BMJ 1995;310:955-956 (15 April)

Editorials

Promoting cost effective prescribing

Britain lags behind

In many countries the cost effectiveness of drugs is receiving increasing attention. Rising budgets have heightened concerns about containing costs and whether resources are used efficiently.1 The need for rigorous examination of cost effectiveness as well as clinical effectiveness has been argued for.2 3 4 The message is clear: doctors may prescribe an effective drug to patients who will benefit, but if the drug is not cost effective they may be using resources that would produce greater benefit for other patients for the same cost.

Expensive drugs require the use of limited resources, which, once deployed are not available for other activities that may bring greater benefits for patients. When an expensive drug is shown to be cost effective, however, its use is justified by the additional benefits it brings. To use scarce resources efficiently the careful and explicit measurement of the value of what is given up (the . . . [Full text of this article]


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Promoting cost effective prescribing
Adrian Towse and Nicholas Wells
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