The Health System Costs of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Ontario: A Population-based Study

Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing (PIP) is common in Canada yet little is known about its health system costs or which PIPs have the greatest cost impact. This thesis examined the health system costs from hospitalizations, emergency department (ED) visits and medications from all PIP, and for di...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Black, Cody
Other Authors: Bjerre, Lise
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/38417
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-22670
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-384172018-11-13T07:04:25Z The Health System Costs of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Ontario: A Population-based Study Black, Cody Bjerre, Lise potentially inappropriate prescribing health system costs health administrative databases Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing (PIP) is common in Canada yet little is known about its health system costs or which PIPs have the greatest cost impact. This thesis examined the health system costs from hospitalizations, emergency department (ED) visits and medications from all PIP, and for distinct PIP. PIPs were identified in a cohort of older adults in Ontario using a subset of the STOPP/START criteria applicable to health administrative databases, and all analyses were conducted by comparing participants with and without PIP. In study one, the costs from hospitalization, ED visits and newly prescribed medications were identified using population attributable fractions. PIP was identified as responsible for a sizeable portion of all three cost categories, with hospitalization and ED visits costs most highly impacted. Study two compared the incremental costs due to PIP among four distinct PIP criteria selected based on differing frequency and crude costs to validate the use of such characteristics for priority-setting. The crude healthcare costs, as well as the cost of the drug causing the PIP and the frequency of the PIP were identified as likely key characteristics of high-impact PIP. Combined, these studies provide evidence on the overall burden of PIP, while also identifying likely characteristics of high-impact PIP. They suggest interventions at the health system level may be needed to address medication appropriateness and provide information which may be helpful to decision-makers when identifying which PIPs should be targeted for intervention, given no health system level interventions for PIP are currently in place. 2018-11-12T16:50:37Z 2018-11-12T16:50:37Z 2018-11-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/38417 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-22670 en application/pdf Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic potentially inappropriate prescribing
health system costs
health administrative databases
spellingShingle potentially inappropriate prescribing
health system costs
health administrative databases
Black, Cody
The Health System Costs of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Ontario: A Population-based Study
description Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing (PIP) is common in Canada yet little is known about its health system costs or which PIPs have the greatest cost impact. This thesis examined the health system costs from hospitalizations, emergency department (ED) visits and medications from all PIP, and for distinct PIP. PIPs were identified in a cohort of older adults in Ontario using a subset of the STOPP/START criteria applicable to health administrative databases, and all analyses were conducted by comparing participants with and without PIP. In study one, the costs from hospitalization, ED visits and newly prescribed medications were identified using population attributable fractions. PIP was identified as responsible for a sizeable portion of all three cost categories, with hospitalization and ED visits costs most highly impacted. Study two compared the incremental costs due to PIP among four distinct PIP criteria selected based on differing frequency and crude costs to validate the use of such characteristics for priority-setting. The crude healthcare costs, as well as the cost of the drug causing the PIP and the frequency of the PIP were identified as likely key characteristics of high-impact PIP. Combined, these studies provide evidence on the overall burden of PIP, while also identifying likely characteristics of high-impact PIP. They suggest interventions at the health system level may be needed to address medication appropriateness and provide information which may be helpful to decision-makers when identifying which PIPs should be targeted for intervention, given no health system level interventions for PIP are currently in place.
author2 Bjerre, Lise
author_facet Bjerre, Lise
Black, Cody
author Black, Cody
author_sort Black, Cody
title The Health System Costs of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Ontario: A Population-based Study
title_short The Health System Costs of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Ontario: A Population-based Study
title_full The Health System Costs of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Ontario: A Population-based Study
title_fullStr The Health System Costs of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Ontario: A Population-based Study
title_full_unstemmed The Health System Costs of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Ontario: A Population-based Study
title_sort health system costs of potentially inappropriate prescribing in ontario: a population-based study
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/38417
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-22670
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