SRINAGAR: Doctors Association Kashmir (DAK) on Sunday called for the prescription audit in hospitals of Kashmir valley that will ensure quality of health care and safety of patients.
“Auditing of prescriptions will curb the practice of unnecessary and irrational prescribing of drugs which is a common and rampant feature in the valley,” said DAK President Dr Nisar ul Hassan in a communique.
He said the most important part of health care system is to deliver the right medicine to the right people.
But this does not happen. “The prescriptions are full of unwanted drugs and they are largely influenced by pharma companies,” said Dr Nisar.
He said doctors prescribe antibiotics for cold and flu that are caused by viruses against which antibiotics have no effect.
Antibiotics frequently find their way in prescriptions for viral diarrhoeas where simple fluid replacement works.
Patients with asthma and allergies are given antibiotics, even though they are not helped by taking these drugs.
“Unnecessary use of antibiotics has led to the emergence of deadly bugs that are killing patients,” Dr Nisar said.
He said fanciful vitamins and tonics are unnecessarily prescribed and are essentially put in the prescription to get favours from pharma companies.
Dr Nisar said there are thousands of brands of unhealthy combinations and pharma companies promote them and are luring medical practitioners to prescribe them.
“Not only these combinations increase the cost of prescription, but also put patients needlessly at risk of serious side-effects,” he added.
Dr Nisar said prescription audit will ensure doctors prescribe cheaper generic drugs instead of costly branded drugs that will make drugs accessible to the poor who cannot afford expensive drugs.
“While generic drug prescribing has been made mandatory, doctors in Kashmir continue to dole out expensive therapies when equally effective cheaper versions are available,” he said. (GNS)
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