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1.
KMJ-Kuwait Medical Journal. 2001; 33 (2): 135-137
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-57523

ABSTRACT

To ascertain whether the parents in Kuwait desire to be present during the induction of anesthesia in their children and to obtain the parents views on factors associated with such presence. The parents of 80 children scheduled for surgery under general anesthesia were given asked to complete a questionnaire. An overwhelming 88.75% of parents wished to be present in the anesthetic room during induction. Conclusions: Parents in Kuwait should be allowed to be present during the induction of anesthesia in their child. Protocols should be drafted accordingly and must include other child-friendly measures to reduce anxiety among parents and children in Kuwait


Subject(s)
Humans , Parents , Parent-Child Relations , Child , Anxiety
2.
KMJ-Kuwait Medical Journal. 2001; 33 (2): 153-155
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-57527

ABSTRACT

To ascertain the prescription patterns of junior doctors with relevance to the use of trade names and generic names and to assess their ability to identify and link trade names with their generic equivalents. Setting: The in-patient records of a large general hospital in Kuwait. A total of 100 randomly picked in-patient prescription records were analyzed for the use of trade or generic names. Ten prescribing junior-grade physicians were given questionnaires to assess their abilities to both identify a drug name as either trade or generic and to link the trade names with their generic equivalents. Atotal of 86% of the prescriptions were written by their trade names. From among the common drugs used, junior doctors correctly identified 94% as either the trade or generic name. The junior doctors were able to write the generic names for only 47% of the trade names listed. This study indicates that junior doctors use trade names in their prescriptions as a matter of habit and they were unable to link the trade names to their generic equivalents. Hence, a policy of using generic names only is suggested to improve prescribing habits


Subject(s)
Humans , Medical Staff, Hospital , Drugs, Generic , Practice Patterns, Physicians'
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