Prescription of anorectic and benzodiazepine drugs through notification B prescriptions in Natal, Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil

Authors

  • Solange Aparecida Nappo Federal University of São Paulo; Department of Psychobiology; Brazilian Information Center on Psychotropic Drugs
  • Elisaldo Araújo Carlini Federal University of São Paulo; Department of Psychobiology; Brazilian Information Center on Psychotropic Drugs
  • Maria Dalva Araújo Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte; Department of Social Sciences; Brazilian Information Center on Psychotropic Drugs; Community Center
  • Lúcio Flávio Sousa Moreira Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte; Department of Social Sciences; Brazilian Information Center on Psychotropic Drugs; Community Center

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1984-82502010000200017

Keywords:

Anorectic^i1^sprescript, Benzodiazepine^i1^sprescript, Obesity^i1^streatm, Medicines^i1^srational, Compounded medicine, Compounding pharmacy

Abstract

A study was conducted on 22,158 special B prescriptions (notificações B) containing amphetamine-type anorectic drugs or benzodiazepines, obtained from compounding pharmacies or drugstores located in the city of Natal, RN, Brazil. The data obtained were compared with those from other Brazilian cities. Results showed that compounding pharmacies dispensed 85.4% of the prescriptions, indicating that these pharmacies filled out nearly 10 times more of these prescriptions than did the drugstores. The majority (83.5%) of B prescriptions issued for the compounding pharmacies were for women, where the female/male patient ratio ranged from 7.1/1.0 for mazindol to 10.3/1.0 for amfepramone. Similar results were obtained for the benzodiazepines with ratios of 1.9/1.0 for clonazepam to 15.6/1.0 for oxazepam. Omissions and mistakes were present in the B prescriptions, including missing information about the patient (in 49.6% of the documents) or about the pharmacies or drugstores (50.4%). There were cases where the name and/or CRM of the physician was lacking. It was noted that one medical doctor made out 1855 B prescriptions within one year. The same patient's name appeared on 138 prescriptions, and the same RG (identification card number) was present in 125 others. Comparison of Natal's data with those of several other Brazilian cities disclosed a striking similarity throughout Brazil, from Pelotas - Rio Grande do Sul State to Belem-Para State, revealing a practically identical medical/pharmaceutical behavior. This pattern of prescription/dispensation of amphetamine-type substances mostly to women for weight loss is therefore for cosmetic reasons. Consequently, there is an urgent need for an ethical review of this behavior.

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Published

2010-06-01

Issue

Section

Original Papers

How to Cite

Prescription of anorectic and benzodiazepine drugs through notification B prescriptions in Natal, Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil . (2010). Brazilian Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 46(2), 297-303. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1984-82502010000200017