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Patient safety research from Manchester Pharmacy School at the University of Manchester (UoM) has reduced prescription errors in primary and secondary care. Pharmacists using our indicators with patients' electronic health records (aimed at preventing drug-related morbidity in general practices) reduced the odds of prescribing and monitoring problems by at least 22%. These indicators are now incorporated into `medicines optimisation' software for general practice computer systems. The EQUIP study led changes in the recommended design of hospital prescription charts, an annual national assessment of prescribing competence of medical students and the employment of extra hospital pharmacists to prevent the 9% of prescriptions with errors from harming patients.
Research at the University of Manchester (UoM) has changed the landscape of medical care and research in fungal infections internationally. The impacts include: the world's first commercialised molecular diagnostic products for aspergillosis and Pneumocystis pneumonia (£10m investment); pivotal contributions to the preclinical development (£35m investment), clinical developments and registrations of 3 new antifungals with combined market share of ~$2 billion; one (voriconazole, 2012 sales >$750m worldwide) now first line therapy for invasive aspergillosis with improved survival of 15-20%; and internationally validated methods to detect azole resistance in Aspergillus (an emerging problem partly related to environmental spraying of azole fungicides for crop protection).
15m people have a stroke each year worldwide. In England alone, stroke generates direct care costs of £3bn and a wider economic burden of £8bn. Service users report high levels of unmet need in relation to cognitive dysfunction (e.g. concentration). Improving cognition was the number one priority agreed by users and providers (James Lind Alliance, Lancet Neurology 2012). Research led by the University of Manchester (UoM) underpins recommendations in several recent clinical guidelines for stroke management and rehabilitation in the UK and internationally. Our 2012 aphasia trial and qualitative study made key contributions to the recommendations in the recent NICE (2013) and Intercollegiate Stroke Working Party (2012) guidelines. UoM-led Cochrane reviews (e.g., neglect, apraxia, perception) have directly influenced recommendations in guidelines produced by the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network, the European Stroke Organization and the Australian National Stroke Foundation.
Falls are a common (30-40% >65 year olds fall each year) and important age-related health problem costing the NHS and social care >£5.6m each day. University of Manchester research has contributed to reducing the burden of falls worldwide.
We demonstrated that falls are better predictors of fracture than bone mineral density. We developed an effective intervention, reducing falls amongst older people by 30%; identified barriers to service use, and approaches to increasing uptake and adherence; and developed a fear of falling instrument (FES-I), now translated into 30+ languages and widely used in clinical practice.
By 2012, 54% NHS Trusts used training programmes based on our research. It moulded service provision nationally and internationally, changing the emphasis of how falls prevention services are presented, from "reducing risk" to "improving/maintaining independence".
Work led by Professor Nick Barber at the UCL School of Pharmacy showed that a majority of patients have problems soon after starting a new medicine for a chronic condition, and this led to the development of a post-consultation intervention by pharmacists that was shown to be more effective and cheaper than normal care. This entered Department of Health policy for pharmacy in 2008 and Barber helped design the New Medicines Service that was launched in October 2011. This service is offered by community pharmacists in England and by the end of May 2013 over a million patients had received the service. The intervention increases patient adherence to medication, thus improving quality of care, and reducing cost to the NHS from wastage. It also improves patient safety through better identification and resolution of adverse effects.
People who develop psychosis (1% of population) typically experience lengthy delays (months to years) before treatment. Researchers at the University of Manchester (UoM) established a concrete and significant association between delay in treatment of the first episode of psychosis and outcome. We demonstrated that outcome of psychosis could be improved considerably if these lengthy delays were reduced. This research influenced policy and practice in the UK and abroad. Policy changes included the establishment of early psychosis teams dedicated to early detection and treatment (50 in England alone). Practice changes included amendments to clinical guidelines in the UK and abroad that now require clinicians to respond urgently to a first episode of psychosis. These changes to clinical practice have increased the proportion of patients with a short DUP from 55.6 to 77.4%.
When anti-TNF therapies (which block tumour necrosis factor) were first licensed in 1999 only a few hundred patients with rheumatoid arthritis had received them, most for relatively short periods of time. Although the drugs represented a major breakthrough, `real-world' effectiveness and safety were unproven. Research at the University of Manchester (UoM) has addressed this knowledge gap and has successfully refined the ways in which anti-TNF drugs are used around the world, leading directly to more effective prescribing and improved patient outcomes. The research has also provided strong evidence that women do not need to discontinue anti-TNF treatment prior to conception.
Our ground-breaking research has driven major changes in non-medical prescribing (NMP) legislation. As a result of our research, over 19,000 nurses and 2,000 pharmacists now independently prescribe medicines directly to patients across the most comprehensive range of medicines in the world. This amounts to four million prescriptions per year in England. NMP has improved the quality and efficiency of health care: patients can now access prescribed medicines faster and NMP has reduced the number of professionals required. Study results have also contributed significantly to a recent extension of independent prescribing powers to physiotherapists and podiatrists. Our research is widely cited in international NMP policy development, and our survey methods and evaluation measures are used to assess NMP quality and safety internationally.
Research conducted at the University of Manchester (UoM) has brought about significantly improved management of neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) and neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1). The demonstration of a survival advantage in NF2 from specialist management centres by Evans and the pioneering work on brain stem/cochlear implants by Ramsden and team were deciding factors for the creation of nationally commissioned services for NF1 and NF2 in 2009 and 2010. All 850 patients with NF2 in England and ~800 complex NF1 patients are now managed through the national services. This specialist management of neurofibromatoses leads to improved life expectancy.
Research by our group at the University of Manchester has impacted directly on policy addressing inequities in access to treatment for older women with breast cancer, affecting treatment for 10,060 older breast cancer sufferers in England each year. Our research has led to improvements in pre-operative nutrition and screening for malnutrition for nearly 100,000 patients in Greater Manchester. We have contributed directly to international guidelines on post-treatment follow up for breast cancer and management of cough in lung cancer. We have also contributed to development of national vocational rehabilitation, employer support and benefits advisors for cancer survivors, affecting 700,000 survivors across the UK. Our work has led to implementation of family carer support needs assessment in UK hospice services, to date supporting some 4,500 carers per year with wider roll out imminent.