How clinical and research failures lead to suboptimal prescribing: the example of chronic gout
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ArticleAbstract
Despite the existence of several effective drugs for chronic tophaceous gout, management is often neither rational nor effective. Wendy Lipworth and colleagues examine the possible reasons An evidence based or “rational” approach to prescribing is thought to maximise the benefit ...
See moreDespite the existence of several effective drugs for chronic tophaceous gout, management is often neither rational nor effective. Wendy Lipworth and colleagues examine the possible reasons An evidence based or “rational” approach to prescribing is thought to maximise the benefit and minimise the harm from prescription drugs. Unfortunately, prescribing often does not meet this ideal despite clinicians’ best intentions. We use treatment of chronic tophaceous gout to show how apparently irrational prescribing arises from several interacting “failures” in both clinical practice and drug development.
See less
See moreDespite the existence of several effective drugs for chronic tophaceous gout, management is often neither rational nor effective. Wendy Lipworth and colleagues examine the possible reasons An evidence based or “rational” approach to prescribing is thought to maximise the benefit and minimise the harm from prescription drugs. Unfortunately, prescribing often does not meet this ideal despite clinicians’ best intentions. We use treatment of chronic tophaceous gout to show how apparently irrational prescribing arises from several interacting “failures” in both clinical practice and drug development.
See less
Date
2011-01-01Publisher
BMJLicence
OtherFaculty/School
Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney Health EthicsCitation
Lipworth W, Kerridge I, Brett J, Day R. How clinical and research failures lead to suboptimal prescribing: the example of chronic gout. BMJ. 2011. 343:d7459.Share