AIM: To assess the value of maintaining a death register in a general practice with particular reference to monitoring quality of care. DESIGN OF STUDY: Observational study. SETTING: Inner London general practice. METHOD: The practice maintained a manual death register, retained medical records of all deceased patients, and requested information on cause of death from health authorities and coroners for 15 years. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Number and causes of deaths; 3 yearly age standardised death rates; proportion of deaths formally notified to the practice; place of death; source of cause of death information. RESULTS: During the study period 578 patients died. Practice age standardised death rates fell significantly from 35.59 to 27.12/100...
INTRODUCTION: Monitoring hospital mortality rates is widely recommended. However, the number of prev...
Background: With an aging population, and most deaths due to a nonmalignant cause, there is urgency ...
Record linkage provides an opportunity for relatively inexpensive follow-up in cohort studies. Most ...
PURPOSE: To gain insight into how general practitioners (GPs) determine the cause of death and recor...
Purpose: To gain insight into how general practitioners (GPs) determine the cause of death and recor...
For observational research studies, the ability to accurately determine follow‐up time is pivotal in...
Kendall and Peter Old Background As part of the work of the Shipman Inquiry, five general practition...
Background: Being able to die in one's place of choice is an indicator of the quality of end-of-life...
Background. Studies have shown that bereaved individuals suffer increased rates of physical and ment...
OBJECTIVE: To examine the concordance between dates of death recorded in UK primary care and nationa...
Objectives. The study aimed (i) to focus on death certification issues faced by GPs and their relate...
BackgroundThe Shipman Inquiry recommended mortality rate monitoring if it could be 'shown to be work...
PURPOSE: It is not clear whether all deaths are recorded in the Clinical Practice Research Datalink ...
PURPOSE: To define periods of acceptable mortality reporting in primary care and to demonstrate thro...
Background: General practitioners (GPs) may play an important role in providing end-of-life care to ...
INTRODUCTION: Monitoring hospital mortality rates is widely recommended. However, the number of prev...
Background: With an aging population, and most deaths due to a nonmalignant cause, there is urgency ...
Record linkage provides an opportunity for relatively inexpensive follow-up in cohort studies. Most ...
PURPOSE: To gain insight into how general practitioners (GPs) determine the cause of death and recor...
Purpose: To gain insight into how general practitioners (GPs) determine the cause of death and recor...
For observational research studies, the ability to accurately determine follow‐up time is pivotal in...
Kendall and Peter Old Background As part of the work of the Shipman Inquiry, five general practition...
Background: Being able to die in one's place of choice is an indicator of the quality of end-of-life...
Background. Studies have shown that bereaved individuals suffer increased rates of physical and ment...
OBJECTIVE: To examine the concordance between dates of death recorded in UK primary care and nationa...
Objectives. The study aimed (i) to focus on death certification issues faced by GPs and their relate...
BackgroundThe Shipman Inquiry recommended mortality rate monitoring if it could be 'shown to be work...
PURPOSE: It is not clear whether all deaths are recorded in the Clinical Practice Research Datalink ...
PURPOSE: To define periods of acceptable mortality reporting in primary care and to demonstrate thro...
Background: General practitioners (GPs) may play an important role in providing end-of-life care to ...
INTRODUCTION: Monitoring hospital mortality rates is widely recommended. However, the number of prev...
Background: With an aging population, and most deaths due to a nonmalignant cause, there is urgency ...
Record linkage provides an opportunity for relatively inexpensive follow-up in cohort studies. Most ...