TY - JOUR T1 - Potentially hazardous co-prescribing of beta-adrenoceptor antagonists and agonists in the community. JF - British Journal of General Practice JO - Br J Gen Pract SP - 423 LP - 425 VL - 46 IS - 408 AU - J M Evans AU - J L Hayes AU - B J Lipworth AU - T M MacDonald Y1 - 1996/07/01 UR - http://bjgp.org/content/46/408/423.abstract N2 - AIM: The aim of this study was to investigate the co-prescribing of beta-antagonists and beta-agonists in the community, and to assess the potential hazards of such co-prescribing. METHODS: The study was set in the population of Tayside, Scotland (population approximately 400,000), between January 1993 and March 1993. An automated person-specific prescribing database was used, which could also be linked to hospital admissions. Patients who were co-prescribed beta-antagonists and beta-agonists on the same day or within 30 days were selected. A model was used to identify those who showed an asthmatic profile, on the basis of age, and previous prescribing and hospitalization history, and for whom the co-prescribing was judged to be particularly hazardous. RESULTS: Altogether, 0.9% of 15824 patients who received a beta-antagonist during the study period received a beta-agonist on the same day. This figure increased to 274 (1.7%) for 30-day co-prescription. A few instances of particularly hazardous co-prescribing were identified, which involved young people who had previously received prescriptions for corticosteroids and been hospitalized for asthma. CONCLUSION: Potentially hazardous co-prescribing of beta-agonists and beta-antagonists occurs despite labelled warnings, even in patients who appear to be at high risk. These events are quite rare but probably should not occur at all. ER -