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- L Kidd, E Shand, R Beavis, Z Taylor, F Dunstan, and D Tuthill.
- Cardiff University Medical School, Cardiff, UK. kiddlr@cardiff.ac.uk
- Arch. Dis. Child. 2010 Mar 1; 95 (3): 219-21.
BackgroundPrescribing errors complicate a significant number of paediatric admissions. Ongoing training and monitoring of prescribing competency in junior doctors has occurred in Cardiff since 2001, alongside national measures aimed at improving training and competency.AimOngoing monitoring of junior doctors' prescribing competency to assess the effect of these national and local initiatives.MethodsJunior doctors receive training and subsequent assessment on prescribing competency at induction. A 1 h bleep-free session concerning paediatric prescribing precedes completion of four prescribing tasks. British National Formulary for children and calculators are provided. Those scoring 0 or 1 are retrained before prescribing is permitted. Our previously published data of doctors between 2001 and 2004 was compared with assessment in 2007.Results30 junior doctors were assessed in 2007 (32 in 2001-2004). All four questions were answered correctly by 22/30, compared to 10/32 (31%) in 2001-2004. The mean score in 2007 was 93.3% compared to 57.8% previously (see table 1). Comparison of means with previous results demonstrated statistically significant improvement with a mean difference of 36% (95% CI 24 to 47). In 2007, eight (27%) doctors got just one question wrong and no doctor answered all questions incorrectly. In 2001-2004, 22/32 (67%) made at least one error during previous assessment, and one doctor answered all questions incorrectly. Table 1Prescribing assessment scores in 2001-2004 and 2007 Answer scores2001-2004 (n=32)2007 (n=30)All questions correct10 (31%)22 (73%)One incorrect08 (27%)Two incorrect13 (41%)0Three incorrect8 (25%)0All questions incorrect1 (3%)0ConclusionOngoing monitoring of junior doctors' prescribing ability has demonstrated improvements which may be due to local and national training initiatives.
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