Overprescribing of potentially harmful medication: an observational study in England’s general practice

Author:

Khan TasneemORCID,Copsey Bethan,Carder Paul,Johnson Stella,Imran Mohammed,Wang Kaiwen,Alderson SarahORCID

Abstract

Background Overprescribing of potentially harmful medication in UK general practice has a complex association with socioeconomic deprivation. Aim To assess trends in general practice prescribing of five high-risk medications and their relationship with deprivation. Design & setting An observational study was conducted using general practice data from three English regions with varied sociodemographic factors: West Yorkshire and Harrogate (WY), Black Country and West Birmingham (BC), and Surrey and East Sussex (SE). Method Practice-level prescribing data were obtained from 2016–2021 for five drug classes: opioids, hypnotics, gabapentinoids, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and antibacterials. Prescribing trends were demonstrated using a linear model. Results Reduction in NSAID, opioid, hypnotic and antibacterial prescriptions, and the increase in gabapentinoid prescriptions, were significant at each financial year time period. Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) was positively associated with all drug classes except antibacterials, which showed a positive association when incorporating the interaction term between IMD and age. When adjusting for IMD and population, region was independently associated with prescribing rate. Compared with WY, IMD had a smaller association with prescribing in BC for NSAIDs (coefficient = −0.01578, P = 0.004) and antibacterials (coefficient = −0.02769, P = 0.007), whereas IMD had a greater association with prescribing in SE for NSAIDs (coefficient = 0.02443, P <0.001), opioids (coefficient = 0.08919, P <0.001), hypnotics (coefficient = 0.09038, P <0.001), gabapentinoids (coefficient = 0.1095, P <0.001), and antibacterials (coefficient = 0.01601, P = 0.19). Conclusion The association of socioeconomic deprivation with overprescribing of high-risk medication in general practice varies by region and drug type. Geographical location is associated with overprescribing, independent of socioeconomic status.

Publisher

Royal College of General Practitioners

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5. Social justice, epidemiology and health inequalities

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