Objective: To determine to what extent general practitioners' (GPs) prescribing behaviour is a result of repeat prescribing of medication which has been initiated by specialists.Method: During a 4-week period, pharmacists identified GPs' prescriptions for a large group of cardiovascular drugs. Next, questionnaires were sent to the prescribing GPs to find out whether the prescriptions were in fact repeat prescriptions. If they were, the GPs were asked whether or not they had originally been prescribed by a specialist.Setting: Six pharmacies in the northeastern part of the Netherlands.Subjects: Fourty-four GPs, 39 of whom responded.Results: Of 1648 questionnaires, 1342 (81%) were returned. Of drugs for cardiovascular therapy that the GPs pres...
The reported scale of repeat prescriptions ranges from 29% to 75% of all items prescribed, depending...
Background: The French National Health Insurance and the Ministry of Health have introduced multiple...
Background: The NHS spends billions of pounds annually on repeat prescriptions in primary care, but ...
Objective: To determine to what extent general practitioners' (GPs) prescribing behaviour is a resul...
Objective: To determine to what extent general practitioners' (GPs) prescribing behaviour is a resul...
Aim: To explore the relationship between actual and expected general medical practitioner (GP) pract...
Contains fulltext : 50980.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVE: To ...
BACKGROUND: New drugs are cornerstones of clinical practice. However, when included in practice in a...
Contains fulltext : 57368.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: Di...
Aim To apply the DU90% indicator (the number of unique drugs which make up 90% of a doctor’s prescri...
Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, p...
Aim: To determine the prevalence and nature of prescribing errors in general practice; to explore ...
Background: High-risk primary care prescribing is common and is known to vary considerably between p...
Objectives: (1) To determine the extent to which Australian general practitioners (GPs) restrict the...
BACKGROUND: The prescribing behaviour of doctors is influenced by the pharmaceutical industry. This ...
The reported scale of repeat prescriptions ranges from 29% to 75% of all items prescribed, depending...
Background: The French National Health Insurance and the Ministry of Health have introduced multiple...
Background: The NHS spends billions of pounds annually on repeat prescriptions in primary care, but ...
Objective: To determine to what extent general practitioners' (GPs) prescribing behaviour is a resul...
Objective: To determine to what extent general practitioners' (GPs) prescribing behaviour is a resul...
Aim: To explore the relationship between actual and expected general medical practitioner (GP) pract...
Contains fulltext : 50980.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVE: To ...
BACKGROUND: New drugs are cornerstones of clinical practice. However, when included in practice in a...
Contains fulltext : 57368.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: Di...
Aim To apply the DU90% indicator (the number of unique drugs which make up 90% of a doctor’s prescri...
Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, p...
Aim: To determine the prevalence and nature of prescribing errors in general practice; to explore ...
Background: High-risk primary care prescribing is common and is known to vary considerably between p...
Objectives: (1) To determine the extent to which Australian general practitioners (GPs) restrict the...
BACKGROUND: The prescribing behaviour of doctors is influenced by the pharmaceutical industry. This ...
The reported scale of repeat prescriptions ranges from 29% to 75% of all items prescribed, depending...
Background: The French National Health Insurance and the Ministry of Health have introduced multiple...
Background: The NHS spends billions of pounds annually on repeat prescriptions in primary care, but ...