Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Antibiotic Prescription By Medical Doctors




Dr. Linder’s research on curbing the dangerous overprescribing of antibiotics suggests doctors do respond to certain electronic nudges and feedback about what they are doing—especially when it involves comparing how they stack up against their peers.

In the case of antibiotics, despite clear guidelines to use the drugs only for bacterial infections, doctors consistently prescribe them for viruses like the flu. 

A recent Pew Charitable Trusts report concluded that 30% of antibiotic prescriptions are unnecessary, or nearly 47 million excess prescriptions a year. 

That’s despite years of warnings about the risk of antibiotic resistance, where bacteria exposed to the drugs start learning to outsmart them. 

Overuse also exposes patients to unnecessary risks and increases health-care costs studies show.


“The model has been if we get people the right information they will do the right thing; but, sad to say, it doesn’t work,” says Dr. Linder. “Doctors know they should not prescribe antibiotics for colds and viral illnesses, but if they are confronted by a sick patient who is a little bit anxious and wants something for treatment,” they often prescribe the drugs.



Source:     WSJ