Background: The prevalence of diabetes is increasing with growing levels of obesity and an aging population. New practical guidelines for diabetes provide an applicable classification. Inconsistent coding of diabetes hampers the use of computerised disease registers for quality improvement, and limits the monitoring of disease trends.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOur objective was to identify and establish consensus on the most important safety features of GP computer systems, with a particular emphasis on medicines management. We used a two-round electronic Delphi survey, completed by a 21-member multidisciplinary expert panel, all from the UK. The main outcome measure was percentage agreement of the panel members on the importance of the presence of a number of different safety features (presented as clinical statements) on GP computer systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To describe the epidemiology of coronary heart disease (CHD) in England and the activity of primary healthcare teams in managing patients with CHD, and also to demonstrate the utility of computerised patient records in providing access to epidemiological data and data reflecting healthcare activity.
Design: A descriptive survey of CHD and related clinical data, recorded using computerised clinical records, entered by primary healthcare teams. Aspects reported include prevalence of CHD, together with additional data reflecting clinical monitoring activity, therapeutic interventions and comorbidity in patients affected by CHD.