ASSESSMENT OF HANDS-ON TRAINING ON INTERNS’ PRESCRIPTION WRITING SKILLS AT A TERTIARY CARE TEACHING HOSPITAL

Authors

  • SWETHA K Department of Pharmacology, Karwar Institute of Medical Sciences, Karwar, Karnataka, India https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2124-359X
  • NITHIN SHETTY Department of Orthopedics, Karwar Institute of Medical Sciences, Karwar, Karnataka, India
  • VISHNU K
  • NEETA T GAVIMATH Department of Pharmacology, Navodaya Medical College, Raichur, Karnataka, India.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22159/ajpcr.2024v17i7.51029

Keywords:

Teaching program, Prescription writing, Interns, Prescribing errors

Abstract

Objectives: This study was conducted with an objective to assess the prevalence of prescription errors and to compare the prescription writing skills of the interns’ pre and post-teaching interventions on the appropriateness “prescription writing.”

Methods: This research was conducted in a tertiary care teaching hospital Karwar Institute of Medical Sciences, Karwar. All interns posted to the orthopedics department as a part of rotatory internship postings during the 6 months from June 2021 were included in this research after receiving informed permission in writing. We gathered the written prescriptions for three distinct cases and a seminar and hands-on training about “prescription writing” was given. Subsequently, the interns were requested to re-write new prescriptions for the same three situations.

Results: A total of 390 prescriptions from 65 interns were gathered and analyzed. In 58%, 36%, 62%, and 78% of the prescriptions, date, diagnosis, prescriber’s name and qualification were absent. In 44% and 12% of the prescriptions, the patient’s age and name were not written, respectively. Following the hands-on teaching intervention, a noteworthy enhancement in the overall prescription writing was noted.

Conclusion: Interns often write prescriptions incorrectly because they do not retain the pharmacotherapeutic information that was given in the 2nd year of the undergraduate program. A teaching program of basic prescription writing is necessary to refresh their knowledge and prescription writing skills.

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Published

07-07-2024

How to Cite

K, S., N. SHETTY, V. K, and N. T. GAVIMATH. “ASSESSMENT OF HANDS-ON TRAINING ON INTERNS’ PRESCRIPTION WRITING SKILLS AT A TERTIARY CARE TEACHING HOSPITAL”. Asian Journal of Pharmaceutical and Clinical Research, vol. 17, no. 7, July 2024, pp. 139-42, doi:10.22159/ajpcr.2024v17i7.51029.

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