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Journal article 1193 views

Tablet crushing: the law!

Richard Griffith

Nurse2nurse, Volume: 3, Issue: 10, Pages: 23 - 4

Swansea University Author: Richard Griffith

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Abstract

<p>A strict legal framework regulates the supply and administration of medicines to protect public safety, yet every year approximately 10,000 serious adverse drug reactions are reported in the NHS (Audit Commission 2002). The Department of Health (DOH) suggests that half of these are avoidabl...

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Published in: Nurse2nurse
ISSN: 1473-2114
Published: 2003
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa6561
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last_indexed 2018-02-09T04:33:57Z
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spelling v2 6561 2012-01-10 Tablet crushing: the law! 6fab953b9a59911d3f46b5b3fd2eb25d Richard Griffith Richard Griffith true false 2012-01-10 HNU <p>A strict legal framework regulates the supply and administration of medicines to protect public safety, yet every year approximately 10,000 serious adverse drug reactions are reported in the NHS (Audit Commission 2002). The Department of Health (DOH) suggests that half of these are avoidable errors in medication administration (DOH 2000). Disquiet over administration errors by the DOH and audit commission has focused on the widespread practice of crushing tablets. In a recent survey 84% of staff working in Nursing and Residential care admitted crushing tablets (Wright 2002).</p> Journal Article Nurse2nurse 3 10 23 4 1473-2114 10 10 2003 2003-10-10 COLLEGE NANME Nursing COLLEGE CODE HNU Swansea University 2023-06-26T15:12:43.7603710 2012-01-10T11:12:07.2970000 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Ethics and Law Richard Griffith 1
title Tablet crushing: the law!
spellingShingle Tablet crushing: the law!
Richard Griffith
title_short Tablet crushing: the law!
title_full Tablet crushing: the law!
title_fullStr Tablet crushing: the law!
title_full_unstemmed Tablet crushing: the law!
title_sort Tablet crushing: the law!
author_id_str_mv 6fab953b9a59911d3f46b5b3fd2eb25d
author_id_fullname_str_mv 6fab953b9a59911d3f46b5b3fd2eb25d_***_Richard Griffith
author Richard Griffith
author2 Richard Griffith
format Journal article
container_title Nurse2nurse
container_volume 3
container_issue 10
container_start_page 23
publishDate 2003
institution Swansea University
issn 1473-2114
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Health and Social Care - Ethics and Law{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Ethics and Law
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description <p>A strict legal framework regulates the supply and administration of medicines to protect public safety, yet every year approximately 10,000 serious adverse drug reactions are reported in the NHS (Audit Commission 2002). The Department of Health (DOH) suggests that half of these are avoidable errors in medication administration (DOH 2000). Disquiet over administration errors by the DOH and audit commission has focused on the widespread practice of crushing tablets. In a recent survey 84% of staff working in Nursing and Residential care admitted crushing tablets (Wright 2002).</p>
published_date 2003-10-10T15:12:39Z
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