In this new era of healthcare, the importance of Continuing Professional Development cannot be underestimated.ย Non-Medical Prescribers have a responsibility to themselves, their employer and their patients to keep up-to-date with developments in this fast-moving area of healthcare. This book looks
CPD for Non-Medical Prescribers: A Practical Guide
- Publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 244
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
In this new era of healthcare, the importance of Continuing Professional Development cannot be underestimated.ย Non-Medical Prescribers have a responsibility to themselves, their employer and their patients to keep up-to-date with developments in this fast-moving area of healthcare. This book looks at the current context of CPD in this area and provides guidance for facilitation.
The book is divided into three clear sections. The first looks at general principles of CPD and considers overarching and organisational issues such as clinical governance. The second section looks at specific approaches adopted by individuals/trusts to facilitate CPD, for example e-learning and how to keep up-to-date with pharmacology. The final section is a resource section which includes a number of usable documents relating to each chapter which identify further resources and include practical ideas, tools and objects.
- Includes legal and professional frameworksContent:
Chapter 1 Keeping Up to Date with Legal and Professional Frameworks for Non?Medical Prescribing (pages 1โ16): Marion Waite
Chapter 2 Prescribing Practice from the Employer's Perspective: The Rationale for CPD within Non?Medical Prescribing (pages 17โ31): Anne Smith and Sanjay Desai
Chapter 3 Writing and Maintaining a Non?Medical Prescribing Policy for Your Organisation (pages 33โ46): Michael Fanning
Chapter 4 Organising CPD for Non?Medical Prescribers at a Regional Level (pages 47โ62): Fiona Peniston?Bird
Chapter 5 Using E?learning for CPD within Non?Medical Prescribing (pages 63โ81): Marion Waite
Chapter 6 Action Learning and Learning Sets (pages 83โ94): Jan Keenan
Chapter 7 Keeping up to Date with Pharmacology (pages 95โ116): Nicola Stoner
Chapter 8 Organising CPD for Non?Medical Prescribers in a General Practice Setting (pages 117โ127): Mandy Fry
Chapter 9 Organising and Running a Journal Club for Non?Medical Prescribers (pages 129โ139): Dan Lasserson
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This is a guide to practitioners on how to prescribe confidently in specialist areas. This book provides and overview of non-medical prescribing by health professions other than doctors and covers the ethics, legal and patient safety framework. The book is intended as a guide for practitioners on ho
Safe and effective prescribing is one of the pillars of medical practice but is much more complicated than it seems. Many new prescribers find prescribing extremely challenging, and a plethora of independent, multidisciplinary prescribers are also seeking guidance. However, pharmacology textbooks ar
The foundations of good prescribing are quality engagement with trusted healthcare staff, access to knowledgeable and skilled personnel, and full involvement in decisions about care. Beginning with a discussion of how prescribing practices have evolved, this book then proceeds to outline how non-med