Title: Paediatric Nurse Prescribing all or nothing
1Paediatric Nurse Prescribing all or nothing?
- Professor Terence Stephenson
- Professor of Child Health
- and Honorary Consultant Paediatrician
- Queens Medical Centre, Nottingham
2Prescribing by nurses in primary care
- 'prescribing by default', in which nurses
prescribe using FP10 prescription forms
previously signed by general practitioners (GPs).
- 1989 An advisory group recommended that district
nurses or health visitors should prescribe from a
limited formulary - Nurse prescribing was introduced in primary care
in the U.K. using a limited list of products
following the 1992 Act of Parliament
3But no prescribing by nurses in secondary care
- Medicinal Products Act of 1992 relating to nurse
prescribing stated that the arrangements would
not extend to nurses working in hospitals - even though many nurses in specialist departments
fulfilled the requirements for prescribing
(suitable level of qualification and adequate
training)
4The governments motivation
- 100,000 doctors
- 350,000 nurses
- Pharmacists, physios, radiographers, podiatrists,
optometrists etc.. - A workforce of all the talents
- 1997 The government established A review of
prescribing, supply administration of
medicines chaired by Dr June Crown to make
greater use of the skills and experience of the
various professions.
5Frank Dobson, Health Secretary, 28th April 1998
- The right patient gets the right drug in the
right quantity at the right time.
6The benefits
- The experienced AE, neonatal, diabetic, asthma
nurse vs the newly qualified House Officer - Data from research
7Pharmacists do it better
- Journal of Clinical Pathology 199548545-547
- Evaluation of anticoagulant control in a
pharmacist operated anticoagulant clinic - AS Radley, J Hall, M Farrow and PJ Carey
Pharmacy Department, Sunderland District General
Hospital. - AIMS--To compare the quality of outpatient
anticoagulant control before and after the
transfer of dosing responsibility to designated
trained pharmacists from rotating junior medical
staff. - RESULTS--INR results (n 2219) for 382 patients
were analysed. For patients in stable therapeutic
control, there was no significant difference in
performance between the two staff groups.
Patients with an INR result "out" of control
limits were more likely to be returned "in" to
control at their next visit by the pharmacists
than by the doctors (plt0.01). - CONCLUSIONS--The quality of anticoagulant control
in outpatient clinics benefits from dedicated
trained staff using standard protocols.
8Nurses do it better
- British Journal of Dermatology 1995133340-341
- Evaluation of anticoagulant control in a
pharmacist operated anticoagulant clinic - AS Radley, J Hall, M Farrow and PJ Carey
Pharmacy Department, Sunderland District General
Hospital. - AIMS--To compare the quality of prescribing for
eczema psoriasis by nurses with at least 6
months dermatology experience and GP trainee
senior house officers. - RESULTS 100 prescriptions for 48 patients were
analysed. 20/100 differences between nurse and
consultant vs 39/100 differences between SHO and
consultant (plt0.01). - CONCLUSIONS In many DGHs, the junior medical
staff are not career dermatologists. Treatment
choice by nursing staff may be closer to
recommendations (guidelines).
9A hierarchy of prescribing
- Standing Orders
- Patient Group Directives (Group Protocols)
- Supplementary Prescribing
- Independent Prescribing
101998 The first Crown Report
- Prescribing from group protocols (Patient Group
Directives) - Ideally one population, one diagnosis, one drug,
one dose - The law should be clarified
- Unlicensed and off-label medicines generally
excluded - But e.g NICU and ANNPs
- Paramedics and Nalbuphine
11Licensing of drugs in the UK
- A pharmaceutical company must have a licence to
market a drug - The drug can only be promoted for the indication,
dose, route and age group for which it is
licensed - A licence is not required for a doctor to
prescribe that drug
12Unlicensed and off-label use of medicines
- Unlicensed
- e.g. paraldehyde
- Off-label
- different age group e.g. morphine
- different route e.g. vitamin K po
- different indication e.g. cisapride for ileus
131999 The second Crown Report
- Extending prescribing to other professions
- Independendent and Supplementary (dependent)
prescribing - Unlicensed and off-label medicines again excluded
14A hierarchy of prescribing
- Standing Orders
- Patient Group Directives (Group Protocols)
- Supplementary Prescribing (some nurses and
pharmacists who prescribe in partnership with a
doctor, following diagnosis according to an
agreed Clinical Management Plan) - Independent Prescribing (all doctors, all
dentists and nurses with the Extended Nurse
Prescribing qualification) - Extended Supplementary prescribing is now a
dual qualification
15A hierarchy of prescribing
- Standing Orders
- Patient Group Directives (Group Protocols)
- Supplementary Prescribing can prescribe
anything in the BNF - Independent Prescribing
- Initially minor injuries, minor ailments, health
promotion palliative care! - From Feb 2004, the Nurse Prescribers Extended
Formulary
16The risks
- Historical separation of
- Diagnosis prescribing (doctors)
- Dispensing (pharmacists)
- Administration (nurse)
- Up to 52 interruptions during one neonatal drug
dose calculation - 25 of negligence claims against GPs due to
errors in prescribing or administering drugs
17Paediatric medication errors in a UK hospital
Medication errors ()
- 68 prescription errors (cf. admin, supply)
- 2x more with new junior doctor
- 2/3 of errors prevented due to
nurses/pharmacists
Profession
18Paediatric Nurse Prescribing all or nothing?
- All the nurses? - no
- All the medicines? - no
- All licensed medicines? - no
19 20Principles of using unlicensed medicines in
paediatric practice
- Prescribers should choose the best medicine
- Currently, unlicensed medicines are necessary
- Health professionals need access to information
on all medicines which they prescribe - The guidelines on consent are the same for
licensed and unlicensed medicines - NHS Trusts should support practices advocated by
a responsible body of opinion
21Percentage of off label/unlicensed prescriptions
in children
- Primary care 11-33
- General paediatric inpatients 40
- Neonatal intensive care unit 90
22- Examples of off label drug use
- Fluticasone 250 µg twice daily in 4 year old.
- Maximum dose 100 µg twice daily
-
- Trimeprazine used as sedative in child with
pneumonia. - Licensed for urticaria, pruritus, and
pre-anaesthetic medication -
- Rifampicin used for enzyme induction in infant
with biliary atresia -
- Salbutamol used two hourly (12 times daily).
- Licensed for 4 times daily
-
- Tobramycin used once daily in neonate.
- Licensed for twice daily
23Paediatric medication errors in a UK hospital
Number of errors
- 441 errors in 682 children over 5315 days
- 7x more on ICU
- 68 prescription errors (cf. admin, supply)
- 2x more with new junior doctor
Level of harm