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Improving Drug-Therapy Decisions through Educational Outreach — A Randomized Controlled Trial of Academically Based Detailing

List of authors.
  • Jerry Avorn, M.D.,
  • and Stephen B. Soumerai, M.S.P.H.

Abstract

Improving precision and economy in the prescribing of drugs is a goal whose importance has increased with the proliferation of new and potent agents and with growing economic pressures to contain healthcare costs. We implemented an office-based physician education program to reduce the excessive use of three drug groups: cerebral and peripheral vasodilators, an oral cephalosporin, and propoxyphene. A four-state sample of 435 prescribers of these drugs was identified through Medicaid records and randomly assigned to one of three groups. Physicians who were offered personal educational visits by clinical pharmacists along with a series of mailed "unadvertisements" reduced their prescribing of the target drugs by 14 per cent as compared with controls (P = 0.0001). A comparable reduction in the number of dollars reimbursed for these drugs was also seen between the two groups, resulting in substantial cost savings. No such change was seen in physicians who received mailed print materials only. The effect persisted for at least nine months after the start of the intervention, and no significant increase in the use of expensive substitute drugs was found. Academically based "detailing" may represent a useful and cost-effective way to improve the quality of drug-therapy decisions and reduce unnecessary expenditures. (N Engl J Med 1983; 308:1457–63.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by the Division of Extramural Research of the National Center for Health Services Research.

We are indebted to the following colleagues for their collaboration in the role of drug-information specialists: Lawrence Robinson, Pharm.D., Maude Babington, Pharm.D., and Dan Spadaro, Pharm.D. (University of Arkansas); Donald Fraser, Pharm.D. (Massachusetts College of Pharmacy); Richard Deth, Ph.D., (Northeastern University); and Aida LeRoy, Pharm.D., and Nancy MacArthur, Pharm.D. (Health Information Designs, Inc.); to Dennis Lyons, Larry Pahigan, and Michael Levy of Programs and Analysis, of Burlington, Mass., for their invaluable help in the analysis of the prescribing data described in this study; to Dennis Ross-Degnan and Karl Finison for programming and statistical work; to Susan Lewis for important technical assistance; to Roberta Clarke, D.B.A., and Howard Silk (Boston University), Lee Morse (Health Information Designs), and Heistand Design, Inc., for assistance in the design of the intervention; and to the officers and staff of the Medicaid programs of Arkansas, New Hampshire, Vermont, and the District of Columbia, without whose cooperation this work would not have been possible.

Author Affiliations

From the Department of Social Medicine and Health Policy and the Division on Aging, Harvard Medical School. Address reprint requests to Dr. Avorn at Harvard Medical School, 643 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02115.