Adherence to Prescribing Indicators at a District Hospital in Ghana: Do We Match WHO Standards?
Obed Kwabena Offe AmponsahNana Kwame Ayisi-BoatengSharath Burugina NagarajaDivya NairKarlos MuradyanGeorge Kwesi HedidorAppiah-Korang LabiMercy Naa Aduele Opare-AddoEmmanuel SarkodieKwame Ohene BuabengPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2022)
(1) Background : Rational use of medicines (RUM) and their assessment are important to ensure optimal use of resources and patient care in hospitals. These assessments are essential to identifying practice gaps for quality improvement. (2) Methods : Assessment of adherence to WHO/International Network for Rational Use of Drugs core prescribing indicators among outpatients in 2021 was conducted at the University Hospital of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in the Ashanti Region of Ghana. We reviewed electronic medical records (EMR) of 110,280 patient encounters in the year which resulted in 336,087 medicines prescribed. (3) Results : The average number of medicines prescribed per encounter was three, with generics being prescribed in 76% of prescriptions. Injections were prescribed in 7% of encounters while 90% of medicines were from Ghana's Essential Medicines List, 2017. (4) Conclusions : With the exception of patient encounters with injections, none of the prescribing indicators assessed in this study met WHO optimum levels, providing targets for quality improvement in RUM. Implementing prescribing guides and policies, regular audits and feedback as well as continuous professional development training may help to improve prescribing practices in the hospital.