The Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) provides affordable medicines to all Australians. However, increasing costs of medications are threatening it.
New means of cost-effective and cost-minimising interventions are always needed to ensure sustainability and viability of the scheme.1 A practical and simple approach of saving is to change the PBS listing of insulin prescribed for gestational diabetes and users of low-dose insulin who will not necessarily go through the normal quantity of insulin provided to them. The standard quantity of insulin supplied by the PBS is five boxes of five individually packed units. This amount is usually excessive for patients using small doses of insulin who are prescribed other antidiabetic medicines.
A new listing of a single box of five individually packed units made available to these groups of patients will significantly save costs to the PBS and promote the quality use of medicines to the consumer as well as the prescribers.
By avoiding wastage of medications and educating prescribers about the need to restrict supply of excess unnecessary medications, resources could be freed up for other government-funded health expenditures.2
Hanan Khalil
Senior Lecturer/Pharmacist Academic
Department of Rural and Indigenous Health
Monash University, Melbourne