Report: E-prescribing improves first-fill med rate
E-prescribing leads to a significant increase in first-fill medication adherence, according to a study from Surescripts. Analysis of de-identified data suggest that the increase in first-fill medication adherence combined with other e-prescribing benefits could, over the next decade, lead to between $140 billion and $240 billion in healthcare savings and improved health outcomes.
Surescripts collaborated with pharmacies and pharmacy benefit managers on the study to quantify the benefits of e-prescribing. Reviewers analyzed de-identified data sets representing over 40 million prescription records--comparing e-prescriptions with paper, phoned- and faxed-prescriptions--to measure the impact on first-fill medication adherence.
The data showed a consistent 10 percent increase in patient first-fill medication adherence (i.e., new prescriptions that were picked up by the patient) among physicians who adopted e-prescribing technology when compared with physicians who did not use e-prescribing. Physicians who adopted e-prescribing used the technology to route up to 40 percent of their prescriptions electronically during the time of the study. Additionally, Surescripts estimated that first-fill medication adherence rates will continue to improve as e-prescribing adoption and usage increase.
Surescripts collaborated with pharmacies and pharmacy benefit managers on the study to quantify the benefits of e-prescribing. Reviewers analyzed de-identified data sets representing over 40 million prescription records--comparing e-prescriptions with paper, phoned- and faxed-prescriptions--to measure the impact on first-fill medication adherence.
The data showed a consistent 10 percent increase in patient first-fill medication adherence (i.e., new prescriptions that were picked up by the patient) among physicians who adopted e-prescribing technology when compared with physicians who did not use e-prescribing. Physicians who adopted e-prescribing used the technology to route up to 40 percent of their prescriptions electronically during the time of the study. Additionally, Surescripts estimated that first-fill medication adherence rates will continue to improve as e-prescribing adoption and usage increase.