Background Quality improvement (QI) is a priority for general practice, and GPs are expected to participate in and provide evidence of QI activity. There is growing interest in harnessing the potential of electronic health records (EHR) to improve patient care by supporting practices to find cases that could benefit from a medicines review. Aim To develop scalable and reproducible prescribing safety reports using patient-level EHR data. Design and setting UK general practices that contribute de-identified patient data to the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD). Method A scoping phase used stakeholder consultations to identify primary care QI needs and potential indicators. QI reports containing real data were sent to...
Background: While the use of prescribing safety indicators (PSI) can reduce potentially hazardous p...
Background: The frequency and nature of safety problems and harm in general practices has previously...
Objective: To identify patient safety monitoring strategies in primary care. Design: Open-ended ques...
BACKGROUND: Quality improvement (QI) is a priority for general practice, and GPs are expected to par...
ABSTRACT Objectives High-risk prescribing in primary care is common and causes considerable harm, w...
Objectives Explore how patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) are collected, communicated and ...
Background Quality indicators (QIs) are an important tool for improving clinical practice and are in...
Objectives: (A) To measure the extent to which different candidate outcome measures identified highr...
Background: Monitoring for potentially hazardous prescribing is increasingly important to improve me...
BACKGROUND: There are widely recognised variations in the delivery and outcomes of healthcare but an...
Background: Patient safety is vital to well-functioning health systems. A key component is safe pres...
Objectives: (A) To measure the extent to which different candidate outcome measures identified highr...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Royal College of General...
Objectives (A) To measure the extent to which different candidate outcome measures identified high-r...
Background: While the use of prescribing safety indicators (PSI) can reduce potentially hazardous pr...
Background: While the use of prescribing safety indicators (PSI) can reduce potentially hazardous p...
Background: The frequency and nature of safety problems and harm in general practices has previously...
Objective: To identify patient safety monitoring strategies in primary care. Design: Open-ended ques...
BACKGROUND: Quality improvement (QI) is a priority for general practice, and GPs are expected to par...
ABSTRACT Objectives High-risk prescribing in primary care is common and causes considerable harm, w...
Objectives Explore how patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) are collected, communicated and ...
Background Quality indicators (QIs) are an important tool for improving clinical practice and are in...
Objectives: (A) To measure the extent to which different candidate outcome measures identified highr...
Background: Monitoring for potentially hazardous prescribing is increasingly important to improve me...
BACKGROUND: There are widely recognised variations in the delivery and outcomes of healthcare but an...
Background: Patient safety is vital to well-functioning health systems. A key component is safe pres...
Objectives: (A) To measure the extent to which different candidate outcome measures identified highr...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Royal College of General...
Objectives (A) To measure the extent to which different candidate outcome measures identified high-r...
Background: While the use of prescribing safety indicators (PSI) can reduce potentially hazardous pr...
Background: While the use of prescribing safety indicators (PSI) can reduce potentially hazardous p...
Background: The frequency and nature of safety problems and harm in general practices has previously...
Objective: To identify patient safety monitoring strategies in primary care. Design: Open-ended ques...