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Clinical decision support: current issues,
future prospects
As the clinical world grows more complex and pharmaceutical knowledge expands exponentially, the delivery of timely, accurate information to clinical professionals has never been a more important issue.
E-Health Insider is pleased to join forces with First DataBank Europe for this feature focusing on clinical decision support. The articles below explore both a variety of current issues and the future potential of clinical decision support to make healthcare safer and more effective.
We look at the role of clinical decision support within the government's NHS modernisation agenda. How can clinical decision support help to reduce adverse drug reactions? How can new prescribers in the nursing and pharmaceutical professions be supported? There is also a glimpse of the future in a case study of a young woman with epilepsy, showing how clinical decision support could be maximised to improve patient safety.
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A view from the top
The NHS is a key element of the current government’s modernisation programme and has been under constant scrutiny in the UK national media. First DataBank Europe looks at the challenges it is facing and how clinical IT systems could hold the key to linking modernisation with greater efficiency.
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Reducing adverse drug reactions
A report published by the British Medical Journal in 2004 (compiled by researchers at the University of Liverpool) reported that over 10,000 Britons could be dying each year as a result of adverse drug reactions (ADRs). First DataBank Europe argues that clinical IT systems with effectively implemented clinical decision support can help to reduce ADRs and improve patient safety.
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The need for clinical standardisation in healthcare
In recent years the NHS has undergone a raft of reforms under the current government’s modernisation programme. The key to these reforms is the transition towards an increasingly joined up electronic healthcare system, to be achieved in part through the introduction and use of standard clinical and drug terminologies across the NHS. |
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Patient safety in the hands of new prescribers
In November 2005, it was reported that nurses and pharmacists in England and Scotland are likely to be given increased powers to prescribe medicines. From Spring 2006, it is anticipated that nurses and pharmacists with special training will be able to prescribe any licensed medicine with the exception of controlled drugs. This article looks at how they can be supported.
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The future of clinical decision support
The picture of patient care and safety will look very different in the future. With integrated clinical IT systems, centralised patient care records and clinical decision support, healthcare professionals will have powerful tools to assist them in providing patients with the safest and most effective medical care.
First DataBank Europe looks ahead to 2010 and beyond, taking us on a hypothetical journey to show how clinical decision support could work in the future.
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E-Health
Insider is published by E-Health Media Ltd
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