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Tag Archives: Division of Psychiatry: University College London
Over-Medication of People With Learning Disabilities? (BBC News / BMJ / PHE)
Summary Analysis of GP data over a decade has revealed that over one quarter of 33,000 adults with learning disabilities (and / or some forms of dementia) may have been prescribed antipsychotics unnecessarily, usually as a result of challenging behaviour. … Continue reading
Posted in Antipsychotics, BBC News, Community Care, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Management of Condition, Mental Health, National, NHS, Patient Care Pathway, Person-Centred Care, Pharmacological Treatments, Public Health England, Quick Insights, Standards, Statistics, UK, Universal Interest
Tagged Alternatives to Antipsychotic Drugs, Alternatives to Antipsychotics, Antidepressants, Antipsychotics, Anxiolytics and Hypnotics (Including Benzodiazepines), Baily Thomas Charitable Fund, BBC Health News, Behavioural Alternatives to Antipsychotic Drugs, BMJ, British Medical Journal (BMJ), Challenging Behaviour, Chemical Restraint, Division of Psychiatry: University College London, Drugs for Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder, Improving Prescribing Practice, Inappropriate Prescribing, Inappropriate Use of Antipsychotics in Dementia, Learning Disabilities, Mood Stabilisers, National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), Over-Medication, Over-Medication for People With Learning Disabilities, Over-Prescribing, Overprescribing, People With Learning Disabilities, Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing, Prescribing of Antipsychotic Drugs For People With Dementia, Prescribing of Antipsychotic Drugs For People With Learning Disabilities, Prescription of Psychotropic Drugs, Reducing Antipsychotic Prescriptions in Dementia, Reducing Inappropriate Use of Antipsychotics, Research Department of Primary Care and Population Health: University College London (Royal Free Campus), The Health Improvement Network (THIN), University College London
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The Pros and Cons of Screening (Sense About Science / BMJ / BMC Geriatrics / BBC News / NHS England)
Summary The brief “Making Sense of Screening” guide attempts to inform public expectations about screening programmes. It offers insights into the limitations of what screening programmes are sometimes able to deliver. Common misconceptions about how screening works are addressed, with … Continue reading
Posted in BBC News, Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Diagnosis, For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), In the News, Models of Dementia Care, Quick Insights, UK, Universal Interest
Tagged Academic Unit of Psychiatry: University of Bristol, Advisory Board of Breast Screening, Association for Clinical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine, BBC Health News, BMJ, British Medical Journal (BMJ), Cambridge Institute of Public Health: University of Cambridge, Case Finding, Cognitive Screening, Dementia Screening, Dementia Screening Debate, Division of Psychiatry: University College London, Early Screening, Evidence Based Medicine Matters, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences: University of East Anglia, False Alarms, False Negatives, False Positives, Great Prostate Mistake, Great Prostate Mistake (PSA sic Promoting Stress and Anxiety), Harms From Overdiagnosis, Health Screening Programmes, Hedley Glencross: Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust, Independent Review of Adult Screening Programme in England (NHS England), Institute of Biomedical Science, Institute of Mental Health: University of Nottingham, International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, Joe O’Meara: Association for Clinical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine, Making Sense of Testing, Making Sense of Uncertainty, Mass Screening, National Breast Cancer Screening Programme, National Screening Committee, Nordic Cochrane Centre in Copenhagen, Overdiagnosis (Speculative Concept), Overdiagnosis and Overtreatment, Population Screening for Dementia Deyond Passive Case-Finding, Professor Sir Mike Richards: Review of Cancer Screening, PSA (Prostate Specific Antigen), Public Attitudes Expectations and Preferences, QRISK2 Calculator, Research Department of Primary Care and Population Health: University College London, Review of National Cancer Screening Programmes in England, Risk of Overdiagnosis Associated With Screening, Síle Lane: Sense About Science, Screening, Screening for Dementia, Screening Populations, Screening Programmes, Screening Tests, Screening: Counter-Intuitive Evidence, Sense About Science, Targeted Screening, UCL Medical School, UK National Screening Committee, University College London, University of Bristol, University of Cambridge, University of East Anglia, University of Nottingham, Watchful Waiting
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