Aims: To investigate medical students' perspectives on the influence of their undergraduate course and the UK prescribing safety assessment (PSA) on the acquisition of practical prescribing skills. Methods: An online questionnaire comprising multiple choice and open-ended questions was available to UK medical students in years 3, 4 and 5. Descriptive statistics and thematic analysis were completed. Results: In total, 1023 medical students from 25 UK medical schools responded: 22% (3rd year), 37% (4th year) and 41% (final year). A minority of medical students believed that their medical course prepared them sufficiently for practical prescribing (36.4%, n = 372, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 32–41%), 52.6%, of students thought that practica...
Aim(s) Newly graduated doctors write a large proportion of prescriptions in UK hospitals but rece...
Background: Prescribing medicines is one of the most common interventions in health care, so even a ...
Student and pre-registration pharmacist performance in a UK Prescribing Assessment’: room for improv...
AIM: To investigate medical students' perspectives on the influence of their undergraduate course ...
Background and Aim Prescribing errors continue to compromise patient safety. However, in spite of i...
Purpose: To determine medical students’ perspectives on the provision for the teaching and learning ...
Background: Junior doctors are responsible for the majority of prescribing at NHS hospitals in th...
Purpose To determine medical students’ perspectives on the provision for the teaching and learning ...
Hamde Nazar,1 Mahdi Nazar,2 Charlotte Rothwell,1 Jane Portlock,3 Andrew Chaytor,1 Andrew Husband1 1S...
Five years after the introduction of the Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA) in the UK, the role pha...
Background and Aim Prescribing errors remains a major challenge that undermines the safe and effect...
Prescribing is a characteristic role of a medical practitioner. On graduating from medical school, s...
Five years after the introduction of the Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA) in the UK, the role pha...
AIMS: The United Kingdom (UK) Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA) is a 2-h online assessment of basi...
Aims: Prescribing errors are an important cause of patient safety incidents and are frequently cause...
Aim(s) Newly graduated doctors write a large proportion of prescriptions in UK hospitals but rece...
Background: Prescribing medicines is one of the most common interventions in health care, so even a ...
Student and pre-registration pharmacist performance in a UK Prescribing Assessment’: room for improv...
AIM: To investigate medical students' perspectives on the influence of their undergraduate course ...
Background and Aim Prescribing errors continue to compromise patient safety. However, in spite of i...
Purpose: To determine medical students’ perspectives on the provision for the teaching and learning ...
Background: Junior doctors are responsible for the majority of prescribing at NHS hospitals in th...
Purpose To determine medical students’ perspectives on the provision for the teaching and learning ...
Hamde Nazar,1 Mahdi Nazar,2 Charlotte Rothwell,1 Jane Portlock,3 Andrew Chaytor,1 Andrew Husband1 1S...
Five years after the introduction of the Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA) in the UK, the role pha...
Background and Aim Prescribing errors remains a major challenge that undermines the safe and effect...
Prescribing is a characteristic role of a medical practitioner. On graduating from medical school, s...
Five years after the introduction of the Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA) in the UK, the role pha...
AIMS: The United Kingdom (UK) Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA) is a 2-h online assessment of basi...
Aims: Prescribing errors are an important cause of patient safety incidents and are frequently cause...
Aim(s) Newly graduated doctors write a large proportion of prescriptions in UK hospitals but rece...
Background: Prescribing medicines is one of the most common interventions in health care, so even a ...
Student and pre-registration pharmacist performance in a UK Prescribing Assessment’: room for improv...