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- International Perspectives on the Possible Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic and Lockdown on Abuse of the Elderly (JGCR / American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry / JAGS)
- Updates Relating to the Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care (Lancet / Alzheimer’s Research and Therapy / Alzheimer’s and Dementia)
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- Some Speculated / Potential Benefits of COVID-19 (JGCR / BBC Radio 4’s Rethink / BGS)
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Tag Archives: Medication Without Harm (WHO)
Quality Improvement: Strategies Needed to Reduce Preventable Patient Harm (NIHR Signal / BMJ / Future Healthcare Journal / WHO / Staffordshire University)
Summary A recent review found that around 6% patients in healthcare settings (internationally) experience potentially preventable harm; with approximately 1 in 8 such cases resulting in severe harm, permanent disability or death “Six types of patient harm were identified: drug … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, Commissioning, Community Care, For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), Integrated Care, International, NHS, NHS England, NHS Improvement, NIHR, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Person-Centred Care, Pharmacological Treatments, Quick Insights, Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust, Systematic Reviews, UK, Universal Interest, World Health Organization (WHO)
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Tagged 10 Facts About Hospital Care (WHO), Avoidable Harm, Avoidable Hospital Mortality, Avoidable Mortality, Avoidable Patient Harm, BMJ, BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, British Medical Journal (BMJ), Centre for Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety: University of Manchester, Clinical Quality Improvement, Clinical Safety Research: Imperial College London, Continuous Improvement, Continuous Learning and Improvement, Continuous Learning Culture, Division of Pharmacy and Optometry: University of Manchester, Division of Population Health: University of Manchester, Division of Primary Care: University of Nottingham, Dr Sarahjane Jones: Associate Professor in Patient Safety at Staffordshire University, Drug Errors, Future Healthcare Journal, Health Innovation Centre: Stafford Centre of Excellence for Healthcare Education (Staffordshire University), Health Services Research and Primary Care: University of Manchester, Honesty and Transparency, Hospital Patient Safety Strategies, Human Factors for Patient Safety: Staffordshire University, Imperial College London, Improving Patient Safety, Improving Safety Measurement Across Whole System, Information Sharing, Innovation and Improvement, Insight: Using Intelligence From Multiple Sources of Patient Safety Information, Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Learning Culture, Learning from Deaths, LeDeR: Learning Disabilities Mortality Review, Lucie Musset: National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS), Medication Errors, Medication Errors and Adverse Drug Reactions, Medication Without Harm (WHO), Medicines Optimisation, National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), NHS Culture, NHS Culture Change, NHS Improvement Patient Safety Alerts, NHS Patient Safety Culture, NHS Patient Safety Strategy, NIHR DC: NIHR Dissemination Centre, NIHR Dissemination Centre, NIHR Greater Manchester Patient Safety Translational Research Centre, NIHR School for Primary Care Research: University of Manchester, NIHR Signal, Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford Healthcare Improvement, Patient Harm, Patient Harms, Patient Safety, Patient Safety Alerts, Patient Safety and Risk Management (WHO), Patient Safety Culture, Patient Safety Fact File (WHO), Prevalence of Patient Harm, Prevalence of Preventable Patient Harm, Preventable Patient Harm, QI Adoption and Spread Approach, Quality and Sustainability, Quality Improvement, Reducing Waste in the NHS, Research Into Safety in Health and Social Care Network (ReSNET), Research into Safety in health and social care Network (Staffordshire University - ReSNET), School of Medicine: University of Nottingham, Service Delivery and Safety (WHO), Staffordshire University, Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses, Ten Facts About Hospital Care (WHO), Transparent Learning Culture, Types of Preventable Patient Harm and Overall Patient Harm, UK General Medical Council, University of Manchester, University of Nottingham, University of Oxford, Vanda Carter: Practice Education Facilitator for Research at Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust, WHO: World Health Organization, World Health Organization (Geneva), World Health Organization (WHO), World Patient Safety Day, World Patient Safety Day (2020)
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Potential Harms From Polypharmacy in the Elderly (BBC News / Age UK / EJCP / Bazian / Lancet Psychiatry)
Summary An Age UK report investigates the potential harms of over-prescribing medicines for older people. Older persons often remain on too many prescribed medicines, putting them at risk of side-effects, potentially resulting in falls and other forms of serious harm. … Continue reading →
Posted in Age UK, Antipsychotics, BBC News, Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, Depression, Falls, Falls Prevention, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Hypertension, In the News, Integrated Care, Management of Condition, National, Personalisation, Pharmacological Treatments, Quick Insights, UK, Universal Interest
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Tagged Achieving Better Value, Addictions Department - Division of Academic Psychiatry: King's College London, Addictive Prescription Medicines, Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs), Adverse Drug Reactions in the Elderly, Ageing Population, Alcohol Drugs Tobacco and Justice Division: Public Health England, AntiCholinergic Burden, Anticholinergic Drugs, Anticholinergics, Antidepressants, Anxiolytics and Hypnotics (Including Benzodiazepines), ARMOUR Tool, Australian Prescribing Indicators, Austrian Criteria, Barenholtz Levy, Bazian, BBC Health News, Beers Criteria, Behind the Headlines, Benzodiazepines, Better Value, Better Value Healthcare, Better Value in the NHS, Brown Model, Cantrill Indicators, Care Home Pharmacists, Care Home Pharmacists to Cut Overmedication, Care Homes, Care of Frail Older People With Complex Needs, Care of Older People Living at Home, Care of Older People Living in Care Homes, Care Planning: Relating New Prescribing Decisions to Existing Medicines, Care Quality Improvement Department: Royal College of Physicians, Case Management and Enhanced Rapid Response, Challenging Behaviour in Dementia, Choosing Wisely, Choosing Wisely in the NHS, Choosing Wisely in the UK, Clinical Pharmacists, CMS List, Communication Between Community Pharmacists and GPs, Community Pharmacies, Community Pharmacists, Community Pharmacy, Community-Based Services, Community-Based Support, Comorbidity, Comorbidity and Dementia, Comorbidity and Polypharmacy in People With Dementia, Dementia Friendly Community Pharmacists, Department of Family Medicine: University of California Los Angeles, Department of Primary Care and Public Health: Imperial College London, Dependence and Withdrawal Associated With Prescribed Medicines (PHE Review), Deprescribing, Discontinuation of Multiple Medications in Older Adults, Doubling-Up, Drug Burden Index, Drug Cost Savings, Economic Sustainability, Elderly Malnutrition, European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, FORTA Criteria, Four or More Medicines (FOMM) Support Service, Frail Older People, Frailty, Gabapentinoids, Geriatric Medication Algorithm, German PRISCUS List of Potentially Inappropriate Medications, Good Practice in Care Homes, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, Hamdy Criteria, Hanoi Medical University, Harms of Too Much Medicine, Health Improvement Directorate: Public Health England, High Quality Medicines Reviews, Holmes Criteria, Hospital Pharmacists, Hospital‑Based Multidisciplinary Teams: Pharmacists, Hull-York Medical School: University of Hull, Imperial College London, Improving Care for Frail Older People, Improving Patient Safety, Improving Pharmaceutical Care in Care Homes, Improving Prescribing in the Elderly Tool, Improving Prescribing Practice, Improving Standards in Care Homes, Inappropriate Drug Use, Inappropriate Medication, Inappropriate Prescribing, Institute of Psychiatry Psychology and Neuroscience: King’s College London, Integrated Care Clinical Pharmacist (ICP) for Frail Older People, Integrated Care Pharmacists (ICPs), Kaiser Permanente Model, Kings College London, KPC Criteria, Lambeth Addictions: South London and Maudsley NHS Mental Health Foundation Trust, Lancet Psychiatry, Laroche Criteria, Later Life, Lechevallier Criteria, Less is More, Liaison and In-Reach Services for Frail Older People, Lindblad’s List, Lipton’s Tool, Living at Home, Living Well in Care Homes, Long-Term Conditions (LTCs), Lowering Costs, Maio Criteria, Malnutrition, Malnutrition in Later Life, Malone’s List, Management of Challenging Behaviour, Managing Comorbidity and Complexity, Managing Medicines in Care Homes, Matsumura Alert System, McLeod Criteria, MDTs: Multidisciplinary Teams, Medical Overuse, Medication Adherence, Medication Appropriateness Index, Medication Creep, Medication Nonadherence, Medication Reviews, Medication Reviews in Care Homes, Medication Without Harm (WHO), Medication-Related Harm, Medications Management Outcome Monitor, Medicine Combinations, Medicines Management, Multi-Morbidities, Multimorbidities and Long-Term Conditions, Multiple Comorbidities, Multiple Long-Term Conditions, Multiple Medications (Polypharmacy), National Guideline Centre: Royal College of Physicians, NCOA Criteria, New Mexico Criteria, NHS Business Services Authority (NHSBSA), NHS Community Pharmacies, Non-Adherence: Medication-Related Harm, Norwegian General Practice (NORGEP) Criteria, Oborne’s Prescribing Indicators, Older Adults Higher Levels of Dependency Dementia and Comorbidity, Older People, Older People Supported and Involved in Decisions About Medicines, Older People With Complex Needs, Older People's Care, Opioid Painkillers, Opioids, Optimising Prescribing and Deprescribing in Older Adults, Over-Medication, Over-Prescribing, Over-Treatment, Overdiagnosis and Overtreatment, Overmedicalization, Overmedicaton in Care Homes, Overprescribing, Overprescription, Overuse of Medication, Owen’s Steps, Patient Harms, Patient Preference and Adherence, Patient Safety, Patients With Polypharmacy Risks, People With Dementia Living at Home, Pharmacist-Led Care Home Medication Reviews, Pharmacist-Led Home Medication Reviews, Pharmacist-Led Information Technology Intervention (PINCER), Pharmacist-Led Medication Reviews, Pharmacists, Pharmacists to Cut Unnecessary Hospital Admissions, PINCER, PINCER Intervention, PMDRP, Polypharmacy, Polypharmacy and Frailty, Polypharmacy in the Elderly STOPP and START Criteria, Poor Medicines Management, Potentially Inappropriate Medications (PIMs), Potentially Inappropriate Medications in the Elderly: the PRISCUS List, Potentially Inappropriate Medicine Combinations, Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing, Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing (PIP), Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Older People With Dementia, Prescribing Cascades, Prescribing Optimisation Method, Prescription Drugs, Prescription Drugs Dependency, Prescription Drugs: Long-Term Use, Prescription of Psychotropic Drugs, Prevalence of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Older People With Dementia, Preventable Hospital Admissions, Preventative Care, Preventing Acute Admissions from Care Homes, Prevention, Prevention of Avoidable Emergency Admissions: Proactive Management of Long-Term Conditions, Preventive Care, Primary Care, Primary Care Adverse Drug Reactions, PRISCUS List, Proactive Specialist In-Reach, Professor Paul Cosford: Director for Health Protection and Medical Director at Public Health England, Protecting Resources and Promoting Value, Psychotropic Drug Cessation, Psychotropic Drugs, Public Health England, Rancourt Criteria, Reducing Inappropriate Polypharmacy, Reducing Prescribing Costs, Reducing Unplanned Hospital Admissions, Reducing Waste in the NHS, Reducing Wasted Medications, Robertson’s Flow Charts, Royal College of Physicians, School of Preventive Medicine and Public Health: Hanoi Medical University, Sloane List, Social Prescribing, Social Prescribing Approach to Reducing Default to Medicines / Drug-Based Treatments, South London and Maudsley NHS Mental Health Foundation Trust, START Criteria, STOPP and START Criteria, STOPP Criteria, STOPP START Criteria, Suboptimal Prescribing, Summary Care Records, Summary Care Records (SCRs), Sustainability, Sustainability in the NHS, Thinking Like a Patient and Acting Like a Taxpayer, TIMER Tool, Too Much Medicine, Tools for Measuring Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Older People With Dementia, Transforming Care for Frail Older People, United States, University of California Los Angeles, University of Hull, Unnecessary Hospital Admissions, Unsafe Drug Combinations, USA. Fielding School of Public Health: University of California Los Angeles, Value for Money, Value Improvement, Vietnam, Wellbeing in Care Homes, Wolfson Centre for Palliative Care Research: University of Hull, Z-Drugs (Sleeping Tablets), Zhan Criteria
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System to Measure and Prevent Medication Errors Under Development (Department of Health and Social Care / EEPRU / BBC News)
Summary The Department of Health and Social Care now has a system to help identify, monitor and prevent medication errors. The aim is to help ensure the NHS becomes the safest healthcare system in the world, as well as avoiding … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, Commissioning, Community Care, Department of Health, Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, National, NHS, Pharmacological Treatments, Quick Insights, Standards, Statistics, UK, Universal Interest, World Health Organization (WHO)
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Tagged Adverse Drug Reactions, Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs), Adverse Drug Reactions in the Elderly, Avoidable Admissions, Avoidable Harm, Avoidable Hospital Admissions, Avoidable Ill-Health, Avoidable Mortality, Avoidable Premature Mortality, Avoidable Rehospitalisations, Caroline Dinenage: Care Minister, Choosing Wisely, Choosing Wisely Campaign, Community Pharmacists, Continuous Learning Culture, Culture Change, Culture of Raising Concerns, Defences for Pharmacists: Accidental Dispensing Errors, Department of Health and Social Care (Formerly the Department of Health), Electronic Prescribing and Medicines Administration (EPMA), Electronic Prescribing Systems, ePACT2, Epidemiology and Statistics, Gastric Bleed Statistics, Global Patient Safety Challenge (WHO), Hospital Admissions, Hospital Electronic Prescribing and Medicines Administration (HePMA), Inappropriate Hospital Admissions, Learning Culture, Measurement and Prevention of Medication Errors, Medication Errors, Medication Errors and Adverse Drug Reactions, Medication Reviews, Medication Safety, Medication Safety Dashboard, Medication Without Harm (WHO), Medicines Optimisation, Medicines Optimisation Dashboard, Medicines Safety Programme (WHO), NHS Culture Change, NHS England Medicines Optimisation Intelligence Group, NHS Patient Safety Culture, NHS Specialist Pharmacy Service, NHS: Safest Healthcare System in the World (Ambition), No Harm Culture, Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs) Without Gastro Protective Medicine, Openness and Honesty When Things Go Wrong, Openness and Transparency, Patient Safety, Patient Safety Improvement, Patient Safety Indicators, Patient Safety Strategies, Patients With Polypharmacy Risks, Pharmacist-Led Medication Reviews, Policy Research Unit in Economic Evaluation of Health and Care Interventions (EEPRU), Polypharmacy, Preventable Deaths in English Acute Hospitals, Preventable Hospital Admissions, Preventable Hospital Deaths, Preventable Hospital Mortality, Preventable Mortality, Preventing Avoidable Emergency Admissions, Primary Care Adverse Drug Reactions, Putting Patients First, Quality Improvement, Quality Improvement Culture, Reducing Inappropriate Polypharmacy, Reducing Litigation Costs, Reducing Waste in the NHS, Regular Medication Reviews, Report of the Short Life Working Group on Reducing Medication-Related Harm, Reporting Culture, Reporting of Incidents, Research on Medication Error, Royal Pharmaceutical Society (RPS), ScHARR: University of Sheffield, School of Health and Related Research (ScHARR): University of Sheffield, Short Life Working Group on Reducing Medication-Related Harm, Stop the Over-Medication of People With a Learning Disability or Autism (STOMP) Campaign, Transparency, Transparency and Accountability, Transparent Learning Culture, Unnecessary Hospital Admissions
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Medication Errors: an Open Learning Culture Recommended to Reduce Patient Harm (BBC News / Department of Health / EEPRU / Department of Health and Social Care)
Summary Medication errors, which include (i) wrong medications given, (ii) incorrect doses and (iii) delays in medication being administered, cause an estimated 700 deaths per year and might play a role in something between 1,700 to 22,300 further avoidable deaths. … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, BBC News, Commissioning, Community Care, Department of Health, Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, Management of Condition, National, NHS, Pharmacological Treatments, Quick Insights, Standards, Statistics, UK, Universal Interest, World Health Organization (WHO)
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Tagged Acute Care and Quality, Acute Care and Workforce, Adult Psychiatric Intensive Care Services, Adverse Drug Reactions, Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs), Adverse Drug Reactions in the Elderly, BBC Health News, Blame Culture, Care Home Culture, Care Home Environments, Care Homes, Centre for Health Economics: University of York, Choosing Wisely Campaign, Choosing Wisely in the NHS, CHUMS Study, Clinical Pharmacists, Clinical Responsibility for Patients (Choosing Wisely and New Deal), Community Pharmacists, Continuous Learning Culture, CQC Investigations and Quality Policy, Culture and Behaviour Change, Culture and Leadership, Culture Change, Culture of Raising Concerns, Department of Health Policy Research Programme, Division of Population Health Health Services Research and Primary Care: University of Manchester, Electronic Prescribing and Medicines Administration (EPMA), Electronic Prescribing Systems, EQUIP Study, Former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt, Global Patient Safety Challenge (WHO), HePMA, Hospital E-Prescribing and Medicines Administration, Hospital Electronic Prescribing and Medicines Administration (HePMA), Hospital Pharmacists, Learning Culture, Making Choices Together (Previously Choosing Wisely Wales), Manchester Centre for Health Economics: University of Manchester, Medication Errors, Medication Errors and Adverse Drug Reactions, Medication Without Harm (WHO), Medicines Safety Programme (WHO), Medicines Value Programme (NHS England), NHS Culture, NHS Culture Change, NHS Patient Safety Culture, NHS Specialist Pharmacy Service, No Harm Culture, Old Age Psychiatry, Open and Transparent Culture, Openness, Openness and Collaboration, Openness and Honesty When Things Go Wrong, Openness and Transparency, Partnering with Patients and Families, Patient and Family Engagement, Patient and Public Engagement (PPE), Patient and Public Involvement, Patient and Public Involvement (PPI), Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Harm, Patient Harms and Harm Free Care, Patient Safety, Patient Safety Champions, Patient Safety Improvement, Patient Safety Indicators, Patient Safety Strategies, Patients With Polypharmacy Risks, Pharmacist Buddy Scheme (County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust), Pharmacist-Led Information Technology Intervention (PINCER), Pharmacists, PINCER Intervention, Policy Research Programme (PRP), Policy Research Unit in Economic Evaluation of Health and Care Interventions (EEPRU), Polypharmacy, Potentially Preventable Complications in Hospitalis, PREPARE: Partnership for Responsive Policy Analysis and Research, PRescribing Outcomes for Trainee Doctors Engaged in Clinical Training (PROTECT) Study, Prescription Errors in Psychiatry, Preventable Deaths in English Acute Hospitals, Preventable Hospital Deaths, Preventable Hospital Mortality, Preventable Mortality, Primary Care Adverse Drug Reactions, PROTECT Programme, Putting Patients First, Quality Improvement Culture, Reducing Inappropriate Polypharmacy, Reducing Litigation Costs, Report of the Short Life Working Group on Reducing Medication-Related Harm, Reporting Culture, Reporting of Incidents, Research on Medication Error, Rt Hon Jeremy Hunt MP: Former Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, ScHARR: University of Sheffield, School of Health and Related Research (ScHARR): University of Sheffield, SDM: Shared Decision Making, Secondary Care Adverse Drug Reactions, Serious Mistakes, Severe Harm, Shared Care and Education, Shared Decision-Making, Short Life Working Group (SLWG), Short Life Working Group on Reducing Medication-Related Harm, Stop the Over-Medication of People With a Learning Disability or Autism (STOMP) Campaign, Transparency, Transparency and Accountability, Transparent Learning Culture, UK Department of Health Policy Research Programme, United States National Coordinating Council for Medication Error Reporting and Prevention, University of Manchester, University of Sheffield, University of York, University of York Centre for Health Economics (CHE), WHO Domain: Health Care Professionals, WHO Domain: Medicines, WHO Domain: Patients and the Public, WHO Domain: Systems and Practice of Medication, WHO Domains, WHO Global Patient Safety Challenge
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