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Dive into the research topics where Imogen Savage is active.

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Featured researches published by Imogen Savage.


Quality & Safety in Health Care | 2009

Care homes’ use of medicines study: prevalence, causes and potential harm of medication errors in care homes for older people

Nick Barber; David Phillip Alldred; David K. Raynor; R. Dickinson; S. Garfield; Barbara Jesson; Rosemary Lim; Imogen Savage; Claire Standage; Peter Buckle; James Carpenter; Bryony Dean Franklin; Maria Woloshynowych; Arnold Zermansky

Introduction: Care home residents are at particular risk from medication errors, and our objective was to determine the prevalence and potential harm of prescribing, monitoring, dispensing and administration errors in UK care homes, and to identify their causes. Methods: A prospective study of a random sample of residents within a purposive sample of homes in three areas. Errors were identified by patient interview, note review, observation of practice and examination of dispensed items. Causes were understood by observation and from theoretically framed interviews with home staff, doctors and pharmacists. Potential harm from errors was assessed by expert judgement. Results: The 256 residents recruited in 55 homes were taking a mean of 8.0 medicines. One hundred and seventy-eight (69.5%) of residents had one or more errors. The mean number per resident was 1.9 errors. The mean potential harm from prescribing, monitoring, administration and dispensing errors was 2.6, 3.7, 2.1 and 2.0 (0 = no harm, 10 = death), respectively. Contributing factors from the 89 interviews included doctors who were not accessible, did not know the residents and lacked information in homes when prescribing; home staff’s high workload, lack of medicines training and drug round interruptions; lack of team work among home, practice and pharmacy; inefficient ordering systems; inaccurate medicine records and prevalence of verbal communication; and difficult to fill (and check) medication administration systems. Conclusions: That two thirds of residents were exposed to one or more medication errors is of concern. The will to improve exists, but there is a lack of overall responsibility. Action is required from all concerned.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2004

We are the experts: people with asthma talk about their medicine information needs

David K. Raynor; Imogen Savage; Peter Knapp; Jeremy Henley

People with chronic illness are being encouraged to become more involved in their care. For this, they need to be well informed about their medicines, and more written medicines information is becoming available. However, there is little data about its effectiveness and impact. This study examined the patient perspective of medicines information through focus groups of people with asthma. Most participants actively sought medicines information from a variety of professional and lay sources. There were some positive experiences but many examples of partial or total information failure. Individualised information was valued and medicine leaflets were generally seen as less helpful than face-to-face advice. Some felt strongly that patients with long experience should be involved in the development of medicine information leaflets. We conclude that medicine information leaflets do not currently meet the needs of users and that people who take medicines should be involved in their development and testing.


BMJ | 1983

Hypnotic accumulation and hangover in elderly inpatients: a controlled double-blind study of temazepam and nitrazepam

Peter Cook; Anthony Huggett; Ruth Graham-Pole; Imogen Savage; Ian James

The hypnotic and residual sedative effects of the first and seventh of seven regular night-time doses of nitrazepam 5 mg, temazepam 20 mg, and placebo were studied in 58 elderly inpatients. Plasma temazepam and nitrazepam concentrations rose by about 50% and 113% respectively between the mornings of day 1 and day 7. Patients reported sleeping well more often after the first dose of either hypnotic (p less than 0.05), but there was no difference after the seventh dose. Reaction time was unchanged on the morning after the first dose but was significantly prolonged after the seventh dose of both hypnotics (p less than 0.01). The time taken to eliminate the letter E from a page of prose tended to be prolonged after the first dose of both drugs (temazepam v placebo, p less than 0.05; nitrazepam v placebo, not significant) and was further prolonged on the morning after the seventh dose of nitrazepam (nitrazepam v placebo, p less than 0.05). Thus plasma accumulation of the drug was associated with a deterioration in daytime performance. This change in performance did not correlate with age, cerebral blood flow, or plasma concentration, but patients of low intelligence tended to be more severely affected.


Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety | 2009

Methodological variability in detecting prescribing errors and consequences for the evaluation of interventions

Bryony Dean Franklin; Sylvia Birch; Imogen Savage; Ian Wong; Maria Woloshynowych; Ann Jacklin; Nick Barber

To compare four methods of detecting prescribing errors (PE) in the same patient cohorts before and after an intervention (computerised physician order entry; CPOE) and to determine whether the impact of CPOE is identified consistently by all methods.


International Journal of Pharmacy Practice | 1995

Time for customer contact in pharmacies with and without a dispensing technician

Imogen Savage

Dispensary workload is widely perceived by pharmacists as limiting the time available for customer contact. This study compared pharmacist work patterns at two neighbouring independent pharmacies, one without (A) and one with (B) a trained dispensing technician, using fixed interval activity sampling. Pharmacists were observed at work over two weeks; six half‐day observation sessions (A = 1,181 observations; B=1,348) could be matched for incoming dispensing workload. Data on 505 prescription issues and 74 over‐the‐counter events (advice requests, advised sales, and health information) were collected. Pharmacy B dispensed a greater proportion of antibiotics (19 per cent v 11 per cent, P<0.02) but there were no other significant differences. Pharmacists at site B spent 20 per cent less of their time on dispensary activities, 14 per cent more of their time on the counter and had 6 per cent more time to rest and read, but they did not spend significantly longer talking to customers about medicines and health. Skilled dispensing help released over an hour of pharmacist time per day, but these savings were linked to prescription workload, which is unpredictable. The pharmacists could not plan to give this extra time to their customers because they did not know when it would be available, or when it would be needed.


British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2009

Prospective observational study of adverse drug reactions to diclofenac in children.

Joseph F. Standing; Kuan Ooi; Simon Keady; Richard F. Howard; Imogen Savage; Ian C. K. Wong

AIM The aim of this study was to investigate the type of common (occurring in >1% of patients) adverse reactions caused by diclofenac when given to children for acute pain. METHODS A prospective observational study was undertaken on paediatric surgical patents aged < or =12 years at Great Ormond Street and University College London Hospitals. All adverse events were recorded, and causality assessment used to judge the likelihood of them being due to diclofenac. Prospective recruitment meant not all patients were prescribed diclofenac, allowing an analysis of utilization. Causality of all serious adverse events was reviewed by an expert panel. RESULTS Children prescribed diclofenac were significantly older, and stayed in hospital for shorter periods than those who were not. Diclofenac was not avoided in asthmatic patients. Data on 380 children showed they suffer similar types of nonserious adverse reactions to adults. The incidence (95% confidence interval) of rash was 0.8% (0.016, 2.3); minor central nervous system disturbance 0.5% (0.06, 1.9); rectal irritation with suppositories 0.3% (0.009, 1.9); and diarrhoea 0.3% (0.007, 1.5). No serious adverse event was judged to be caused by diclofenac, meaning the incidence of serious adverse reactions to diclofenac in children is <0.8%. CONCLUSION Children given diclofenac for acute pain appeared to suffer similar types of adverse reactions to adults; the incidence of serious adverse reaction is <0.8%.


British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2008

Population pharmacokinetics of oral diclofenac for acute pain in children

Joseph F. Standing; Richard F. Howard; Atholl Johnson; Imogen Savage; Ian C. K. Wong

AIMS To develop a population pharmacokinetic model for a new diclofenac suspension (50 mg 5 ml(-1)) in adult volunteers and paediatric patients, and recommend a dose for acute pain in children. METHODS Blood samples were drawn at the start and end of surgery, and on removal of the venous cannula from 70 children (aged 1 to 12 years, weight 9 to 37 kg) who received a preoperative oral 1 mg kg(-1) dose; these were pooled with rich (14 post-dose samples) data from 30 adult volunteers. Population pharmacokinetic modelling was undertaken with NONMEM. The optimum adult dose of diclofenac for acute pain is 50 mg. Simulation from the final model was performed to predict a paediatric dose to achieve a similar AUC to 50 mg in adults. RESULTS A total of 558 serum diclofenac concentrations from 100 subjects was used in the pooled analysis. A single disposition compartment model with first order elimination and dual absorption compartments was used. The estimates of CL/F and V(D)/F were 53.98 l h(-1) 70 kg(-1) and 4.84 l 70 kg(-1) respectively. Allometric size models appeared to predict adequately changes in CL and V(D) with age. Of the simulated doses investigated, 1 mg kg(-1) gave paediatric AUC((0,12 h)) to adult 50 mg AUC((0,12 h)) ratios of 1.00, 1.08 and 1.18 for ages 1-3, 4-6 and 7-12 years respectively. CONCLUSIONS This study has shown 1 mg kg(-1) diclofenac to produce similar exposure in children aged 1 to 12 years as 50 mg in adults, and is acceptable for clinical practice; patients are unlikely to obtain further benefit from higher doses.


International Journal of Pharmacy Practice | 1999

The changing face of pharmacy practice — evidence from 20 years of work sampling studies

Imogen Savage

Objectives — To determine whether the professional policy shift away from dispensing towards patient‐focused care is reflected in the way community pharmacists actually use their time.


International Journal of Pharmacy Practice | 2008

Development and validation of criteria to identify medication-monitoring errors in care home residents

David Phillip Alldred; Claire Standage; Arnold Zermansky; Barbara Jesson; Imogen Savage; Bryony Dean Franklin; Nick Barber; David K. Raynor

Aim The identification of medication‐monitoring errors requires a validated definition. This paper describes the development and validation of a definition which includes criteria for specific medicines to determine whether a medication‐monitoring error has occurred in the care home setting.


International Journal of Pharmacy Practice | 2001

Supplying emergency hormonal contraception through patient group direction: a qualitative study of the views of pharmacists

Paul Bissell; Claire Anderson; Imogen Savage; Larry Goodyear

□ Pharmacists have been supplying emergency hormonal contraception via patient group direction in two health action zone areas since late 1999 and early 2000

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Nick Barber

University College London

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Deborah Pritchard

Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency

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