Influencer les pratiques prescriptives des médecins pour contenir les coûts

Translated title of the contribution: Influencing physician drug prescription habits toward cost containment

Allon Zuker, Tsipi Heart, Joseph S. Pliskin, Nava Pliskin

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

In Israel, diffusion of clinical information systems is almost universal in ambulatory medical services. The drug prescription module embedded in a widely-used electronic patient record system has the capacity to intervene and notify physicians about available generic or therapeutic substitute drugs, when their first choice is outside the insurer's preferred drug list. The objective of this paper is to study how such intervention influences drug prescription habits of physicians and helps contain costs. To this end we monitored system use for 40 weeks, recording physicians' willingness to change their choice to a substitute following system notification. Findings show higher physician compliance with generic substitutes than with therapeutic substitutes, based on a cognitive decision process upon notification, and increase in compliance over time, until stabilization. The resulting direct financial savings on expenditure for drugs, estimated to be 4.7% for chronic drugs, entail long-term savings.

Translated title of the contributionInfluencing physician drug prescription habits toward cost containment
Original languageFrench
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2008
Event29th International Conference on Information Systems, ICIS 2008 - Paris, France
Duration: 14 Dec 200817 Dec 2008

Conference

Conference29th International Conference on Information Systems, ICIS 2008
Country/TerritoryFrance
CityParis
Period14/12/0817/12/08

Keywords

  • Clinical information systems
  • Drug cost containment
  • Drug prescription system
  • Electronic patient record
  • Physician drug prescription habits

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Information Systems

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