June 13, 2011

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Article outlines principles for a conservative approach to prescribing medication

A shift toward more conservative medication-prescribing practices would serve patients better, according to a review article published Online First today by Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. The article is part of the journal's Less Is More series.

As background, the article notes that the majority of under age 65 years receive at least one prescription drug annually. However, according to the authors, not every patient visit needs to result in a prescription. They point to "the recent spate of revelations of undisclosed and unexpected of drugs in multiple therapeutic categories" as just one reason to take a more measured approach to medication usage.

Gordon D. Schiff, M.D., from Harvard Medical School, Boston, with colleagues in the medical and pharmacy divisions of the University of Illinois at Chicago, outlines a series of steps that can be taken to rein in prescription writing. "Although others have used labels such as healthy skepticism, more judicious, rational, careful, or cautious prescribing," they write, "we believe that the term conservative prescribing conveys an approach that goes beyond the oft-repeated physician's mantra, 'first, do no harm.'" Among the steps they recommend for conservative prescribing:

"Individually, none of these principles is particularly novel, nor should any of them be terribly controversial," write the authors. "But taken together, they represent a shift in prescribing paradigm from 'newer and more is better' to 'fewer and more time tested is best.'" The authors recommend taking greater care when deciding to prescribe a drug, especially one that is new or not well understood. "While clinicians must always weigh the benefits of conservative against the risks of withholding potentially needed medications, at the very least we should seek to shift the burden of proof toward demanding a higher standard of evidence of benefit before exposing patients to the risks of drugs."

More information: Arch Intern Med. 2011;10.1001/archinternmed.2011.256

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