A Controlled Study of the Effects of State Surveillance on Indicators of Problematic and Non-Problematic Benzodiazepine Use in a Medicaid Population

Author:

Ross-Degnan Dennis1,Simoni-Wastila Linda,Brown Jeffrey S.,Gao Xiaoming,Mah Connie,Cosler Leon E.,Fanning Thomas,Gallagher Peter,Salzman Carl2,Shader Richard I.3,Inui Thomas S.4,Soumerai Stephen B.1

Affiliation:

1. Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care

2. Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts Mental Health Center

3. Tufts University School of Medicine

4. Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care and Regenstrief Institute for Health Care

Abstract

Objective: Benzodiazepines (BZs) are safe, effective drugs for treating anxiety, sleep, bipolar, and convulsive disorders, but concern is often expressed about their overuse and potential for abuse. We evaluated the effects of physician surveillance through a Triplicate Prescription Program (TPP) on problematic and non-problematic BZ use. Method: This study uses interrupted time series analyses of BZ use in the New York (intervention) and New Jersey (control) Medicaid programs for 12 months before and 24 months after the New York BZ TPP. The regulation required NY physicians to order BZs on triplicate prescription forms with one copy forwarded by pharmacies to a state surveillance unit. Study participants were community-dwelling persons over age 18 continuously enrolled between January 1988 and December 1990 in New York ( n = 125,837) or New Jersey Medicaid ( n = 139,405). Results: During the baseline year, 20.2% of New York and 19.3% of New Jersey cohort members received at least one BZ prescription. After the TPP, there was a sudden, sustained reduction in BZ use of 54.8% (95% CI = [51.4%, 58.3%]) in New York with no changes in New Jersey. Significantly greater reductions were experienced by young women, and persons living in zip codes that were urban, predominantly Black, or with a high density of poor households. Increases in potential substitute medications were modest. At baseline, nearly 60% of BZ recipients had no evidence of potentially problematic use. Despite a somewhat greater likelihood of discontinuation of BZ therapy among those with potentially problematic use, the largest impact of the TPP was a substantially greater relative reduction in access to BZs among non-problematic users. Conclusions: State-mandated physician surveillance dramatically reduces BZ use with limited substitution of alternative drugs, lowers rates of possible abuse, but may severely limit non-problematic BZ use.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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