
Reducing long-term diazepam prescribing in office practice. A controlled trial of educational visits.
We conducted a controlled, statewide trial of the efficacy of an educational visit by a physician counselor in the reduction of diazepam prescribing in outpatient practice. A novel aspect of this trial was the provision of a schedule for gradual withdrawal of long-term diazepam users from drug therapy; 51% of visited doctors attempted to withdraw patients from diazepam therapy and 26% utilized the withdrawal schedule. The entire group of 43 visited doctors reduced the rate of long-term diazepam users in their practice by 18% relative to the control group; the subgroup of doctors who utilized the withdrawal schedule had and even greater reduction of 33%. These results suggest that practicing doctors are concerned with long-term use of diazepam and that the educational visit by another physician is one method for reducing such use.
Duke Scholars
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- Tennessee
- Statistics as Topic
- Medicaid
- Humans
- General & Internal Medicine
- Evaluation Studies as Topic
- Education, Medical, Continuing
- Drug Utilization
- Drug Information Services
- Drug Administration Schedule
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Published In
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Tennessee
- Statistics as Topic
- Medicaid
- Humans
- General & Internal Medicine
- Evaluation Studies as Topic
- Education, Medical, Continuing
- Drug Utilization
- Drug Information Services
- Drug Administration Schedule