Abstract
Background: The subject of Pharmacology is taught to medical students in India in the second year of their undergraduate (UG)studies,andoneofthecrucialcomponentsofwhichisClinicalPharmacologyandTherapeutics(CPT).Themaingoalof teaching CPT is to impart knowledge, skills, and attitudes so that a clinician is able to weigh the potential beneï¬ts and risks of a treatment along with its cost-effectiveness. Aims and Objective: To understand whether interns have sufï¬cient knowledge to prescribing rationally. Materials andMethods: We handed out questionnaires consisting of 15 questions on rational prescribing to 108 interns across different departments of the hospital. The completed questionnaires were then collected, and the responses were analyzed. Result: A large number of interns reported that UG medical curriculum was inadequate to train them to prescribe rationally. A number of them afï¬rmed that doctors should prescribe by the ‘‘essential medicines list’’ (48/73). Interns most commonly prescribed by generic name (68/73) and considered safety and efï¬cacy as the most important factors while prescribing. However, a fewer number of interns (39/73) agreed with the importance of cost or knew the deï¬nition of pharmacoeconomics (38/73). Each of them experienced problems while prescribing during internship, and the commonly reported were drug dosage calculation based on weight and age and the knowledge of trade names.Withregardtoprescribingskills,internsfeltlessconï¬dentinaccessingdrug-relatedinformation,dosagecalculation, and writing prescriptions. Most interns (65/73) were unaware of the ‘‘six steps of rational prescribing’’. Conclusion: The study highlighted some gray areas in the knowledge of rational prescribing among interns while also indicating possible areas of improvement. Hence, there is a need for a refresher course aimed at sensitizing interns to the practice of rational pharmacotherapy, so as to inculcate a balanced and safe prescribing approach.