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Therapeutics: Adverse Drug Reactions Part Two

April 12, 2019 by James Thomas in Therapeutics

In the second part of our Adverse drug reactions (ADR) series recorded in Annie’s Burger Shack Kunal takes us through:

  • Type D (Delayed)

  • Type E (End of Dose)

  • Type F (Failure)

  • An example of each one and what we can do about them

You can find Part One here

ADRs cost the NHS in England £380 million a year (Source: NICE)

ADRs cost the NHS in England £380 million a year (Source: NICE)

Here is the #TakeVisually for this episode:

1.6% of hospital inpatients will have an avoidable ADR during their stay (Source: NICE)

1.6% of hospital inpatients will have an avoidable ADR during their stay (Source: NICE)

April 12, 2019 /James Thomas
adverse drug reactions, ADR
Therapeutics
Comment
photo-1549477752-31cd7327aed0.jpeg

Therapeutics: Adverse Drug Reactions Part One

April 05, 2019 by James Thomas in Therapeutics

Kunal Gohil joins Jamie at Annie’s Burger Shack in Nottingham to discuss Adverse Drug Reactions.

ADRs are responsible for 6-7% hospital admissions each year in the UK (from NICE)

Kunal defines adverse drug reactions before going through the first three types:

  • Type A (Augmented)

  • Type B (Bizarre)

  • Type C (Chronic)

Giving examples of each and steps of how to avoid them!

ADRs affect 10-20% of hospital inpatients each year in the UK (from NICE)

Here is the #TakeVisually for this episode:

45% of ADRs are preventable (from NICE)

April 05, 2019 /James Thomas
ADR, adverse drug reactions
Therapeutics
Comment

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