Factors associated with unnecessary drug therapy and inappropriate dosage in Jimma University specialized hospital, South West Ethiopia

Authors

  • Bereket Molla Tigabu Clinical Pharmacist, Haramaya University School of Pharmacy, Ethiopia
  • Daniel Daba Pharmacologist, Jimma University Department of Pharmacy, Ethiopia
  • Belete Habte Internal Medicine Specialists, Jimma University Department of Internal Medicine, Ethiopia

Keywords:

Unnecessary drug therapy, Inappropriate dosage, Polypharmacy

Abstract

To assess factors associated with unnecessary drug therapy and inappropriate dosage in hospitalized patients. A hospital based cross-sectional study design was employed. The study was conducted in Jimma University Specialized Hospital, Jimma, which is 345 Km from South west of Addis Ababa. All patients who were admitted to medical ward from February 5 March 21, 2011 were included in the study. Data on socio-demographic variables, past medical history, past medication history, current diagnosis, current medications, vital signs and relevant laboratory data were collected by using bed side patient interview guided semi-structured questionnaire and data abstraction formats for card review. The data were analysed by using SPSS version 16 for windows. Descriptive statistics, cross-tabs, chi-square and logistic regression were done. Out of 257 study participants 140(54.5%) had unnecessary drug therapy or inappropriate dosage. The only independent factors which predicted the unnecessary drug therapy in study population was polypharmacy while not considering organ function test, polypharmacy and clinically significant potential drug-drug interaction were independent factors associated with inappropriate dosage. The prevalence of unnecessary drug therapy or inappropriate dosage is significantly high.

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Published

2013-12-03

How to Cite

Bereket Molla Tigabu, Daniel Daba, & Belete Habte. (2013). Factors associated with unnecessary drug therapy and inappropriate dosage in Jimma University specialized hospital, South West Ethiopia. World Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 1(4), 93–98. Retrieved from https://wjpsonline.com/index.php/wjps/article/view/42

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Section

Research Article