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BACKGROUND: NHS England issued commissioning guidance on 18 low-priority treatments which should not be routinely prescribed in primary care. We aimed to monitor the impact of an educational intervention delivered to regional prescribing advisors by senior pharmacists from NHS England on the primary care spend on low-priority items. METHODS: An opportunistic randomised, controlled parallel-group trial. Participants (clinical commissioning groups, CCGs) were randomised to intervention or control in a 1:1 ratio. The intervention group were invited to participate. The intervention was a one-off educational session. Our primary outcomes concerned the total prescribing of low-priority items in primary care. Secondary outcomes concerned the prescribing of specific low-priority items. We also measured the impact on information-seeking behaviour. RESULTS: 40 CCGs were randomised, 20 allocated to intervention, with 11 receiving the intervention. There was no significant impact on any prescribing outcomes. There was some possible evidence of increased engagement with data, in the form of CCG email alert sign-ups (p = 0.077). No harms were detected. CONCLUSIONS: A one-off intervention delivered to CCGs by NHS England did not significantly influence low-priority prescribing. This trial demonstrates how routine interventions planned to improve uptake or adherence to healthcare guidance can be delivered as low-cost randomised trials and how to robustly assess their effectiveness. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN31218900, October 01 2018.

Original publication

DOI

10.1186/s12913-024-11575-y

Type

Journal article

Journal

BMC Health Serv Res

Publication Date

25/02/2025

Volume

25

Keywords

Cost-effectiveness, Education, General practice, Prescribing, Randomised controlled trial, Humans, Primary Health Care, England, State Medicine, Drug Prescriptions, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Pharmacists, Inappropriate Prescribing