMPs, and can be explained by structural characteristics of GMPs, the socioeconomic status of patients provided, and the quality of cooperation between patients and GPs. Moreover, our findings suggest that the use of the dispensed-to-prescribed medication ratio in routine monitoring of primary health care could effectively support the necessary interventions.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphar.2019.01280/fullmedication adherencedispensed prescriptionsurbanizationlevel of educationGP vacancyGMP size
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nouh Harsha
László Kőrösi
Anita Pálinkás
Klára Bíró
Klára Boruzs
Róza Ádány
János Sándor
Árpád Czifra
spellingShingle Nouh Harsha
László Kőrösi
Anita Pálinkás
Klára Bíró
Klára Boruzs
Róza Ádány
János Sándor
Árpád Czifra
Determinants of Primary Nonadherence to Medications Prescribed by General Practitioners Among Adults in Hungary: Cross-Sectional Evaluation of Health Insurance Data
Frontiers in Pharmacology
medication adherence
dispensed prescriptions
urbanization
level of education
GP vacancy
GMP size
author_facet Nouh Harsha
László Kőrösi
Anita Pálinkás
Klára Bíró
Klára Boruzs
Róza Ádány
János Sándor
Árpád Czifra
author_sort Nouh Harsha
title Determinants of Primary Nonadherence to Medications Prescribed by General Practitioners Among Adults in Hungary: Cross-Sectional Evaluation of Health Insurance Data
title_short Determinants of Primary Nonadherence to Medications Prescribed by General Practitioners Among Adults in Hungary: Cross-Sectional Evaluation of Health Insurance Data
title_full Determinants of Primary Nonadherence to Medications Prescribed by General Practitioners Among Adults in Hungary: Cross-Sectional Evaluation of Health Insurance Data
title_fullStr Determinants of Primary Nonadherence to Medications Prescribed by General Practitioners Among Adults in Hungary: Cross-Sectional Evaluation of Health Insurance Data
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of Primary Nonadherence to Medications Prescribed by General Practitioners Among Adults in Hungary: Cross-Sectional Evaluation of Health Insurance Data
title_sort determinants of primary nonadherence to medications prescribed by general practitioners among adults in hungary: cross-sectional evaluation of health insurance data
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Pharmacology
issn 1663-9812
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Background: Primary nonadherence to prescribed medications occurs when patients do not fill or dispense prescriptions written by healthcare providers. Although it has become an important public health issue in recent years, little is known about its frequency, causes, and consequences. Moreover, the pattern of risk factors shows remarkable variability across countries according to the published results. Our study aimed to assess primary nonadherence to medications prescribed by general practitioners (GPs) and its associated factors among adults in Hungary for the period of 2012–2015.Methods: Data on all general medical practices (GMPs) of the country were obtained from the National Health Insurance Fund and the Central Statistical Office. The ratio of the number of dispensed medications to the number of prescriptions written by a GP for adults was used to determine the medication adherence, which was aggregated for GMPs. The effect of GMP characteristics (list size, GP vacancy, patients’ education provided by a GMP, settlement type [urban or rural], and geographical location [by county] of the center) on adherence, standardized for patients’ age, sex, and eligibility for an exemption certificate, were investigated through generalized linear regression modeling.Results: A total of 281,315,386 prescriptions were dispensed out of 438,614,000 written by a GP. Overall, 64.1% of prescriptions were filled. According to the generalized linear regression coefficients, there was a negative association between standardized adherence and urban settlement type (b = -0.099, 95%CI = -0.103 to -0.094), higher level of education (b = -0.440, 95%CI = -0.468 to -0.413), and vacancy of the general practices (b = -0.193, 95%CI = -0.204 to -0.182). The larger GMP size proved to be a risk factor, and there was a significant geographical inequality for counties as well.Conclusions: More than one-third of the written prescriptions of GPs for adults in Hungary were not dispensed. This high level of nonadherence had great variability across GMPs, and can be explained by structural characteristics of GMPs, the socioeconomic status of patients provided, and the quality of cooperation between patients and GPs. Moreover, our findings suggest that the use of the dispensed-to-prescribed medication ratio in routine monitoring of primary health care could effectively support the necessary interventions.
topic medication adherence
dispensed prescriptions
urbanization
level of education
GP vacancy
GMP size
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphar.2019.01280/full
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