Affiliation:
1. School of Pharmacy, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
2. School of Pharmacy, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand
Abstract
Background: Community pharmacies in New Zealand have varying ownership and operational structures. Unlike independent pharmacies, corporate and hybrid pharmacies do not charge prescription copayments. Objectives: This research aims to determine whether people receiving free prescriptions from corporate and hybrid pharmacies have greater medication adherence than the users of independent pharmacies. Methods: A nationwide, retrospective, observational study linked 1 year of dispensing data (1/05/2022 to 30/04/2023) from the Pharmaceutical Collection to patient enrollment data using a National Health Index number to identify demographics of different pharmacy-type users. People were assigned to a particular type of pharmacy if they collected at least 70% of their prescriptions from there; if they did not meet this threshold, they were defined as mixed users. People were classified as adherent if dispensing data showed they collected their supply of medication to cover at least 80% of the study period. Results: The sample captured 218,080 people taking at least 1 diabetes medication, with a total of 360,079 unique medications being included in the analysis. The majority, 156,893, used independent pharmacies. The type of pharmacy used was shown to be a significant predictor of adherence. Corporate and hybrid pharmacy users were 1.11 (95% CI 1.07–1.14) and 1.07 (95% CI 1.04–1.11) times as likely to not be adherent than the users of independent pharmacies. Mail order pharmacy users were the most likely to be adherent, whereas mixed pharmacy users were the least likely to be adherent. Conclusions: These findings suggest that prescription copayments are not the most significant barrier to medication adherence. Further research may identify more efficient ways of improving medication adherence than removing prescription copayments for all.
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1 articles.
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