The Medical journal of Australia
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Comparative Study
Computerised prescribing: assessing the impact on prescription repeats and on generic substitution of some commonly used antibiotics.
To assess the impact of two interventions on computer-generated prescriptions for antibiotics--(i) an educational intervention to reduce automatic computerised ordering of repeat antibiotic prescriptions, and (ii) a legislative change prohibiting the "no brand substitution" box being checked as a default setting in prescribing software--and to compare these findings with those of a similar survey we conducted in 2000. ⋯ The legislative change which disallowed having the "no brand substitution" box checked as a default setting in prescribing software had a dramatic impact on the checking of the "no brand substitution" box. In contrast, there was no sustained effect of educating prescribers about software default settings relating to repeat prescribing of antibiotics. Other actions are required if unnecessary repeat prescriptions for some medicines, such as antibiotics, are to be reduced.
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Comparative Study
Urban-rural comparison of weight status among women and children living in socioeconomically disadvantaged neighbourhoods.
To compare the weight status of women and children living in socioeconomically disadvantaged rural and urban neighbourhoods in Victoria. ⋯ The higher prevalence of obesity in rural women compared with urban women was largely explained by individual-level sociodemographic factors, such as age, number of children, country of birth, education level, employment status and marital status. This suggests that higher obesity levels among women in rural areas may be attributable to the sociodemographic composition of these areas.