Long term acid suppressing treatment Survey shows variation in practice

Abstract
EDITOR, - Stephen D Ryder and colleagues noted the lack of data on the long term use of acid suppressing drugs in general practice.1 A recent survey of prescribing in five Ipswich general practices (36 000 patients) over a year addressed this issue. In all, 284 (0.78% of the population) patients had been receiving acid suppressing drugs for six months or more; 590 patients (1.64%) had received at least one prescription. The most common reason for long term treatment was oesophageal disease (94 patients). Duodenal ulcers and “dyspepsia” (patients lacking a definitive diagnosis) accounted for 66 patients each. Gastric ulcer was uncommon, as in Harlow, occurring in 22 patients. Although the percentages of the total population in Harlow and Ipswich maintained on these drugs are similar (0.82% and …