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The financial costs of anticipatory prescribing: A retrospective observational study of prescribed, administered and wasted medications using community clinical records

Morgan, Lloyd; Barclay, Stephen; Pollock, Kristian; Massou, Efthalia; Bowers, Ben

Authors

Lloyd Morgan

Stephen Barclay

Kristian Pollock

Efthalia Massou

Ben Bowers



Abstract

Background:
The prescribing of injectable end-of-life anticipatory medications ahead of possible need is recommended best practice. The financial costs of these medications have been little studied.
Aim:
To identify the costs of anticipatory medications prescribed, used and not used for patients approaching the end-of-life at home and in residential care.
Design:
Retrospective observational study using general practitioner and community nursing clinical records.
Setting/participants:
Data were collected from eleven general practitioner practices using the records of the 30 most recent deaths per practice. Patients were aged 18+ and died between 2017 and 2019 from any cause except trauma, sudden death or suicide.
Results:
Anticipatory medications were prescribed to 167/329 patients, of which 164 were included in the analysis. Costs (GBP) were analysed both at patient-level and drug-level. Median anticipatory prescription cost was £43.17 (IQR: £38.98–£60.47, range £8.76–£229.82). Median administered (used) drug cost was £2.16 (IQR: £0.00–£12.09, range £0.00–£83.14). Median unused (wasted) drug cost was £41.47 (IQR: £29.15–£54.33, range £0.00–£195.36). Prescription, administered and unused costs were significantly higher for the 59 patients prescribed an anticipatory syringe driver. There were wide variations in the unused costs of individual drugs; Haloperidol and Cyclizine contributed 49% of total unused costs.
Conclusion:
The costs of prescribed and unused anticipatory medications were higher than previously reported but remain modest. Usage of prescriptions was lower than previously documented. There may be scope to reduce the quantity of vials that are routinely prescribed without adversely affecting care; further research is needed to investigate this possibility.

Citation

Morgan, L., Barclay, S., Pollock, K., Massou, E., & Bowers, B. (2023). The financial costs of anticipatory prescribing: A retrospective observational study of prescribed, administered and wasted medications using community clinical records. Palliative Medicine, 37(10), 1554-1561. https://doi.org/10.1177/02692163231198372

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 10, 2023
Online Publication Date Oct 10, 2023
Publication Date 2023-12
Deposit Date Oct 17, 2023
Publicly Available Date Oct 19, 2023
Journal Palliative Medicine
Electronic ISSN 1477-030X
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 37
Issue 10
Pages 1554-1561
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/02692163231198372
Keywords Anticipatory prescribing, anticipatory medications, palliative medicine kit, terminal care, palliative care, end of life care, home palliative care, medication costs
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/25958335
Publisher URL https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/02692163231198372

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