Literature DB >> 22026488

Improving prescribing practice in psychiatry: the experience of the Prescribing Observatory for Mental Health (POMH-UK).

Thomas R E Barnes1, Carol Paton.   

Abstract

Data from the UK Prescribing Observatory for Mental Health (POMH-UK) suggest that while positive change in prescribing practice can be achieved with focused, audit-based, quality improvement programmes (QIPs) that include feedback of benchmarked performance data and customized change interventions, the time frame for progress is long and improvement generally modest. Improvement may be seen between the baseline audit and re-audit, but supplementary audits conducted in subsequent years can show incremental, sustained improvement in clinical services that have been consistently involved. Audit invariably reveals a marked variation across and within healthcare organizations in the level of compliance with evidence-based clinical practice standards. Additional work has identified various impediments to behavioural change. Some are common to all QIPs, such as the incomplete dissemination of audit results throughout participating organizations and variable uptake of change interventions. Others are specific to particular QIPs, depending on the prescribing issue addressed. For example, in a QIP targeting biochemical monitoring of lithium treatment, the major barrier was the complexity of clinical care arrangements, including multiple interfaces between clinical and laboratory services, which were often not directly or wholly under the control of clinical teams. In this QIP there was little improvement in overall performance against the clinical standards in the total national sample between baseline and re-audit.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22026488     DOI: 10.3109/09540261.2011.606541

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int Rev Psychiatry        ISSN: 0954-0261


  5 in total

1.  Prevalence and correlates of diabetes mellitus and dyslipidaemia in a long-stay inpatient schizophrenia population in Singapore.

Authors:  Saleha Shafie; Siau Pheng Lee; Samantha Bee Cheng Ong; Peizhi Wang; Esmond Seow; Hui Lin Ong; Siow Ann Chong; Mythily Subramaniam
Journal:  Singapore Med J       Date:  2018-02-12       Impact factor: 1.858

2.  Undertaking clinical audit, with reference to a Prescribing Observatory for Mental Health audit of lithium monitoring.

Authors:  Carol Paton; Thomas R E Barnes
Journal:  Psychiatr Bull (2014)       Date:  2014-06

3.  Screening for the metabolic side effects of antipsychotic medication: findings of a 6-year quality improvement programme in the UK.

Authors:  T R E Barnes; S F Bhatti; R Adroer; C Paton
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2015-10-01       Impact factor: 2.692

4.  Using Routine Hemoglobin A1c Testing to Determine the Glycemic Status in Psychiatric Inpatients.

Authors:  Pratyusha Naidu; Leonid Churilov; Alvin Kong; Richard Kanaan; Henry Wong; Arielle Van Mourik; Anthony Yao; Elizabeth Cornish; Mariam Hachem; Graeme K Hart; Elizabeth Owen-Jones; Raymond Robbins; Que Lam; Katherine Samaras; Jeffrey D Zajac; Elif I Ekinci
Journal:  Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)       Date:  2017-03-28       Impact factor: 5.555

5.  Evaluation of social cognitive measures in an Asian schizophrenia sample.

Authors:  Keane Lim; Sara-Ann Lee; Amy E Pinkham; Max Lam; Jimmy Lee
Journal:  Schizophr Res Cogn       Date:  2019-12-10
  5 in total

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