15 research outputs found

    Factor V Leiden, estrogen, and multimorbidity association with venous thromboembolism in a British-South Asian cohort

    No full text
    Summary: Multimorbidity, estrogen use, and Factor V Leiden (FVL) are known independent risk factors for venous thromboembolism (VTE). This cross-sectional analysis of women in the Genes & Health British-South Asian cohort (N 20,048) linked the F5 SNP rs6025 with estrogen prescribing data and VTE events. Multivariable logistic regression was used to test the association between estrogen use, FVL, common medical co-morbidities, and VTE. Estrogens were prescribed to 30% of women. 3% of participants were FVL carriers. 439 participants had a VTE event (2.2%), and VTE prevalence increased with obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, chronic kidney disease, estrogen use, and in the presence of FVL. One medical condition above was independently associated with VTE with an OR 1.6 (CI 1.2–2.0, p 0.001); two medical conditions OR 2.7 (CI 2.0–3.7, p < 0.001); three OR 5.3 (CI 3.8–7.4, p < 0.001); four OR 8.1 (CI 4.9–13.0, p < 0.001). Multimorbidity and FVL compound risk of VTE with estrogen use

    UK Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA):The development, implementation and outcomes of a national online prescribing assessment

    No full text
    AIMS: The United Kingdom (UK) Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA) is a 2-h online assessment of basic competence to prescribe and supervise the use of medicines. It has been undertaken by students and doctors in UK medical and foundation schools for the past decade. This study describes the academic characteristics and performance of the assessment; longitudinal performance of candidates and schools; stakeholder feedback; and surrogate markers of prescribing safety in UK healthcare practice.METHODS: We reviewed the performance data generated by over 70 000 medical students and 3700 foundation doctors who have participated in the PSA since its inception in 2013. These data were supplemented by Likert scale and free text feedback from candidates and a variety of stakeholder groups. Further data on medication incidents, collected by national reporting systems and the regulatory body, are reported, with permission.RESULTS: We demonstrate the feasibility, high quality and reliability of an online prescribing assessment, uniquely providing a measure of prescribing competence against a national standard. Over 90% of candidates pass the PSA on their first attempt, while a minority are identified for further training and assessment. The pass rate shows some variation between different institutions and between undergraduate and foundation cohorts. Most responders to a national survey agreed that the PSA is a useful instrument for assessing prescribing competence, and an independent review has recommended adding the PSA to the Medical Licensing Assessment. Surrogate markers suggest there has been improvement in prescribing safety in practice, temporally associated with the introduction of the PSA but other factors could be influential too.CONCLUSIONS: The PSA is a practical and cost-effective way of delivering a reliable national assessment of prescribing competence that has educational impact and is supported by the majority of stakeholders. There is a need to develop national systems to identify and report prescribing errors and the harm they cause, enabling the impact of educational interventions to be measured.</p
    corecore