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Dive into the research topics where Murray Tilyard is active.

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Featured researches published by Murray Tilyard.


BMJ | 1997

Randomised controlled trial of a general practice programme of home based exercise to prevent falls in elderly women

Campbell Aj; M. C. Robertson; Melinda M. Gardner; Robyn Norton; Murray Tilyard; David M. Buchner

Abstract Objective: To assess the effectiveness of a home exercise programme of strength and balance retraining exercises in reducing falls and injuries in elderly women. Design: Randomised controlled trial of an individually tailored programme of physical therapy in the home (exercise group, n=116) compared with the usual care and an equal number of social visits (control group, n=117). Setting: 17 general practices in Dunedin, New Zealand. Subjects: Women aged 80 years and older living in the community and registered with a general practice in Dunedin. Main outcome measures: Number of falls and injuries related to falls and time between falls during one year of follow up; changes in muscle strength and balance measures after six months. Results: After one year there were 152 falls in the control group and 88 falls in the exercise group. The mean (SD) rate of falls was lower in the exercise than the control group (0.87 (1.29) v 1.34 (1.93) falls per year respectively; difference 0.47; 95% confidence interval 0.04 to 0.90). The relative hazard for the first four falls in the exercise group compared with the control group was 0.68 (0.52 to 0.90). The relative hazard for a first fall with injury in the exercise group compared with the control group was 0.61 (0.39 to 0.97). After six months, balance had improved in the exercise group (difference between groups in change in balance score 0.43 (0.21 to 0.65). Conclusions: An individual programme of strength and balance retraining exercises improved physical function and was effective in reducing falls and injuries in women 80 years and older. Key messages Modifiable risk factors for falls in elderly people have been well defined; they include loss of muscle strength and impaired balance A programme to improve strength and balance in women aged 80 years and older can be set up safely with four home visits from a physiotherapist This programme reduced falls and moderate injuries appreciably over the subsequent year in Dunedin, New Zealand The benefit was most noticeable in elderly people who fell often


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1992

Treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis with calcitriol or calcium

Murray Tilyard; George F.S. Spears; Janet Thomson; Susan Dovey

Background and Methods. Osteoporosis is a common problem whose management is controversial. To evaluate the efficacy and safety of calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis, we conducted a three-year prospective, multicenter, single-blind study in 622 women who had one or more vertebral compression fractures. The women were randomly assigned to receive treatment with calcitriol (0.25 μg twice a day) or supplemental calcium (1 g of elemental calcium daily) for three years. New vertebral fractures were detected by means of lateral roentgenography of the spine each year, and calcium absorption was measured in 392 of the women. Results. The women who received calcitriol had a significant reduction in the rate of new vertebral fractures during the second and third years of treatment, as compared with the women who received calcium (second year, 9.3 vs. 25.0 fractures per 100 patient-years; third year, 9.9 vs. 31.5 fractures per 100 patient-years; P<0.001). This effec...


American Journal of Public Health | 1998

The green prescription study: a randomized controlled trial of written exercise advice provided by general practitioners.

Boyd Swinburn; Lisa Walter; Bruce Arroll; Murray Tilyard; David Russell

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to determine whether written advice from general practitioners increases physical activity among sedentary people more than verbal advice alone. METHODS Sedentary patients (n = 456) received verbal advice on increasing physical activity and were then randomized to an exercise prescription (green prescription) group or a verbal advice group. RESULTS The number of people engaging in any recreational physical activity at 6 weeks increased substantially, but significantly more so in the green prescription group. Also, more participants in the green prescription group increased their activity over the period. CONCLUSIONS A written goal-oriented exercise prescription, in addition to verbal advice, is a useful tool for general practitioners in motivating their parents to increase physical activity.


Clinical Toxicology | 2003

Comparison of the Fatal Toxicity Index of Zopiclone with Benzodiazepines

David M. Reith; John S. Fountain; Rebecca McDowell; Murray Tilyard

Abstract Background. Zopiclone is a hypnosedative structurally unrelated to the benzodiazepines but operating at the same receptor complex. Although zopiclone has been used in clinical practice for many years, relatively little is known of its relative toxicity in comparison with other hypnosedatives. Method. Deaths, where hypnosedatives were implicated, in New Zealand (NZ) in 2001 were identified from a chemical injury database. Prescription and aggregate defined daily dose (DDD) data for NZ in 2001 were obtained from a national prescribing database. Rates of death per prescription and DDD, and relative rates between individual hypnosedatives and benzodiazepines, and their respective 95% CI were calculated Results. Of the 200 poisoning deaths in NZ for 2001, 39 involved hypnosedatives, and zopiclone was involved in 12. Hypnosedatives were the sole agents in only one death and were the primary agents in eight deaths. Zopiclone was the sixth most commonly involved agent in poisoning deaths in NZ in 2001. The relative rate of death per prescription (95% CI) and DDD (95% CI) of zopiclone compared with benzodiazepines were 1.04 (0.49–2.05) and 0.59 (0.28–1.16), respectively. The relative rates of death per DDD (95% CI) for alprazolam and chlormethiazole compared with the other sedatives/anxiolytics were 6.2 (1.6–17.0) and 20.9 (2.5–79.8) respectively. Conclusions. The fatal toxicity for zopiclone was not significantly different from that for benzodiazepines as a group when adjusted for usage, whereas alprazolam and chlormethiazole had greater toxicity. Hypnosedatives are contributory factors rather than primary substances in poisoning deaths.


Neurology | 2015

Cluster randomized controlled trial of TIA electronic decision support in primary care

Annemarei Ranta; Susan Dovey; Mark Weatherall; Des Odea; John Gommans; Murray Tilyard

Objective: To test if TIA/stroke electronic decision support in primary care improves management. Methods: Multicenter, single-blind, parallel-group, cluster randomized, controlled trial comparing TIA/stroke electronic decision support guided management with usual care. Main outcomes were guideline adherence and 90-day stroke risk. Secondary outcomes were cerebrovascular/vascular/death/adverse events, cost, and user feedback. Main analysis was logistic regression with a normal random effect for clusters using a generalized linear mixed model. Results: Twenty-nine clinics were randomized to intervention, 27 to control, recruiting 172 and 119 eligible patients. More intervention patients received guideline-adherent care (131/172; 76.2%) than control patients (49/119; 41.2%) (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 4.57; 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.39–8.71; p < 0.001). Ninety-day stroke occurred in 2/172 (1.2%) intervention and 5/119 (4.2%) control patients (OR 0.27; 95% CI 0.05–1.41; p = 0.098). Ninety-day TIA or stroke occurrence was lower in the intervention group, 4/172 (2.3%) compared to 10/119 (8.5%) control (adjusted OR 0.26; 95% CI 0.70–0.97; p = 0.045). Fewer vascular events/deaths occurred in intervention, 6/172 (3.5%), than in control patients, 14/119 (11.9%) (adjusted OR 0.27; 95% CI 0.09–0.78; p = 0.016). Treatment cost ratio of 0.65 (95% CI 0.47–0.91; p = 0.013) favored the intervention without increased adverse events. Clinician feedback was positive. Conclusion: Primary care use of the TIA/stroke electronic decision support tool improves guideline adherence, safely reduces treatment cost, achieves positive user feedback, and may reduce cerebrovascular and vascular event risk following TIA/stroke. Classification of evidence: This study provides Class II evidence that a primary care electronic decision support tool improves guideline adherence and might reduce 90-day stroke risk.


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 2008

Risk factors for hospitalization due to diabetes complications

Andrew M. Tomlin; Susan Dovey; Murray Tilyard

AIM To determine risk factors monitored in primary care that were significantly associated with diabetes complications requiring hospitalization. METHODS We examined clinical and demographic data for 1080 Type 1 and 11,283 Type 2 New Zealand diabetes patients attending a free primary care diabetes examination between 2000 and 2002. Hospital admissions data for the 2 years following the index examination were linked for each patient using a unique National Health Index code. Logistic regression was used to determine odds ratios for the likelihood of developing diabetic complications adjusted for each variable. RESULTS In the Type 1 cohort, 222 patients (20.6%) were hospitalized for diabetes complications and 1948 patients (17.3%) in the Type 2 cohort. In both cohorts, patients admitted with diabetes complications had significantly higher mean glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c) (p<0.001) and triglyceride levels (p<0.001), urine albumin:creatinine ratios (p<0.001) and duration of diabetes (p<0.01 Type 1: p<0.001 Type 2) than patients not admitted. In Type 2 patients, age, obesity, HbA1c, urine albumin:creatinine ratios, HDL levels and treatment with insulin or oral medication were all associated with increased odds of admission. CONCLUSIONS Although it is well known that HbA1c is a significant predictor of diabetes complications, this study shows that urine albumin:creatinine ratio, body mass index, triglycerides and high density lipoproteins are also independent predictors of hospitalization for diabetes complications. Attention to all these factors in the primary care setting is indicated if the burden of diabetes complications to hospital services is to be minimized.


PharmacoEconomics | 1993

Roxithromycin versus Cefaclor in Lower Respiratory Tract Infection

W. Guy Scott; Murray Tilyard; Susan Dovey; Bruce Cooper; Helen M. Scott

SummaryAn economic evaluation compring roxithrornycin 150mg twice daily and cefaclor 250mg thrice daily in the treatment of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) was undertaken as part of a randomised clinical trial in New Zealand general practice. The observed statistically significant difference in adverse events, withdrawal rates and extra treatment courses in favour of roxithromycin in the clinical study was translated into medical cost savings. Treatment failures, withdrawals or adverse events resulted in additional costs for 11 of 120 (9%) patients receiving roxithromycin and 19 of 118 (16%) patients receiving cefaclor. In these cases (treatment failure withdrawals, adverse effects) additional antibiotics and general practitioner visits were required 3 times more often and the cost of additional medication for treating failure or adverse effects was 3 times higher for patients treated with cefaclor than for patients receiving roxithromycin. The total direct medical per patient treated with roxithromycin was


Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 1992

A randomized double-blind controlled trial of roxithromycin and cefaclor in the treatment of acute lower respiratory tract infections in general practice

Murray Tilyard; Susan Dovey

NZ9.37 lower (on an incremental basis) than for patients treated with cefaclor, despite a higher drug acquisition cast. An estimate of


European Journal of Applied Physiology | 1994

Skeletal muscle mechanics in osteoporotic and nonosteoporotic postmenopausal women.

Stephen N. Stanley; R.N. Marshall; Murray Tilyard; Nigel A.S. Taylor

NZ656 000 per year in total savings in direct medical costs could be made in New Zealand if roxitbromycin were to replace all cefaclor prescriptions in the treatment of LRTI.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 1990

Low-dose calcitriol versus calcium in established postmenopausal osteoporosis

Murray Tilyard

A multicenter, randomized, double-blind, single-dummy placebo-controlled study is being undertaken by the Research Unit of the Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners to compare the efficacy and tolerance of 150 mg twice daily roxithromycin with 250 mg three times daily cefaclor in the treatment of 250 general practice patients with acute lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs). Interim analysis of 200 patients reveals no statistically significant differences in the study parameters. Of the patients on roxithromycin and cefaclor, 83% and 67%, respectively, had a moderate or severe illness. Based on efficacy criteria, 96% of roxithromycin recipients and 99% of cefaclor recipients had a satisfactory or improved response. On an intention-to-treat basis, this was reduced to 95% for both treatment groups. Sputum grading and semiquantitative culturing was performed according to NCCLS standards. The most common isolates in order were Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis, and Streptococcus pneumoniae. Efficacy for bacteriologically evaluable cases was 87.5% for roxithromycin and 57% for cefaclor. Four patients on roxithromycin (3.9%) and 11 patients on cefaclor (11.3%) withdrew because of side effects probably or possibly related to the study treatment. The study is ongoing.

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