
Department of Economics
University of Delaware
Working Paper #2008-07
Who Receives Statins? Variations in Physicians’ Prescribing Patterns for Patients with Coronary Heart Disease, Dyslipidemia, and Diabetes
Charles R. Link, Simon Condliffe and Bryan Townsend
ABSTRACT
Our objective is to estimate the extent to which clinical and non-clinical
factors are associated with physicians’ prescribing patterns for statins. The
data are from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey for the period 1992
through 2004. The three samples examined included more than 14,000 patients who
were diagnosed with coronary heart disease, high cholesterol, or diabetes,
individuals who are most likely to benefit from being prescribed a statin drug.
Using a multinomial logit framework, we find disparities in prescribing patterns
based on non-clinical factors. Namely, whites and patients who have private
insurance are more likely to be prescribed a statin than nonwhites and those
with public insurance. Also, even though a large increase occurred in the uptake
of statins over the period 1992 to 2004, our results for 2004 show that only
about 50 percent of patients diagnosed with coronary heart disease were
prescribed a statin. Because coronary heart disease is the leading cause of
death in the U.S. and currently is estimated to cost over $150 billion annually
in the U.S. in direct and indirect costs, observed differences in prescribing
patterns along these dimensions is troubling and should be part of discussions
dealing with health care reform.
Key Words: Pharmaceuticals; Statins; Equity in Physician Prescribing Patterns;
Insurance
JEL Code: I1, I10, I12