(Press-News.org) Greater powers introduced by the government to enable specially trained nurses and pharmacists to prescribe medication in England have been successfully adopted, according to a new report.
Health service researchers from the universities of Southampton and Keele found widespread acceptance of the new powers among patients and that prescribing practices were safe and appropriate for the type of medical conditions being treated.
The Department of Health-funded report, published today (Tuesday, 10 May 2011), gives a national 'snapshot' of how successfully nurse and pharmacist prescribing is being used in primary care trusts, GP surgeries and hospitals.
"This study is the first national evaluation of independent prescribing by nurses and pharmacists since legislation in 2006 enabled nurses and pharmacists to independently prescribe across an extensive range of medicines. Our research shows that the practice is becoming a well–integrated and established means of managing a patient's condition," comments Sue Latter, professor of nursing at the University of Southampton, who led the study.
"We were also able to highlight areas to the government where expansion of non-medical prescribing could strengthen NHS services in order to meet health care needs of the future."
The legislation, which gave experienced nurses and pharmacists powers to prescribe medication to patients, was viewed by some as controversial when it was introduced in 2006. Specially trained nurses and pharmacists in England are now able to manage all aspects of a patient's treatment including diagnosis, prescription and monitoring, without supervision by a doctor.
"Our research shows that nurse and pharmacist independent prescribers are now making a substantial contribution to patient care which is safe and of good quality," says Alison Blenkinsopp, professor of the practice of pharmacy at Keele University.
"Commissioners of healthcare can use our findings to make the most effective use of nurse and pharmacist prescribing when they are commissioning services."
The report also found that:
86 per cent of nurses and 71 per cent of pharmacists are using their new powers after training as a prescriber.
Most nurses and pharmacists are prescribing in a primary care setting, with substantial numbers also in secondary care settings, such as hospitals.
Most patients did not mind whether they received care from a nurse, pharmacist or a doctor.
Enabling non-medical prescribing to develop further, by additional training of nurses and pharmacists to treat patients with more than one medical condition, could improve patient care and efficiency in the health service.
### END
Wide-reaching report finds strong support for nurse and pharmacist prescribing
Greater powers introduced by the government to enable specially trained nurses and pharmacists to prescribe medication in England have been successfully adopted, according to a new report
2011-05-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
As good as gold
2011-05-11
Similar to humans, the bacteria and tiny plants living in the ocean need iron for energy and growth. But their situation is quite different than ours — for one, they can't exactly turn to natural iron sources like leafy greens or red meat for a pick-me-up.
So where does their iron come from? New research published by "Nature Geoscience" points to a source on the seafloor: minute particles (called nanoparticles) of pyrite, or fool's gold, from hydrothermal vents at the bottom of the ocean.
Scientists already knew the vents' cloudy plumes emitted from the earth's interior ...
It all depends on the coffee
2011-05-11
This release is available in French and German.
Capsule systems for making coffee are convenient and practical and therefore very popular. In terms of their environmental friendliness, however, a large question mark hangs over them. Roland Hischier, Empa's ecobalance expert, has just finished investigating various capsule systems as well as fully automatic machines, filter and soluble coffee making techniques, and has prepared a simplified life cycle analysis. This shows that it is the content which matters most. "A well-informed choice of coffee is in any case the ...
The sweet mysteries of the nervous system
2011-05-11
The antibody 5750 recognises a specific sugar residue on the cell surface, which is called LewisX. The research group lead by Prof. Dr. Andreas Faissner has now been able to use LewisX for the first time to separate different types of stem cells. The researchers report on their results in the Journal of Biological Chemistry.
Unexpected sugar diversity
Antibodies that recognise the LewisX sugar residue are used routinely to identify so-called neural stem cells from which the various cells of the nervous system originate. Prof. Faissner's team has now shown that the designation ...
Los Angeles Criminal Attorney, Matian and Moaddel, Provide Expungement Services to Help Their Clients Have a Better Life
2011-05-11
The process to expunge criminal record in California is a legal relief for many people with a criminal charge in their record. More people are learning that the mistakes they have made in the past are now coming back to haunt them due to public background checks. The law firm of Matian and Moaddel is now extending their legal services to expunge criminal charges from permanent criminal records to help people live a normal and peaceful life.
People can make poor decisions in life and go through an arrest and get charged for a criminal offense. The convicted person may ...
Study: Pace of brain development still strong in late teens
2011-05-11
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Boys and girls have put many of the trappings of teenagerhood behind them by the age of 18 or 19, but at least some of the brain resculpting that characterizes the decade of adolescence may still be going as strong as ever, according to findings in a new study that measured brainwaves of subjects in their midteens and again in their late teens.
One of the kinds of neurological changes underway in a teen brain is a pruning of unneeded connections forged earlier in life — the brain invests in developing some connections but sheds a ...
Wild animals age too
2011-05-11
Until now, the scientific community had assumed that wild animals died before they got old. Now, a Spanish-Mexican research team has for the first time demonstrated ageing in a population of wild birds (Sula nebouxii) in terms of their ability to live and reproduce.
"It was always thought that senescence was something particular to humans and domestic animals, because we have an extended life expectancy", Alberto Velando, lead author of the study and a researcher at the Ecology and Animal Biology Department of the University of Vigo, tells SINC.
However, the idea that ...
Bacterium Salmonella enterica regulates virulence according to iron levels found in its surroundings
2011-05-11
Salmonella enterica, one of the main causes of gastrointestinal infections, modulates its virulence gene expression, adapting it to each stage of the infection process, depending on the free iron concentration found in the intestinal epithelium of its host. Researchers at Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB) have demonstrated for the first time that the pathogen activates these genes through the Fur protein, which acts as a sensor of iron levels in its surroundings.
The research, published online in the journal PLoS ONE and entitled "Fur activates the expression of ...
Vitamin D deficiency in pneumonia patients associated with increased mortality
2011-05-11
A new study published in the journal Respirology reveals that adult patients admitted to the hospital with pneumonia are more likely to die if they have Vitamin D deficiency.
Vitamin D is known to be involved in the innate immune response to infection.
The team of researchers at Waikato Hospital and the Universities of Waikato and Otago, measured vitamin D in the blood samples of 112 adult patients admitted with community acquired pneumonia during the winter at the only acute-care hospital in Hamilton, New Zealand.
The researchers found that Vitamin D deficiency was ...
Herschel Space Observatory discovers the clearing out of star-forming gas
2011-05-11
(WASHINGTON) -- The European Space Agency (ESA) Herschel Space Observatory, home to the largest single mirror telescope in space, has detected massive amounts of molecular gas gusting at high velocities — in some cases in excess of 1000 kilometers per second — from the centers of a sample of merging galaxies. Herschel was built by a European-led, multi-national team, including U.S. contributions from researchers at NASA's JPL, Caltech, and the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL). It opens a new terahertz window on the cold and dusty Universe, enabling its scientific objective: ...
Munster Eye Care Associates: Specializing in Personalized Care
2011-05-11
Munster Eye Care Associates has been an integral part of the ophthalmology community in Munster, Indiana for 30 years. Munster Eye Care Associates specializes in providing patients with the personalized care that everyone deserves. MECA offers complete eye healthcare by using the latest techniques, refractive surgery, and general ophthalmology treatments to obtain the optimal visual health.
MECA has one of the best equipped eye care facilities in Northwest Indiana. Munster Eye Care Associates exists for the purpose of providing patients with the highest quality eye ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
An enzyme-proof glycan glue for extracellular matrix to ameliorate intervertebral disc degeneration
Deepfakes now come with a realistic heartbeat, making them harder to unmask
So, our city’s shrinking—Now what?
Parents with alcohol-related diagnoses are twice as likely to maltreat children
Giant croclike carnivore fossils found in the Caribbean
Palatable versus poisonous: Eavesdropping bats must learn to identify which prey is safe to eat
Being hit by an SUV increases the likelihood of death or serious injury, new research shows
New test diagnoses bacterial meningitis faster and better
Majority of Americans experience some form of gun violence in person
Broader antibiotic use could change the course of cholera outbreaks, research suggests
Higher cigarette taxes may improve childhood survival
Exercise can counter detrimental effects of cancer treatment
Too few ward nurses linked to longer hospital stay, readmission, and risk of death
Friendship bracelet: New technology connects neurodiverse groups of children
Forest in sync: Spruce trees communicate during a solar eclipse
Parents take a year to ‘tune in’ to their child’s feelings about starting school, research suggests
American Heart Association stands together with Arkansas and against the soda industry to reduce sugary drink consumption
AI-ECG tools can help clinicians identify heart issues early in women planning to have children
NIH’s initiative to prioritize human-based research a ‘big win for animals,’ says doctors group
Nearly one-quarter of e-Scooter injuries involved substance impaired riders
Age, previous sports experience, stronger predictors of performance in children than previous concussions, York U study finds
Dogs with meningiomas live longer with radiation therapy than surgery, Texas A&M researchers find
Pregnancy-related proteins in tumors linked to worse survival in female lung cancer patients
New study highlights success of financial toxicity tumor board in reducing cancer treatment costs
CAD/CAM shows clinical benefits in jaw reconstruction, reports Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Missed school is an overlooked consequence of climate change
Reasons why anxiety and depression promote low self-belief revealed
UMass Amherst graduate student’s discovery shows that even neutral molecules take sides when it comes to biochemistry
Electroactive biofiltration dynamic membrane: A new hope for wastewater treatment
Disparities in breast reconstruction persist after ACA, reports Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
[Press-News.org] Wide-reaching report finds strong support for nurse and pharmacist prescribingGreater powers introduced by the government to enable specially trained nurses and pharmacists to prescribe medication in England have been successfully adopted, according to a new report