84 results on '"Tully, Mary P."'
Search Results
2. Exploring the challenges faced by foundation doctors when prescribing high risk medicines safely during the on‐call period: A qualitative study
3. Development of the adult complexity tool for pharmaceutical care (ACTPC) in hospital: A modified Delphi study
4. Prescriber behaviours that could be targeted for change: An analysis of behaviours demonstrated during prescription writing in children
5. Trading off accuracy and explainability in AI decision-making: findings from 2 citizens’ juries
6. Development of an Emergency Department Pharmacist Practitioner service specification
7. Patient prioritisation for hospital pharmacy services: current approaches in the UK
8. Characteristics of Reported Pediatric Medication Errors in Northern Ireland and Use in Quality Improvement
9. Realist evaluation of public engagement and involvement in data-intensive health research
10. Public preferences regarding data linkage for research: a discrete choice experiment comparing Scotland and Sweden
11. An exploration of the perceptions of non-medical prescribers, regarding their self-efficacy when prescribing, and their willingness to take responsibility for prescribing decisions
12. Readiness to prescribe: Using educational design to untie the Gordian Knot
13. Public Preferences regarding Data Linkage for Research: A Discrete Choice Experiment comparing Scotland and Sweden
14. Commercial use of health data—A public “trial” by citizens' jury
15. What causes prescribing errors in children? Scoping review
16. Public Preferences regarding Data Linkage for Research: A Discrete Choice Experiment comparing Scotland and Sweden
17. Prevalence, nature and risk factors for medication administration omissions in English NHS hospital inpatients: a retrospective multicentre study using Medication Safety Thermometer data
18. Understanding the causes of prescribing errors from a behavioural perspective
19. 49 Prescriber behaviors that could be targeted for change: an analysis of behaviors demonstrated during the prescribing process
20. Consensus Statement on Public Involvement and Engagement with Data-Intensive Health Research
21. A qualitative study exploring how routinely collected Medication Safety Thermometer data have been used for quality improvement purposes using case studies from three UK hospitals
22. Prescribing errors by junior doctors- A comparison of errors with high risk medicines and non-high risk medicines
23. Foundation year one and year two doctors’ prescribing errors: a comparison of their causes
24. Investigating the Extent to Which Patients Should Control Access to Patient Records for Research: A Deliberative Process Using Citizens’ Juries
25. ‘If no-one stops me, I'll make the mistake again’: Changing prescribing behaviours through feedback; A Perceptual Control Theory perspective’
26. A formative evaluation of the implementation of a medication safety data collection tool in English healthcare settings: A qualitative interview study using normalisation process theory
27. Practice makes perfect: A systematic review of the expertise development of pharmacist and nurse independent prescribers in the United Kingdom
28. Factors influencing secondary care pharmacist and nurse independent prescribers’ clinical reasoning: An interprofessional analysis
29. A qualitative study exploring how pharmacist and nurse independent prescribers make clinical decisions
30. Tea, talk and technology: patient and public involvement to improve connected health ‘wearables’ research in dementia
31. Using the Behaviour Change Wheel to identify interventions to facilitate the transfer of information on medication changes on electronic discharge summaries
32. Investigating the Extent to Which Patients Should Control Access to Patient Records for Research: A Deliberative Process Using Citizens� Juries
33. Investigating the Extent to Which Patients Should Control Access to Patient Records for Research: A Deliberative Process Using Citizens� Juries (Preprint)
34. Learning from the design, development and implementation of the Medication Safety Thermometer
35. Rasch analysis of the Antimicrobial Self-Assessment Toolkit for National Health Service (NHS) Trusts (ASAT v17)
36. Prevalence and appropriateness of psychotropic medication prescribing in a nationally representative cross-sectional survey of male and female prisoners in England
37. Nonmedical prescribing: where are we now?
38. Pharmacist-led feedback workshops increase appropriate prescribing of antimicrobials
39. Development of indicators to assess the quality of medicines reconciliation at hospital admission: an e-Delphi study
40. How to use the nominal group and Delphi techniques
41. The Degree of Readiness among a Population of HIV Infected Patients in Sweden
42. Prevalence, Nature, Severity and Risk Factors for Prescribing Errors in Hospital Inpatients: Prospective Study in 20 UK Hospitals
43. Preparing to prescribe: How do clerkship students learn in the midst of complexity?
44. Learning to work with electronic patient records and prescription charts: experiences and perceptions of hospital pharmacists
45. Exploring the causes of junior doctors' prescribing mistakes: a qualitative study
46. Association betweenClostridium difficileinfection and antimicrobial usage in a large group of English hospitals
47. Did a quality improvement collaborative make stroke care better? A cluster randomized trial
48. Research: Articulating Questions, Generating Hypotheses, and Choosing Study Designs
49. Transfer of data or re-creation of knowledge – Experiences of a shared electronic patient medical records system
50. Prescribing errors in hospital practice
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.