Prescribing Issues and Concordance

Last updated by Peer reviewed by Dr Doug McKechnie
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Drug treatment is the most common form of treatment in primary care. Prescribing is the most common intervention in the NHS across all sectors, and after staffing costs, accounts for the second highest area of expenditure in the NHS.

Although prescribing is an important part of primary care, it has frequently been described as unnecessary and wasteful. Polypharmacy is an increasing problem associated with an ageing and multimorbid population.[1]

The NHS Business Services Authority (NHSBSA) collects and publishes prescribing data and analyses prescribing trends in England. The latest report from 2021-2022 shows:[2]

  • The cost of prescription items dispensed in the community in England was £9.69 billion. This was a 0.87% increase of £83.7 million from £9.61 billion in 2020/21.
  • The number of prescription items dispensed in the community in England was 1.14 billion. This was a 2.58% increase of 28.7 million items from 1.11 billion in 2020/21.
  • Atorvastatin was the most dispensed drug in England in 2021/22 with 53.4 million items, while apixaban was the drug with the highest cost of £401 million.
  • FreeStyle Libre 2 Sensor kit was the presentation with the largest absolute increase in cost between 2020/21 and 2021/22 of £69.8 million - from £2.84 million to £72.6 million.

Elsewhere in the UK:

  • Similar trends can be found on the Public Health Scotland website. In 2021-2022 106.6 million items were dispensed in Scotland, with number of items also increasing year on year (except a dip in 2020-2021 - likely pandemic-related).[3] Generic prescribing has also been increasing steadily.
  • Annual dispensing statistics are published by calendar year by the Welsh government. 82.8 million items were prescribed in the community in Wales between 2021-2022.[4] There is a long-term trend for an increase in the number of items prescribed, but the rate of increase is slowing.
  • In Northern Ireland, statistics are published by calendar year by the Business Services Organisation. There were 43.2 million prescription items dispensed in 2021-2022.[5]

An ageing population has led to the increased presence of multiple morbidity, and inevitable polypharmacy. Several community-based studies of older adults in Germany have shown polypharmacy (defined as >5 medicines) rates of around 47%.[6] A cross-sectional analysis of the Survey of Health, Ageing, and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) database showed that the prevalence of polypharmacy, defined as taking five or more medications concurrently in older adults aged 65 years or more, was between 26.3% and 39.9% among 17 European countries and Israel.[7]

There are many pressures to prescribe from differing sources. The drive to meet GP contract targets has encouraged GPs to prescribe increasing numbers of medicines and to chase patients who decline to take them as advised.

This might in part explain the comment in the 2009 guidance from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) that between a third and a half of medicines that are prescribed for long-term conditions are not used as recommended.[8]

Another influential factor is the "pill for every ill" culture which has been fuelled by the media and is now firmly embedded in the nation's psyche. New guidelines and diagnostic criteria have been accused of medicalising normality in many clinical areas and fuelling prescribing.[9, 10]

Prescribing Analysis and Cost (PACT) is a series of reports which tells GPs what they have prescribed and how much their prescribing has cost. This is now produced in England by NHS Prescribing Services in electronic web-based format (ePACT).[11] Data can be compared by prescriber, by practice and by organisation in order to inform on prescribing costs and trends. It is updated monthly, six weeks after the end of the prescribing month.

Clinicians are encouraged (within the GP appraisal process) to be aware of their own prescribing practice and review it with a view to 'Quality Improvement' activities within their surgery.[12]

There are many guidelines to safe responsible prescribing available.

  • The General Medical Council (GMC) issued "Good practice in prescribing and managing medicines and devices" in 2013.[13] This has detailed guidance about good medical practice with regards to prescribing. It includes sections on:
    • Keeping up to date.
    • Shared prescribing.
    • Repeat prescribing.
    • Reporting adverse reactions.
    • Remote prescribing.
    • Prescribing of unlicensed medicines.
    • Prescribing for yourself or those close to you.
    • Consent.
    • Sharing of information.
  • The British Medical Association (BMA) website contains further guidance on prescribing.
  • The BNF contains essential prescribing information and detailed instructions about all the drugs used by the NHS, as well as how to write prescriptions.[14]
  • Clinical guidelines from NICE and Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) provide specific prescribing advice in some areas.
  • The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) provides regular drug safety updates and alerts.[15]

Repeat prescriptions are estimated to account for two thirds of primary care prescriptions and 80% of medicine costs.[16] A benefit of repeat prescriptions is that they reduce patient inconvenience as well as the professional workload.

A disadvantage is the reduction of patient-doctor contact, resulting in potential clinical problems. Some patients may be eligible for a repeat dispensing scheme, whereby they can obtain repeat prescriptions for up to a year from their community pharmacy without having to contact their GP surgery. The pharmacist monitors the ongoing need for the prescriptions and checks they continue to be appropriate.

When reviewing each repeat prescription, consideration should be given to the following:[17]

  • Is it effective?
  • Is it necessary or still required?
  • Will the patient take it?
  • Is the present formulation appropriate?
  • Does it provide the most cost-effective treatment available?
  • Has the patient had a clinical review within the previous 15 months (or shorter if clinically appropriate)?

In its guidance on Medicines Adherence, NICE also recommends considering the following at review:[8]

  • Offer repeat information and review, especially when treating long-term conditions with multiple medicines.
  • Review at agreed intervals patients' knowledge, understanding and concerns about medicines and whether they think they still need the medicine.
  • Ask about adherence when reviewing medicines. Clarify possible causes of non-adherence and agree any action with the patient (including a date for follow-up).
  • Bear in mind that patients sometimes evaluate prescribed medicines in their own way (for example, by stopping and starting them and monitoring symptoms). Ask the patient if they have their own way of weighing up their medicine.

The majority of GP practices now use the Electronic Prescription Service (EPS). This allows prescriptions to be sent electronically to the chemist or dispenser of the patient's choice. This should improve both efficiency and convenience for all concerned.

Access to the relevant system is through the use of smart cards. A GP applies an electronic signature to the prescription by using the PIN number for their smart card. A prescription can be cancelled at any point up until it is dispensed.

In recent years there has been a move away from the term "compliance", which suggests an element of compulsion, to "concordance", in which prescriber and patient enter into a partnership concerning the use of medication.

The cornerstones of concordance include:

  • The level of information given to patients.
  • Side-effects.
  • The costs of medication.
  • The effect on lifestyle.

NICE guidance refers to the term "non-adherence" and identifies two types: intentional (the patient decides not to follow the treatment recommendations) and unintentional (the patient wants to follow the treatment recommendations but has practical problems).[8] Guidelines advocate a non-judgemental discussion in which the patient's perceptions and preferences are explored. These two types can overlap.

The discussion should, where relevant, include:

  • What will happen if they don't take the medicine.
  • Non-pharmacological alternatives.
  • Reducing or stopping long-term medicines.
  • Fitting medicines into their routine.
  • Choosing between medicines.

The patient should also be given adequate information covering:[20]

  • What the medicine is, how to use it and likely benefits.
  • Likely adverse effects and what to do if they think they are experiencing them.
  • What to do if they miss a dose.
  • Whether another prescription is needed and how to obtain further supplies.

Although not evidence-based, NICE recommends considering the following interventions if there is a specific need:

  • Suggesting patients record their medicine-taking.
  • Encouraging patients to monitor their condition.
  • Simplifying the dosing regimen.
  • Using alternative packaging.
  • Using a multi-compartment system of medicines.
  • Considering options to reduce prescribing costs if this is an issue.

Special clinical scenarios

Children

  • Parents are mainly responsible for the administration of medicines to their children, so both the concordance of the parent and of the child should be considered.
  • Concordance in children is influenced by the formulation, taste, appearance and ease of administration of a preparation.
  • Prescribed regimens should be tailored to the child's daily routine.
  • Treatment goals should be set in collaboration with the child/parent.

The elderly
Important principles include:

  • Effective communication.
  • Keeping regimens simple.
  • Giving reminder charts, concordance aids and special written instructions.
  • Consider monitoring concordance by counting returned tablets or checking plasma drug levels.
  • Review medication regularly. Stop medication which is unnecessary, or causing harm. A '5Ms' approach is age-friendly.[21]
  • Consider potential practical difficulties such as difficulty in opening child-proof containers, poor vision, difficulty swallowing, and means of accessing repeat prescriptions. Discuss solutions where appropriate such as blister packets, pre-filled dosette boxes, non child-proof containers, large print labels, liquid formulations, delivery of medication, etc.
  • Consider anticholinergic drug burden and assess for possible risks.[22]
  • Awareness of problems of polypharmacy. This is more common in the elderly, and the 2013 Kings Fund report made recommendations for improvements needed.[23] They included longer GP appointments to deal with polypharmacy, more research as most studies exclude patients with multiple morbidities, and consequent changes to guidelines where appropriate. Although use of multiple items of medication may extend and improve life, there is a risk of increased interactions, side-effects, concordance issues and potential for reduction in quality of life.
  • NICE produced Medicines optimisation guidance in 2015.[24]

One study found that large numbers of medicines, confusion and lack of knowledge as to why a medicine had been prescribed, contributed to non-compliance.[25]

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Further reading and references

  1. Payne RA; The epidemiology of polypharmacy. Clin Med (Lond). 2016 Oct16(5):465-469. doi: 10.7861/clinmedicine.16-5-465.

  2. Prescription data cost analysis, England 2021-22: NHS Business Services Authority, 2023

  3. Prescribing and medicines; Public Health Scotland web page.

  4. Prescriptions in Wales: April 2021 to March 2022; GOV.Wales, September 2022

  5. General pharmaceutical services annual statistics N. Ireland; Health and Social Care Business Service Organisation, June 2022

  6. Barghouth MH, Schaeffner E, Ebert N, et al; Polypharmacy and the Change of Self-Rated Health in Community-Dwelling Older Adults. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023 Feb 2520(5):4159. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20054159.

  7. Midao L, Giardini A, Menditto E, et al; Polypharmacy prevalence among older adults based on the survey of health, ageing and retirement in Europe. Arch Gerontol Geriatr. 2018 Sep-Oct78:213-220. doi: 10.1016/j.archger.2018.06.018. Epub 2018 Jun 30.

  8. Medicines adherence: involving patients in decisions about prescribed medicines and supporting adherence; NICE Clinical Guideline (January 2009)

  9. Dowrick C, Frances A; Medicalising unhappiness: new classification of depression risks more patients being put on drug treatment from which they will not benefit. BMJ. 2013 Dec 9347:f7140. doi: 10.1136/bmj.f7140.

  10. Moynihan R, Heneghan C, Godlee F; Too Much Medicine: from evidence to action. BMJ. 2013 Dec 4347:f7141. doi: 10.1136/bmj.f7141.

  11. NHS Prescription services; NHS Business Services Authority

  12. Khan NF, Booth HP, Myles P, et al; Use of prescribing safety quality improvement reports in UK general practices: a qualitative assessment. BMC Health Serv Res. 2021 Apr 2721(1):394. doi: 10.1186/s12913-021-06417-0.

  13. Good practice in prescribing and managing medicines and devices; General Medical Council, February 2013 - updated 15 March 2022

  14. British National Formulary (BNF); NICE Evidence Services (UK access only)

  15. Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)

  16. The quality of GP prescribing in England; The Kings Fund, 2011

  17. Kairuz T, Bye L, Birdsall R, et al; Identifying compliance issues with prescription medicines among older people: a pilot study. Drugs Aging. 200825(2):153-62.

  18. Electronic Prescription Service (EPS); Health and Social Care Information Centre (HSCIC) - NHS Digital

  19. De las Cuevas C; Towards a clarification of terminology in medicine taking behavior: compliance, adherence and concordance are related although different terms with different uses. Curr Clin Pharmacol. 2011 May6(2):74-7.

  20. Nafradi L, Nakamoto K, Schulz PJ; Is patient empowerment the key to promote adherence? A systematic review of the relationship between self-efficacy, health locus of control and medication adherence. PLoS One. 2017 Oct 1712(10):e0186458. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186458. eCollection 2017.

  21. Monette PJ, Schwartz AW; Optimizing Medications with the Geriatrics 5Ms: An Age-Friendly Approach. Drugs Aging. 2023 Apr 12:1-6. doi: 10.1007/s40266-023-01016-6.

  22. Lu X, Huang H, Huang Y, et al; Evaluation of anticholinergic burden in elderly outpatients and the risk factors. Zhong Nan Da Xue Xue Bao Yi Xue Ban. 2023 Jan 2848(1):114-122. doi: 10.11817/j.issn.1672-7347.2023.220080.

  23. Martin Duerden et al; Polypharmacy and medicines optimisation: Making it safe and sound, The Kings Fund, 28 Nov 2013

  24. Medicines optimisation: the safe and effective use of medicines to enable the best possible outcomes; NICE Guidance (March 2015)

  25. Yoon S, Kwan YH, Yap WL, et al; Factors influencing medication adherence in multi-ethnic Asian patients with chronic diseases in Singapore: A qualitative study. Front Pharmacol. 2023 Mar 914:1124297. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2023.1124297. eCollection 2023.

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