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1.
J Clin Neurosci ; 126: 80-85, 2024 Jun 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38852427

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Functional neurological symptom disorder (FND) is characterised by neurological symptoms that are incompatible with recognised neurological or medical conditions. The condition is common in neurology clinics and causes significant morbidity, though timely access to specialist care is difficult. We sought to characterise the availability and clinical practice of specialist FND clinics across Australia and New Zealand. METHODS: Clinicians or coordinators involved in running specialist FND clinics were identified through clinical contacts with further recruitment by snowball sampling and contacting patient organisations. All clinics completed a survey about details of service delivery, including clinical model, referral sources, criteria, demand, staffing, interventions, clinical data collection, and funding. RESULTS: We identified 16 clinics across Australia and New Zealand. Of these, 12 were in capital cities and four were in regional centres. Three of these focused on paediatric patients and 13 focused on adults. Clinics varied in their clinical model, referral sources, criteria, staffing, interventions, data collection, and funding. Most clinics reported challenges related to coping with demand and obtaining adequate funding. CONCLUSION: FND clinics in Australia and New Zealand appear to be concentrated predominantly in metropolitan areas and vary considerably in their referral sources, clinical data collection, and models of care. Reported challenges in meeting demand indicate a need for greater resources. The heterogeneity across clinics suggests a need to harmonise clinical standards to facilitate access to evidence-based care.

2.
J Am Vet Med Assoc ; 262(3): 1-7, 2024 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38134457

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To identify the rate at which medication errors occurred over a 2-year period in a large animal veterinary teaching hospital and describe the types of errors that occurred. SAMPLE: 226 medication errors over 6,155 large animal visits occurred during the study period. Multiple errors may have affected the same patient. METHODS: Medication error reports from March 1, 2021, to March 31, 2023, were reviewed retrospectively and classified by species, type of drug, and month and day of the week the error occurred. Errors were categorized according to multiple previously developed systems to allow for comparison to other studies. RESULTS: 226 medication errors occurred over 6,155 patient visits in a 2-year period: 57.5% (130/226) were identified by a dedicated large animal pharmacist, and 64.2% (145/226) of errors were identified and corrected before reaching the patient. Prescription/medication order errors (58.4% [132/226]) occurred significantly more often than errors in medication preparation (21.7% [49/226]; P < .001) and administration (19.6%; P < .001). Antibiotics (48.7% [110/226]) and NSAIDs (17.7% [40/226]) were the drug classes most involved in errors. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Most medication errors in this study occurred in the ordering/prescribing phase. This is similar to reports in human medicine, where standardized medication error reporting strategies exist. Developing and applying similar strategies in veterinary medicine may improve patient safety and outcome.


Subject(s)
Hospitals, Animal , Hospitals, Teaching , Animals , Humans , Retrospective Studies , Medication Errors/veterinary , Patient Safety
3.
Am J Pharm Educ ; 84(10): ajpe7314, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33149322

ABSTRACT

Objective. To characterize the veterinary pharmacy and pharmacology literature cited by veterinary drug monographs and journal articles and describe the database indexing and availability of this literature in libraries serving pharmacy schools. Methods. Citations in American Academy of Veterinary Pharmacology and Therapeutics monographs, Journal of Veterinary Pharmacology and Therapeutics (JVPT) articles, and Plumb's Veterinary Drug Handbook, Eighth Edition (Plumb's) were analyzed for publication type and age. Three zones of cited journals were determined by Bradford's Law of Scattering based on citation counts. Results. Monographs most often cited journal articles (1886 [64.7%]), unpublished "grey" literature (632 [21.7%]), and books (379 [13.0%]), but only a few cited proceedings (16 [0.5%]). In JVPT, articles predominated (9625 [91.9%]). Articles comprised 54.8% (1,959) of Plumb's citations; proceedings, 27.0%; books, 15.7%; and grey literature, 2.5%. The age of cited items varied, with 17.1% of monograph citations less than five years old, compared to 26.3% of cited items in JVPT and 40.5% of cited items in Plumb's being less than five years old. Zone 1 consisted of three veterinary journals for monographs, four veterinary journals for Plumb's, and 16 veterinary and human journals for JVPT. Indexing coverage was above 92% in Web of Science, Scopus, and PubMed for zone 1 and 2 journals. Libraries serving both pharmacy and veterinary education programs subscribe to 95% of zone 1 journals, while libraries serving pharmacy education at institutions without a veterinary program subscribe to an average of 59% of zone 1 journals. Conclusion. Veterinary pharmacy and pharmacology literature relies on journals from human and veterinary practice, veterinary proceedings, and, less often, books and drug manufacturer information. Libraries supporting pharmacy programs could contribute to the education of future pharmacists who will be filling veterinary prescriptions by increasing access to this literature.


Subject(s)
Access to Information , Education, Pharmacy , Education, Veterinary , Veterinary Drugs , Abstracting and Indexing , Bibliometrics , Databases, Bibliographic , Humans , Libraries , Periodicals as Topic
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