Generic drugs are an important alternative to branded drugs, with the same efficacy. But when too many generics are changed for a pathology, the patient complies less with the doctor's prescriptions, or worsens his adherence to therapy.
Wednesday 18 November 2015 – L'ECO DI BERGAMO
This is in summary the preliminary result of a study conducted in 2 Lombard Local Health Authorities, in Pavia and Bergamo, promoted by the National Observatory on Women's Health (Onda) in collaboration with Doc Generici.
The results of the study are obtained from the analysis of over 14,500 patients of the two Local Health Authorities. Six therapeutic areas were examined: diabetology, cardiology, dyslipidemia, rheumatology, psychiatry and hypertension. "The goal was to see how the patient behaves when the pharmacist replaces a generic medicine prescribed by the doctor with another equivalent medicine, with the same effectiveness."
The survey found that "the patient's adherence to the prescription decreases, with a value equal to 28% if the replacement affects half of the prescriptions. In all 6 areas, there was a progressive reduction in adherence after a drug change: on average, if one generic prescription out of two is replaced with an equivalent one, dyslipidemia and diabetes have the highest percentage reduction of adherence (respectively the 48% and the 36%), followed by the area of rheumatology (21%) and psychiatry (19%) and hypertension (10%)».
This decline in adherence, the experts conclude, "implies a lower efficacy and safety of therapeutic treatments, with a consequent increase in the risk of complications and a worsening of the patients' health conditions".
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