TY - JOUR
T1 - Insomnia management in Dutch general practice
T2 - a routine care database study
AU - Bakker, Mette H.
AU - Oldejans, Nina A.
AU - Hugtenburg, Jacqueline G.
AU - van der Horst, Henriëtte E.
AU - Slottje, Pauline
N1 - Funding Information: This study was funded by ZonMw, the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development. We are grateful to the general practitioners for sharing their routine care data and to J.H.K. Joosten and F. Botman for their assistance with data extraction and data reviewing respectively. Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Objective: To explore insomnia management in general practice, with a focus on sleep medication prescription. Design: Descriptive analysis of anonymized routine general practice care data extracted from electronic medical records (EMRs), including demographics, free text annotations from sleep consultations and sleep medication prescriptions covering one year before up to two years after the registration of the International Classification for Primary Care (ICPC) code P06 ‘Sleep disturbance’. Setting: Twenty-one general practices in an urban area of the Netherlands. Patients: Adults (18–85 year) with a first sleep consultation with their GP. Outcomes: Documented non-pharmacological and sleep medication treatment. Results: Of the 1,089 patients who consulted their general practitioner (GP) for sleep disturbance for the first time, about 50% had one more sleep consultation during the two years follow-up. Over two years including the first consultation, GPs documented a non-pharmacological intervention for 48.4% of the patients and prescribed sleep medication to 77.0%. 64.6% of the patients received a sleep medication prescription in the first consultation. Among patients receiving medication (N = 838); 59.6% received more than one prescription; 76.8% received one or more short-acting benzodiazepine receptor agonist (BZRA), 39.5% one or more unrecommended drugs and 14.7% >180 pills of BZRAs in two years. Conclusion: Although the guidelines advocate non-pharmacological treatment and warn against unwarranted sleep medication, it is still very common in Dutch general practice to prescribe medication, even at the first sleep consultation. Prescriptions frequently include unrecommended and off-label drugs or repeated BZRA prescriptions.
AB - Objective: To explore insomnia management in general practice, with a focus on sleep medication prescription. Design: Descriptive analysis of anonymized routine general practice care data extracted from electronic medical records (EMRs), including demographics, free text annotations from sleep consultations and sleep medication prescriptions covering one year before up to two years after the registration of the International Classification for Primary Care (ICPC) code P06 ‘Sleep disturbance’. Setting: Twenty-one general practices in an urban area of the Netherlands. Patients: Adults (18–85 year) with a first sleep consultation with their GP. Outcomes: Documented non-pharmacological and sleep medication treatment. Results: Of the 1,089 patients who consulted their general practitioner (GP) for sleep disturbance for the first time, about 50% had one more sleep consultation during the two years follow-up. Over two years including the first consultation, GPs documented a non-pharmacological intervention for 48.4% of the patients and prescribed sleep medication to 77.0%. 64.6% of the patients received a sleep medication prescription in the first consultation. Among patients receiving medication (N = 838); 59.6% received more than one prescription; 76.8% received one or more short-acting benzodiazepine receptor agonist (BZRA), 39.5% one or more unrecommended drugs and 14.7% >180 pills of BZRAs in two years. Conclusion: Although the guidelines advocate non-pharmacological treatment and warn against unwarranted sleep medication, it is still very common in Dutch general practice to prescribe medication, even at the first sleep consultation. Prescriptions frequently include unrecommended and off-label drugs or repeated BZRA prescriptions.
KW - Insomnia
KW - general practice
KW - hypnotics
KW - sleep disturbance
KW - sleep medication
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85165496772&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2023.2237073
DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2023.2237073
M3 - Article
C2 - 37470474
SN - 0281-3432
VL - 41
SP - 306
EP - 316
JO - Scandinavian journal of primary health care
JF - Scandinavian journal of primary health care
IS - 3
ER -