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Prescribing pattern of angiotensin receptor blocker: A study of errors and drug-drug interactions

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dc.contributor.author Nesar, Shagufta
dc.contributor.author Shoaib, Muhammad Harris
dc.contributor.author Rafiq, Kiran
dc.contributor.author Rahim, Najia
dc.contributor.author Muhammad, Iyad Naeem
dc.contributor.author Iffat, Wajiha
dc.date.accessioned 2022-12-15T10:34:19Z
dc.date.available 2022-12-15T10:34:19Z
dc.date.issued 2018-01-20
dc.identifier.citation Nesar, S., Shoaib, M. H., Rafiq, K., Rahim, N., Muhammad, I. N., & Iffat, W. (2018). Prescribing pattern of angiotensin receptor blocker: A study of errors and drug-drug interactions. Pak J Pharm Sci, 31(1), 113-117. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://142.54.178.187:9060/xmlui/handle/123456789/15230
dc.description.abstract Prescriptions comprising multi-drug therapy mostly illustrate the prescribing error. The phenomenon of error is bonded with human inaccuracy. The erroneous practice is observed in under developed countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh and also in developed ones. Consequently drug-drug interaction is one of the most common error associated with potentially serious adverse response even death. Accordingly the present study was conducted to assess the prevalence of prescribing errors and drug-drug interactions in out-patients receiving angiotensin receptor blockers. The study was done with population size one hundred fifty prescriptions obtained from different out-patient settings in Karachi. The prescriptions were screened for prescribing errors and risk factors for drug-drug interactions. Drug-drug interactions were recognized by Micromedex.2.0.Drug-Reax®database. The most common type of error was omission error. These errors were patient’s age, weight and diagnosis found in 51.3%, 97.3% and 74% of prescriptions, respectively. The prevalence of drug-drug interaction was 38%. A total of 746 drugs were prescribed with an average of 5 drugs per prescription and 450 medication errors were detected. Majority of the interaction were moderate (19.33%), others were minor (14%) and major (6%) in severity. Patients who prescribed many drugs (more than 5 drugs in a while) had a higher risk of developing drug-drug interactions (OR=4.76; 95% CI=2.30-9.64; p=0.0001*).The study data reports the occurrence of prescribing errors in Karachi and also necessitate the need of clinical pharmacist’s services in health care system. The step will help to minimize the risk factors by having the drug prescriptions reviewed by the pharmacists. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Karachi:Pakistan Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, university of Karachi. en_US
dc.subject Prescribing errors en_US
dc.subject drug-drug interactions en_US
dc.subject angiotensin receptor blockers en_US
dc.subject out-patients en_US
dc.title Prescribing pattern of angiotensin receptor blocker: A study of errors and drug-drug interactions en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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