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Title: Use of explicit criteria and implicit judgments in a drug-use review program. Author: Gregoire JP, Tremblay J. Journal: Am J Hosp Pharm; 1987 Feb; 44(2):332-6. PubMed ID: 3565392. Abstract: The degree of agreement between implicit and explicit judgments made by a pharmacist in a drug-use review program in an ambulatory-care setting was studied. During a six-month period in 1980, all prescriptions for a group of 19 drugs were reviewed for appropriateness of indication, dosage, and length of therapy by a pharmacist using implicit judgment. The same prescriptions were then reevaluated according to explicit criteria that had been approved by the prescribing physicians. A sample of prescriptions that did not meet either implicit or explicit criteria for use was subjected to review by a committee of four physicians to validate whether these prescriptions were indeed inappropriate. Of the 935 prescriptions evaluated, 36.8% were judged inappropriate by the explicit criteria and 23.5% were judged inappropriate by implicit judgment. The explicit and implicit approaches yielded concordant results for 95.5% of the observations. The proportion of true deviations as validated by the review committee was estimated at 80% for the implicit method and 74.4% for the explicit method. The implicit judgments of a pharmacist appear to be as effective as explicit drug-use criteria for identifying inappropriate prescribing in a drug-use review program. These judgments could be used to increase the efficiency of a drug-use review program when explicit criteria are not available.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]