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Abstract Title
Building Improvement Capability in Pharmacy: A Bespoke 6-Part Quality Improvement Training Series
Background and Introduction
Sustainable improvement in hospital pharmacy requires staff equipped with practical Quality Improvement (QI) skills. While national policy emphasises continuous improvement, frontline teams often lack structured, accessible training tailored to pharmacy practice. A bespoke six-part “bite-size” QI training series was developed within the Pharmacy Department to build internal capability, support Cost Improvement Programme (CIP) delivery, and enhance patient-centred service redesign. Sessions were interactive, practical and aligned to real departmental challenges, aiming to embed a culture of structured problem solving and measurable change.
Aims and Objectives
To design and deliver a structured six-session QI programme tailored to pharmacy staff.
Objectives were to:
1. Improve understanding of core QI methodologies (PDSA, process mapping, Lean, stakeholder engagement).
2. Enable staff to apply tools to live pharmacy improvement projects.
3. Support CIP planning and project management capability.
4. Increase confidence in leading and sustaining change.
5. Provide CPD-recognised development accessible to all grades of pharmacy staff (pharmacists, technicians and support staff).
Method
Six weekly 45–60 minute interactive sessions were delivered via webinar, supported by recorded access and intranet resources.
Topics included: Introduction to Improvement1,2, Understanding Problems, Lean methodology, Stakeholder Mapping and Influencing, Human Factors, and Leading Change3. Teaching incorporated case studies, real departmental examples, process mapping examples, and stakeholder power–interest grids. Participants were encouraged to apply tools to active workstreams. Attendance was open to all staff groups. Feedback forms were completed following each session, and automated personalised CPD certificates were issued upon completion of each session.
Results
The programme achieved strong engagement. Feedback demonstrated increased confidence in using QI tools, particularly lean identification, process mapping and stakeholder mapping. Participants reported improved understanding of change methodologies and greater readiness to initiate improvement projects. Early impact included application of stakeholder mapping to change initiatives and process mapping within dispensary workflows, alongside increased engagement with CIP planning discussions. Participants valued practical examples and clear explanations of improvement principles, particularly PDSA cycles. 100% of pharmacy staff who attended rated the training ≥4 out of 5 stars, with an overall rating of 4.6 /5. 82% reporting they learned something new.
Authors and affiliation
Aarti Patel, Lead Pharmacist - Transformation
Chandni Shantilal, Highly Specialist Pharmacist, Emergency Care
Sarita Thethy Lead Pharmacist - Quality Improvement and Innovation
Pharmacy Department, London North West University Healthcare NHS Trust
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Abstract Title
Re-audit of Time Critical Medicines Prescribing and Administration in ED RAFT – 2025
Background and Introduction
Time critical medicines (TCMs) are essential for patient safety and timely therapeutic outcomes. A 2024 audit at Queen’s Hospital Emergency Department (ED), Rapid Assessment and First Treatment (RAFT) revealed suboptimal prescribing and administration of TCMs. This 2025 re-audit evaluates improvements following targeted interventions.
Aims and Objectives
Aim:To determine whether patients attending ED RAFT are prescribed and administered their clinically indicated TCMs within 24 hours,in accordance with level 2 medicines reconciliation standards.
Objectives:
- To review, over one week,if patients in ED RAFT are prescribed the correct TCMs based on their clinical needs.
- To review, over one week,whether patients in ED RAFT had their prescribed TCMs appropriately administered and documented on prescription charts.
Method
Patients on TCM were identified daily using local records and TCM poster reference.
Data for first five patients each day collected via Microsoft forms within one hour of review.
Drug histories were verified with patients and documented.
Prescriptions were checked for administration,and any delays or omissions were assessed for clinical appropriateness and documentation.
Immediate concerns were escalated.
Results
• 39/45 patients had all TCMs clinically indicated
• 69/86 TCMs clinically indicated
• 79%(n=31,N=39) patients were correctly prescribed all TCMs where clinically indicated.
• 14%(n=10,N=69) TCMs not prescribed when clinically indicated
• 16%(n=5,N=31) patients had≥1 delayed/omitted TCM dose
• 9%(n=6,N=69) prescribed and clinically indicated TCMs were delayed/omitted.
• 63% TCMs delayed/omitted due to not being prescribed(n=10,N=16)
Audit standards not met but significantly improved.
On re-audit:
- Nearly 80% (vs 56%) patients prescribed all TCMs where clinically indicated
- No.of documented authorised omissions increased
Authors and affiliation
Abida Begum.
Zoe Duncan.
Sanyu Lawanson.
Anah Saiyed.
Ayodeji Femi-Obalemo
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Abstract Title
Evaluation of Paediatric IVIG Dosing Practice and Stewardship at a UK Tertiary Trust
Background and Introduction
Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) is a high-cost plasma-derived therapy with nationally controlled supply in the UK. NHS England commissioning guidance and local immunoglobulin governance policies require approved indications, accurate weight-based dosing, dose rounding, and documentation of treatment outcomes. In paediatric practice, variation in dosing methodology and documentation may affect stewardship, governance compliance and overall utilisation. Limited local data exist assessing adherence to IVIG prescribing standards in paediatric services.
Aims and Objectives
To evaluate IVIG dosing practice and stewardship within paediatric services at a tertiary NHS trust, focusing on weight selection for dosing, dose rounding compliance, and documentation of treatment response.
Method
A retrospective service evaluation reviewed paediatric IVIG courses administered between November 2024 and November 2025. Data were extracted from Cerner electronic patient records, pharmacy dispensing records and the Immunoglobulin Panel database. Variables included patient weight used for dosing, dose rounding practice, prescribing timing (in-hours vs out-of-hours), and documentation of clinical response. Where ideal body weight (IBW) dosing was indicated under local policy, projected IVIG utilisation was recalculated using IBW while maintaining identical dosing regimens and rounding rules.
Results
Fifty-six paediatric IVIG courses were reviewed. Nineteen (34%) were prescribed using actual body weight where IBW dosing was indicated. Applying IBW reduced projected IVIG utilisation from 1247 g to 1126 g, representing a reduction of 121 g (9.7%). Dose rounding compliance was high (55/56; 98%). Three incorrect doses were administered, including two prescribed out-of-hours despite pharmacy advice. Documentation of treatment response was absent in 21/56 courses (38%).
Authors and affiliation
Rushil Amin¹, Ahmad Ashour¹, Chloe Benn¹
¹Barts Health NHS Trust, London, UK
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Abstract Title
An audit of compliance assessing completion rates of the 24-Hour Decompensated Cirrhosis Care Bundle (2014) in hepatology inpatients at the Royal London Hospital over a 6-month period
Background and Introduction
The 24-hour Decompensated Cirrhosis Care Bundle (DCCB) (2014) is recommended to provide a structured approach to the inpatient management of decompensated cirrhotic patients within the initial 24-hours of admission (BSG, 2023). Despite evidence showing the positive effects of the DCCB in advancing patient care, its overall usage in the UK was only 11.4%, according to a national audit. Therefore, an audit was conducted to evaluate completion rates of the DCCB in hepatology inpatients at the Royal London Hospital over a 6-month time period.
Aims and Objectives
Aim:
To determine the completion rate of the DCCB in patients admitted to the Royal London Hospital with decompensated liver disease over a 6-month period.
Objectives:
Identify patients admitted to the Royal London Hospital with decompensated liver disease between 1st September 2024 and 28th February 2025 from the hepatology inpatient discharge list.
Collect data on patients using the proforma to evaluate completion of the 7 key areas of the DCCB.
Analyse data to determine completion rates of the 7 key areas of the DCCB.
Method
A data collection pro forma was developed based on the DCCB. Patients were identified via the hepatology inpatient discharge list and assessed against the inclusion criteria. No ethical approval was neither obtained nor required for the purpose of this audit. The pro forma was piloted on a subset of patients and finalised for data collection. Data analysis was performed in Microsoft Excel to determine compliance rates to the DCCB.
Results
50 patients included (36 male, 14 female).
No audit trail available for completion of DCCB.
4% patients received all investigations as per the DCCB (Figure 1).
Inconsistent documentation for VTE prophylaxis, infection source, alcohol withdrawal and chart review in AKI.
Authors and affiliation
Alice Bennett, Arron Jones, Eva Lau, Vikram Shah, Kohi Gananandan.
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Abstract Title
Evaluating the Integration of a 13 Week Cross Sector Placement into the Trainee Pharmacist Training Year
Background and Introduction
In line with NHS England guidance and the ambitions of the NHS Long Term Plan, future foundation trainee pharmacist programmes must include a multi‑sector rotation. This approach helps trainees understand pharmacists’ roles across different care settings, building a more flexible workforce and expanding learning and prescribing opportunities. To meet this new requirement, St George’s Hospital NHS FT and Pearl Chemist Group have partnered for the 2025/26 training year, with 14 trainees in each sector completing a 13‑week cross‑sector rotation. In order to ensure success and adapt for future workforce an evaluation of this integration was completed.
Aims and Objectives
Aim: To evaluate the implementation and impact of a structured 13 week cross sector rotation within the trainee pharmacist year, developed collaboratively between hospital and community pharmacy partners.
Objectives:
1. Assess trainee experience, confidence, and perceived value of the cross sector placement, including exposure to clinical activities and prescribing related learning.
2. Determine the effectiveness and usability of sector specific workbooks in supporting learning activities mapped to the GPhC learning outcomes.
3. Identify barriers and enablers to successful integration of the rotation
4. Generate recommendations for refining the programme, including workbook design, supervision structure and cross-sector coordination.
Method
A cross-sector programme was co developed with Pearl Chemist, enabling hospital-based trainees to undertake a community placement and vice versa. Trainees were provided with sector specific workbooks designed to guide learning, clinical activities and prescribing related tasks.
Evaluation consisted of:
• A Likert scale survey assessing trainee experience, confidence and perceived value of the cross sector rotation.
• Qualitative feedback from hospital trainees undertaking community placements and community trainees entering the hospital setting.
• Review of workbook completion to assess engagement with activities mapped to the learning outcomes.
Results
Preliminary outcomes indicate positive engagement across both groups of trainees. Likert scale responses demonstrated generally favourable perceptions regarding:
• The relevance and usefulness of sector specific activities
• Opportunities to apply knowledge in new practice settings
• Understanding of patient pathways across sectors
Qualitative feedback provided further insight into perceived benefits, including improved confidence in clinical decision making, enhanced communication with multidisciplinary teams, and greater understanding of the role and pressures within the alternate sector. Areas for improvement around objectives, rotation length and consistency of supervision were also identified.
Authors and affiliation
Alison Jones (St George's Hospital NHSFT)
Affiliation:
St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK
Pearl Chemist Group, London, UK
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Abstract Title
Maternity Satellite
Background and Introduction
The maternity service has historically had a substandard pharmacy service and a recent service review highlighted significant concerns regarding patient care and prescribing errors for patients who have significant comorbidities. There was no capacity for medicines reconciliation, prescribing verification, patient counselling or complex patient reviews and discharge medication often took up to 6 hours to reach the ward. New mothers often went home without their thromboprophylaxis, increasing the risk of postnatal thrombosis and, therefore, readmission for scans and treatment. Improved pharmacy interventions would allow us to focus on complex patient and improve near patient services, reducing the need for readmission
Aims and Objectives
The aim of the satellite service was to reduce the TTA turnaround times improving patient flow on the ward as well as increasing the number of patients receiving their medication before being discharged. Pharmacy presence would improve medication safety and storage, allow closer working with the clinicans as well as correction of prescribing and and VTE scoring errors prior to discharge. Prepacks were used to streamline the discharge process while other items were dispensed and delivered to the ward. This reduced medication errors, discrepancies, bed blocking and TTAs were ready within 30 minutes of a request being received in Cerner
Method
Data collection for prescribing and dispensing times supported the need for investment in staffing and resources to support service improvement. A business plan was submitted to stakeholders for additional staffing to implement the initiative for a safer, more streamlined ward. A discussion with the senior midwifery team led to a joint decision to set up a satellite within the clinical area on the ward. An omnicell was purchased and storage split between ward stock and satellite dispensing stock, enabling rapid dispensing of discharge. SOPs and KPIs developed alongside daily dispensary processes and nurses supported with administration of medication on wards.
Results
Patients were discharged much faster and more safely, leaving with their thromboprophylaxis, reducing the risk of postnatal thrombosis. An MS form was developed to allow redirection of inpatient requests to the satellite faster and Ferinject infusions were facilitated at short notice. Midwives didn't have to repeatedly chase TTAs and their time was freed up to focus on patient care. The service afforded mums their dignity, allowing them to stay in their beds until discharge and not in corridors feeding and changing their babies on the open ward with all their luggage and car seat around them.
Authors and affiliation
Aquila Rajwani
Asma Sahak
Catherine McCauley
Betol Al-Alawy
Malcolm Smith
Minal Patel
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Abstract Title
Improving and sustaining VTE Risk Assessment Compliance in Gynaecology
Background and Introduction
Hospital-acquired venous thromboembolism (HaVTE) refers to VTE events occurring within 90 days of hospital admission. HaVTE accounts for 50–60% of all VTEs and causes thousands of deaths annually within the NHS. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guideline NG89 recommends timely VTE risk assessment for all hospitalised patients. Mechanical and pharmacological prophylaxis significantly reduce the risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT), and systematic prevention strategies introduced in 2010 reduced deaths within 90 days of discharge by 15.4% (1,2).
Aims and Objectives
To improve compliance with VTE risk assessment within the Gynaecology department by implementing targeted interventions, with the goal of improving compliance to at least 90% by December 2025.
Method
A monthly VTE compliance report monitors compliance by specialty. This project focused on the Gynaecology department, where baseline compliance was ~80%, prompting two PDSA cycles (3). The first focused on education, integrating VTE risk assessment training into Foundation Year 1 and 2 inductions and senior doctor handovers to improve understanding and documentation. The thrombosis committee was also relaunched to review Datix incidents and implement mitigation strategies. The second cycle introduced an electronic VTE proforma for newly admitted gynaecology patients to support the move to a paper-free system.
Results
Baseline VTE compliance in April 2025 was 87.8%, with a temporary decrease to 82.8% following the initial interventions, likely due to the junior doctor changeover period when new doctors were becoming familiar with local processes. After the introduction of a Gynaecology-specific electronic VTE proforma in October 2025, compliance improved to 91% by December 2025.
Authors and affiliation
Asil Ibrahim, Ian Man
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Abstract Title
The Influence of Biosimilar Switch Team on Sustaining High Transition Rates to Adalimumab Biosimilar Yuflyma
Background and Introduction
The transition from originator biologics to biosimilars offers significant cost savings while maintaining therapeutic efficacy. However, patient concerns and adverse events can lead to challenges in sustaining high switch rates. At The Royal London Hospital and Mile End Hospital a dedicated Biosimilar Switch Team comprising of a pharmacist, pharmacy technician and a nurse helped with biosimilar switches across Gastroenterology, Rheumatology and Dermatology.
The team supports the management of switch back queries by reviewing clinical concerns, assessing disease activity using scoring tools and advising on the appropriateness of reverting to previous adalimumab treatment, including the originator or alternative biosimilar.
Aims and Objectives
• To maintain a high switch rate to the adalimumab biosimilar Yuflyma through structured multidisciplinary team (MDT) collaboration and patient support.
• To ensure safe patient care by accurately identifying true disease flares versus non-inflammatory causes of symptoms, such as administration issues or anxiety.
• To provide targeted patient education and follow up, reducing unnecessary switchbacks and supporting continued biosimilar use.
Method
Patients across Gastroenterology, Rheumatology and Dermatology who were transitioned to Yuflyma were monitored by the Biosimilar Switch Team during routine MDT meetings. The team reviewed clinical details, patient reported outcomes and disease activity scores to evaluate adverse events and switch back requests. When concerns arose, the Biosimilar Switch Team offered additional training on Yuflyma administration and reassurance via hospital visits and follow ups. Switch back decisions were made collaboratively with consultants and nurses based on a thorough clinical assessment.
Results
Between the specialties, 944 patients were switched to Yuflyma, achieving an overall switch rate of 96.7%. The switch back rates were 3.4% in Rheumatology (19/553), 6.5% in Dermatology (8/124) and 0.4% in Gastroenterology (1/267), with a total switch back rate of only 3.3%. The majority of switch back requests were attributable to non-inflammatory causes such as incorrect administration technique or patient anxiety rather than true disease flares. Through personalised training and follow up, the team successfully maintained majority of patients on Yuflyma, enhancing patient confidence and adherence.
Authors and affiliation
Brian Gatungu, Usha Hawker, Hershey Antipuesto and Dita Valentinaviciute
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Abstract Title
Structured Work Experience in Mental Health Pharmacy: A Governance-Led Workforce Initiative
Background and Introduction
Mental health pharmacy operates within enhanced safeguarding and governance frameworks due to patient vulnerability, confidentiality requirements and the management of high-risk medicines. Traditional work experience placements often rely on ward shadowing; however, students under 18 are not permitted access to inpatient clinical areas. This limits exposure to pharmacy practice and creates a challenge for workforce engagement. A structured pharmacy work experience programme was developed within a mental health hospital to provide safe, meaningful exposure to pharmacy technician practice while maintaining safeguarding requirements and governance standards aligned with the General Pharmaceutical Council professional framework.
Aims and Objectives
Aim: To implement a structured work experience programme within a mental health pharmacy service that is safe, supervised and educational.
Objectives:
-Develop a governance-led placement model aligned to safeguarding policy
-Introduce structured timetables and signable task sheets
-Define clear scope of activities for students under and over 18
-Provide meaningful exposure to pharmacy practice
-Evaluate service and educational impact
The programme aimed to demonstrate that placements within mental health settings can be both compliant and engaging, while supporting early awareness of pharmacy technician careers and future workforce development.
Method
A structured five-day programme was implemented incorporating risk assessment, confidentiality agreements and continuous supervision. Students completed an induction covering health and safety, confidentiality, information governance and professional standards. Learning sessions included pharmacy roles, mental health conditions and medicines optimisation. Supervised practical tasks included expiry date checking, stock rotation, procurement support, shelf organisation and supervised blister pack preparation. Scope of activity differed by age, with under-18 students excluded from inpatient wards and patient-identifiable information. All tasks were supervised and signed off by pharmacy staff, ensuring accountability and safeguarding compliance.
Results
-The programme was delivered to 10 students over 6 months (June 2025-November 2025)
-Service benefits included improved stock organisation, increased completion of expiry checks and support with procurement processes. Structured task sheets ensured activities remained supervised and accountable.
-Student feedback was highly positive. Comments included:
“I didn’t realise how much responsibility pharmacy technicians have.”
“I liked being given real tasks instead of just watching.”
“I want to work in pharmacy after this week.”
Students reported improved understanding of medicines governance, confidentiality and the role of pharmacy technicians within mental health services.
Authors and affiliation
Caroline Lawrence - Lead Pharmacy Technician: Education and Training & Medicines Management - North London NHS Foundation Trust
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Abstract Title
The Non-medical Prescriber (NMP) Clinical Trials Pharmacist in Research Clinic - A Pilot Study at The Royal Marsden Hospital Foundation Trust.
Background and Introduction
Pharmacist independent prescribers are increasingly recognised as valuable in outpatient care. However, their role in clinical trial (CT) research clinics remains underutilised and underexplored3. This pilot study conducted at The Royal Marden Hospital (RMH), aimed to evaluate the feasibility and contribution of NMP Clinical Trial Pharmacist within oncology research clinic in line with national and local legislation, best practice, regulatory standards and contractual requirements.
Aims and Objectives
• Phase 1: Quantify clinical contributions of CT pharmacists over five months as aligned with Competency Framework for all Prescribers and RMH NMP prescribing policy.
• Phase 2: Evaluate patient and multidisciplinary team (MDT) perceptions of CT pharmacist involvement via qualitative surveys to identify perceived benefits, barriers, and service development opportunities.
Method
Phase 1
Between December 2024 and April 2025, five clinical trials NMP’s (qualified or in training) collected activity data across standard of care (SoC) and CT clinics using a bespoke in house data collection spreadsheet tool. Data included prescribing, clinical assessments, clinical history, treatment decision, signposting and safety netting.
Phase 2
Surveys will be distributed to patients and MDT members to capture feedback on the CT NMP pharmacists, including perceived value, barriers, and recommendations for future opportunities.
Results
During the five-month phase I period (December 2024 – April 2025), CT NMP pharmacists reviewed 110 patients: 68 within SoC clinics and 42 in CT clinics. The lower number of CT patients reflects smaller cohorts typically enrolled in research compared to SoC.
NMP Pharmacists undertook a range of clinical activities, including prescribing investigational/supportive medications toxicity management, and contribution to treatment decision (figure 1).
Early results demonstrate strong clinical integration and relevance of NMP CT pharmacists into oncology research clinics, supporting patient safety, trial compliance, and multidisciplinary working.
Authors and affiliation
All work for the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust:
- W. Tong,
- I. Sanna,
- T. Palizdar,
- J. Khoo,
- K. Wong,
- N. Nisiobedzka,
- P. Mtetwa.
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Abstract Title
The role of the Medicines Management Technician within the Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Hospital at Home Team.
Background and Introduction
In 2024, the Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Hospital at Home (HaH) Team acquired funding to employ a Medicines Management Technician (MMT) to support the Specialist Pharmacists to provide a clinical pharmacy service for HaH team. We chose to analyse the contribution that this new role has had within the team.
Aims and Objectives
The aim of this study was to explore the role of the MMT and it's impact within the HaH setting.
Method
An activity audit was conducted to document the day-to-day tasks undertaken by the MMT. Tasks were grouped into clinical, technical and other activities. A questionnaire was sent out to the HaH MDT to assess the impact that the MMT role has had since it was introduced.
Results
The audit identified a wide variety of tasks that are carried out by the MMT. Whilst almost 50% of the MMTs time was spent undertaking technical activities, 34% of their time was focused on clinical tasks which would otherwise be carried out by pharmacists. All questionnaire respondents said that the MMT role has had a positive or significantly positive impact on the service that the HaH Pharmacy team provide.
Authors and affiliation
Claire Darby - Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Sophie McGlen - Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Warwick University Medical School
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Abstract Title
Implementation of a patient access scheme for Vorasidenib in IDH-mutant Low-Grade Glioma in a single UK centre
Background and Introduction
The phase 3 INDIGO trial demonstrated that Vorasidenib, a brain-penetrant dual inhibitor of mutant IDH1/IDH2, significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS) and delayed the need for radiotherapy or chemotherapy in patients with residual or recurrent IDH-mutant grade 2 gliomas . Vorasidenib represents a novel early-intervention option for patients with non-enhancing, grade 2 oligodendroglioma or astrocytoma following surgical resection, where current practice involves observation until progression. 1
Following FDA approval, Vorasidenib is now undergoing regulatory review in the UK. NICE has selected it for full Technology Appraisal (ID6407), and MHRA approval is pending. In anticipation, Servier have initiated an early-access programme, enabling...
Aims and Objectives
We aimed to implement this scheme at Mount Vernon Cancer Centre (MVCC) and evaluate both the practical aspects of its rollout and the real-world use of Vorasidenib in comparison with the INDIGO trial population.
To evaluate the implementation of the Vorasidenib early-access programme at MVCC, including its impact on multidisciplinary team (MDT) workload and clinical pathways. We also assessed the real-world use of Vorasidenib in patients with IDH1/IDH2-mutant low-grade glioma and compared clinical characteristics, treatment patterns, and safety outcomes with those reported in the INDIGO trial between September 2024 to June 2025...
Method
A retrospective review of electronic health records was conducted for patients with IDH1/IDH2-mutant grade 2 gliomas who received Vorasidenib at MVCC during the study period. Patients who received one cycle or less were excluded. Data collected included demographics, clinical features, adverse events, dose delays, and discontinuations. Findings were compared with published INDIGO trial data.
Results
Implementation of the Vorasidenib early-access programme at MVCC was completed within two months. This included identifying eligible patients through neuro-oncology MDT discussions, completing institutional documentation, and gaining approval via the Systemic Anti-Cancer Therapy (SACT) Quality Improvement Team. Pharmacy staff coordinated stock ordering, dispensing setup, and protocol development. Clinical and pharmacy teams received training from Servier, demonstrating an efficient MDT-led approach to drug integration.
At data cut-off, 14 patients were registered and 12 had commenced Vorasidenib treatment, each receiving at least two cycles and included in the analysis. Patients who received only one cycle or not started were excluded.
Authors and affiliation
Dao Yi Wong, Supaluxan Paramanathan, Olivia Selley, Kiana Karsan, Margaret Gye, Tanya Betts, Heidi Rana, Wendy Ng, Vikash Dodhia, Anup Vinayan, Thomas Carter Mount Vernon Cancer Centre, London, United Kingdom
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Abstract Title
Business Skills Training Increases Confidence and Capability Among Pharmacy Staff and Helps Create Opportunities
Background and Introduction
Pharmacists engage in operational, strategic, and commercial activities throughout their careers, yet business skills are rarely included in traditional pharmacy education. This gap leaves many practitioners underprepared for service planning, project development, and organisational leadership.
Aims and Objectives
A local weekly education programme (1), aligned to the Royal Pharmaceutical Society's (RPS) five pillars of expert practice, identified a significant unmet need for structured business skills education among pharmacy staff
Method
In our NHS Teaching Trust, an informal needs assessment confirmed strong staff interest in business skills, particularly service planning and business case writing. In response, a pharmaceutical company was engaged to deliver a series of eight non-promotional business skills workshops, with institutional approval. Places were allocated by competitive application, subject to line manager approval and commitment to attend. Ethical approval was not required.
Immediate post-workshop feedback was collected from all attendees. A follow-up questionnaire at six months assessed the longer-term impact on professional practice.
Results
Twenty-one staff members (AfC Band 7 and above), representing a broad range of specialities including pharmacy technicians, were selected to participate; 88% had over ten years of practice experience. Average attendance was 11 per session, rising to 14 when sessions were repeated 3 times.
Immediate satisfaction ratings were high (mean 4.5–5.0 out of 5), with 100% of attendees stating they would recommend the programme to colleagues highlighting the benefit of the workbooks.
At six months, 43% of attendees responded to the follow-up questionnaire, again reporting high satisfaction (4.5–5.0 out of 5).
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Abstract Title
Improving cost and therapy of Caffeine Citrate in infants with Apnoea of Prematurity
Background and Introduction
Caffeine citrate is used on neonatal units for the treatment of apnoea of prematurity. This condition is defined as a pause in breathing, associated with bradycardia, pallor, and desaturation. It arises in premature infants and is attributed to the immaturity of the respiratory centre in the brain. Caffeine is not a medication used outside of Neonatal units but is considered a costly, yet important medication for the frequency at which it is prescribed in these settings (1, 2). Our Trust Caffeine monograph was outdated, starting on a higher maintenance dose than generally advised which could risk adverse effects from Caffeine.
Aims and Objectives
The aim of this project is to harmonise the dosing regime for Caffeine Citrate across the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) and Special Care Baby Unit (SCBU) at Whittington Health NHS Trust with those used at neighbouring neonatal units in North Central London (NCL). Additionally, the project seeks to optimise medication expenditure. The specific objectives are as follows:
1) Initiate 100% of patients requiring Caffeine therapy on a maintenance dose of 5mg/kg daily, subject to adjustment based on clinical assessment and review.
2) Achieve a 25% reduction in the cost of Caffeine Citrate solution by the end of March 2026.
Method
PDSA cycles undertaken:
1: Updated Trust Neonatal monograph: dosing was updated to match BNFC, UCLH and GOSH guidelines. This involved reducing starting dose to 5mg/kg and training prescribers accordingly. Daily audits via Excel will be undertaken to track compliance.
2: Purchasing caffeine citrate solution at a 20% cheaper rate should decrease expenditure. This will be assessed by undertaking year-to-date comparison of expenditure using Pharmacy financial dashboard.
3: Introduction of Caffeine rounds (3). Vial sharing between patients reduces the number of vials used, expenditure and waste. This will be measured via the Pharmacy dispensing system (CMM).
Results
Following the update to drug monographs and communication to prescribers regarding the new dosing, 100% of new patients commenced on Caffeine received the lower maintenance dose. The average quarterly spend on Caffeine for 2025 was £1,217.25. Caffeine spend in the immediate quarter following PDSA cycles 1 and 2 was £1,195.20. This has resulted in only a 2% decrease in spend due to supply issues and delay in commencement of PDSA cycle 3.
Authors and affiliation
[Thomas, Elin]1, [Nagaria, Darshan]1, [Rao, Nischal]1.
(1 - Whittington Health NHS Trust).
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Abstract Title
Impact of Locally Commissioned Prescribing Incentive Scheme on Asthma Guideline Implementation in Doncaster
Background and Introduction
Doncaster ranks among England's top 20–30 most deprived local authorities per IMD 2025, with smoking prevalence ~22–25% (1.7x national average) and baseline asthma exacerbation admissions 1.5–2x England rates (~150–200/100k vs 80–100/100k). National trends show rises (+9.5% 2022/23; +18.8% 2023/24). Previous national Investment and Impact Fund (IIF) 2022/2023) incentives achieved modest salbutamol (SABA) reductions (13% vs Doncaster's incentive scheme SABA reduction 16–31%), underscoring need for targeted local approaches amid patchy guideline uptake (GINA 2025, NICE NG245). This high-risk context highlights DIBS' role in accelerating maintenance and reliever therapy (MART)/ reliever therapy (AIR) implementation over SABA use in combination with inhaled corticosteroids.
Aims and Objectives
Evaluate Doncaster Indicative Budget Scheme (DIBS)—a locally commissioned prescribing incentive—impact on implementing GINA (prioritizing ICS-formoterol MART over SABA) and NICE NG245 guidelines versus previous 2022/2023national IIF schemes. Specific objectives: quantify SABA reduction speed/outcomes (2024/25–2025/26), assess ICS adherence, high-dose ICS prescribing shifts, measure dry powder inhaler (DPI) adoption for greener prescribing, and demonstrate cost savings/equity gains in a deprived setting (IMD top 20–30%) facing national admission surges.
Method
Retrospective analysis of DIBS data for asthma patients ≥5 years (excluding COPD). 2024/25 thresholds: <27.52% receiving ≥5 SABA inhalers/12 months; <30.89% with <3 ICS inhalers (36 practices tracked). 2025/26 tightened SABA to <20% or ≥7.5% reduction from March 2025 baseline (36 practices). Monthly clinical system searches captured prescribing %; statistical analysis (means, reductions) on baseline-to-February 2026 trends. Outcomes compared to national 2022/2023 IIF (13% SABA drop).
Results
DIBS exceeded national benchmarks: 2024/25 salbutamol (SABA) reduced 16% (vs IIF 13%), 27 practices met targets (13,990 fewer items; £21,000 saved). 2025/26 accelerated this reduction - mean SABA 22.94% baseline (March 2025) fell to 15.79% February 2026 (-30.9% overall), 31/36 practices achieved <20% or >7.5% threshold. ICS metric was met by 36 practices in 2024/2025, curbing high-dose corticosteroid reliance; DPI shifts aligned with greener agenda (100–200x lower carbon vs pMDIs). Trends counter national admission rises.
Authors and affiliation
Ewa Gabzdyl, Senior Pharmacist, South Yorkshire Integrated Care Board; Senior Pharmacist at Hillsborough Primary care Network (Sheffield)
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Abstract Title
Supporting pharmacists to succeed in advanced practice credentialing: Impact of small group learning
Background and Introduction
In 2022, the Royal Pharmaceutical Society (RPS) commissioned the Centre for Pharmacy Postgraduate Education (CPPE) to pilot a structured support programme to help pharmacists develop portfolios aligned to the RPS Advanced Core Curriculum (Phase 1) [1]. Evaluation of the pilot highlighted inconsistent portfolio quality and lack of clarity around what constitutes high-quality evidence for assessment. [2]. Small group learning offers the opportunity to explore the impact and benefits of peer referencing as a developmental tool, enabling participants to consider their own practice in comparison to their peer group.
Aims and Objectives
To explore the impact and outcomes of redesigning small group learning on early educational impact, specifically candidate confidence, learning and intended behaviour change.
Ethics approval was not required as this was a programme improvement activity.
Method
We introduced two additional tutor-facilitated small-group evidence-review sessions and redesigned two existing sessions using constructive alignment principles, resulting in four mandatory small-group sessions over 12 months. The small group sessions focused on evidence triangulation and review, reflective writing, discussion of commonly observed challenges in previous submissions, and peer-discussion.
Candidates completed post-session online surveys capturing confidence levels, reasons for change in confidence, and planned actions. Quantitative confidence ratings and analysis of free-text responses were mapped to Kirkpatrick Levels 1 and 2. The Kirkpatrick Evaluation Model is a framework for evaluating training and education by measuring Reaction, Learning, Behaviour, and Results.[2]
Results
Early analysis of 33 responses (22.6%) showed that Twenty-nine respondents (88%) reported increased or greatly increased self-reported confidence following small-group sessions. Key themes included improved understanding of evidence triangulation, the value of reflection and feedback, and benefits of peer discussion. Planned actions include earlier engagement with collaborators, more intentional selection of assessment tools to generate evidence, and deeper reflective writing. All respondents rated the learning environment as very or extremely supportive and inclusive.
Authors and affiliation
Faiza Ali
faiza.ali@cppe.ac.uk
Centre for Pharmacy Postgraduate Education (CPPE), Division of Pharmacy and Optometry, The University of Manchester, M13 9PT
Emma J Wright
emma.wright@cppe.ac.uk
Centre for Pharmacy Postgraduate Education (CPPE), Division of Pharmacy and Optometry, The University of Manchester, M13 9PT
Matthew Shaw
matthew.shaw@cppe.ac.uk
Centre for Pharmacy Postgraduate Education (CPPE), Division of Pharmacy and Optometry, The University of Manchester, M13 9PT
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Abstract Title
An Audit Reviewing the Compliance of Prescribing Antibiotics for Patients with Community Acquired Pneumonia (CAP) in a Hospital Setting
Background and Introduction
Due to the merger of North Middlesex University Hospital to RFL Trust the microbiology team want to update Eolas starting with high prevalence infections first such as CAP. Prior to the renewal senior leadership at Barnet Hospital (BH) requested a review to examine common prescribing practice for CAP to support the new recommendations on Eolas. This audit will communicate with key stake holders throughout including the microbiology team and doctors to determine prescribing decisions and feedback results. The key areas from Eolas and NICE guided the aims, objectives and standards chosen.
Aims and Objectives
To review the prescribing of antibiotics for the indication of CAP and the compliance to Eolas guidelines across Barnet Hospital.
Is the CURB65 score is being calculated accurately
If prescribers are following Eolas or microbiology for choice of antibiotics
If prescribers are following Eolas or microbiology for duration of antibiotics
If the correct indication is being documented on the drug chart
If antibiotics are being reviewed within 72 hours of initiation
How often microbiology sensitivities are collected
How often atypical screening is conducted
Method
The audit was approved by the clinical governance team. Ethics approval was not necessary. Data analyst team retrospectively collected data from EPR for all patients prescribed antibiotics for CAP over November 2025. Using the Raosoft sample size calculator and a confidence interval of 95% a sample size of 200 was calculated. The 200 patients were randomly selected using a random number generator. A pilot study was conducted where amendments were made to finalise the data collection tool. Data was analysed using a password protected Excel spreadsheet. Patient identifiable information anonymised and saved on a secure NHS drive.
Results
Only 42.5% (n=200) had the CURB65 score calculated and clearly documented. Antibiotics prescribed were then reviewed to see if they followed Eolas or a microbiology review and the standard achieved a compliance of 52% (n=200). Antibiotic duration was also reviewed with compliance being 82.5% (n=200). All indications on the drug chart were endorsed as CAP however each patient was reviewed to confirm if this was the true indication; compliance was 61.5% (n=200). From the final standard 90.5% (n=200) had a review by 72hours. Only 18% (n=200) had microbiology sensitivities and 16.5% (n=200) had an atypical screen.
Authors and affiliation
Author: Francesca Panayi
Audit Supervisor: Karishma Vekaria
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Abstract Title
Perioperative Management of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in Adult Cardiac Surgery: An Audit of Adherence to Inpatient Diabetes Care Standards
Background and Introduction
Diabetes Mellitus is highly prevalent in the UK, with an estimated 5.8 million people diagnosed with the disease, 90% of whom have Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) . Diabetic patients face higher risks during surgery, requiring increased hospital stays and complications such as surgical site infections and acute kidney injury (Association of Anaesthetists, 2015). Optimal management of T2DM is required to reduce cardiovascular complications and enhance recovery through preoperative glucose and HbA1c monitoring. Inconsistency in glycaemic monitoring and adherence to guidance in my organisation emphasises the need for a formal audit to improve care quality.
Aims and Objectives
The aim of this audit is to evaluate the perioperative management of patients with T2DM undergoing adult cardiac surgery and determine compliance with established inpatient diabetes care standards. Overall, improving glycaemic control, reducing postoperative complications, and enhancing continuity of diabetes management.
Objectives:
1. Measure current adherence to perioperative diabetes management standards.
2. To evaluate the effectiveness and consistency of pre-operative diabetes assessment and glycaemic optimisation for adults with Type 2 Diabetes undergoing cardiac surgery.
3. To assess the quality of postoperative glycaemic management and continuity of diabetes care in adult cardiac surgery patients with Type 2 Diabetes.
Method
This retrospective audit evaluated adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) admitted to Benjamin Weir Ward following cardiac surgery between 1 September and 1 November. The ePMA team provided MRNs for all admissions during this period. HIE was used to identify patients with T2DM who underwent cardiac surgery. Eighty-three patients met the criteria. Electronic medical records, laboratory results and medication summaries were reviewed to assess compliance with predefined standards. Data were recorded and analysed using Microsoft Excel. Inclusion criteria were adults (≥18 years) with T2DM undergoing cardiac surgery. Exclusion criteria included T1DM, non-surgical cardiology admissions and patients <18 years.
Results
Eighty three patients met the inclusion criteria, 100% of patients received a blood glucose reading on admission, 63% of patients received a HbA1c reading on admission. Among the 32 patients who’s HbA1c results were above target only 39% received a Diabetes Specialist Nurse (DSN) referral. Post-operatively 67% of patients were noted to have received their first dose of oral anti-diabetic medication at the correct dose and in accordance with their eating and drinking status. 57% of the 35 patients who were flagged with having 2 or more CBG readings above 14 received a DSN referral prior to their discharge.
Authors and affiliation
Miss Grace Miles - Trainee Pharmacist, St George's Hospital
Tanjeena Choudhury - Lead Pharmacist - Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, St George's Hospital
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Abstract Title
Evaluation of Prohibited Concomitant Medications and Washout Intervals in Clinical Trials at Sarah Cannon Research Institute
Background and Introduction
Sarah Cannon Research Institute (SCRI), the clinical trial centre of HCA Healthcare UK, recruits primarily to oncology/haematology Phase I, first in-human studies. All clinical trials, in particular Phase 1 trials, have prohibited concomitant medications and washout periods to consider before enrolling a patient. If not promptly identified, treatment delays are inevitable or patients could risk becoming ineligible for trial. Through identification of common classes of IMP and their associated washout periods and potential drug interactions, screening and trial initiation can be optimised.
Aims and Objectives
Identify common prohibited concomitant medications and washout periods
Utilise multiple sources to compile a list of drug classes likely to be prohibited
Create educational material for wider clinical trial team and GPs
Method
Data from all new trials opened between 2023 and 2024 were evaluated to review the concomitant medications or class of medications that are prohibited or required a washout period. The length of the washout period was also evaluated. The results were tabulated according to IMP class. Non-interventional trials were excluded. Credible meds1 and Indiana University2 were some of the sources utilised.
Results
Between 2023 and 2024, 31 studies were opened (19 Phase I studies, 4 Phase II studies, 8 Phase III studies).
12 out of 19 phase I studies, 2 out of 4 phase II studies and 4 out of 8 phase III studies required discontinuing strong/moderate CYP inhibitors or inducers within 2 weeks prior to starting trial treatment.
100% BiTE studies required stopping corticosteroids >12mg daily prednisolone equivalent between 2 to 3 weeks prior.
7 out of 31 studies required stopping drugs that prolong QTc interval. 5 of these were with small molecules, while the other 2 were with ADCs.
Authors and affiliation
Hameeda Sultany, Sheliza Esmail, Anita Carlier, Tahereh Tajabor and Dr Elisa Fontana
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Abstract Title
Leveraging Surplus Medicines To Reduce Wastage
Background and Introduction
Medicines represent the second highest category of spend within EKHUFT (East Kent Hospitals university Foundation Trust)., surpassed only by workforce costs.
There is a high amount of medication wastage on wards due to the inability to return and reuse medications, as no 24 hour room or fridge monitoring system implemented.
The lack of 24 hour monitoring means there is no guarantee that medications are stored within the perimeters of the manufacturers guidelines therefore meaning we can not verify the stability of medicines stored in the area to be re-distributed elsewhere.
recent instillation of 24hr temperature monitoring system presents an opportunity
Aims and Objectives
To reduce medication wastage across inpatient wards within EKHUFT by exploring safe processes that support the return, monitoring, and redistribution of medicines
To measure monthly cost savings generated by filtering returns
Method
Updated current SOP to reflect the new way of working
Presentation and training to the clinical pharmacy team on the new way of working
Set up new generic CMM accounts on each hospital site to monitor returns
Create dashboard with monthly information
Introduction of fridge returns using cold storage boxes to maintain cold chain during transportation
Implemented returns rota
Results
Total average monthly saving on £9900 Per month (last 12 months data) over three hospital sites
£141,000 so far this financial year
Authors and affiliation
Hannah Symons
Patrick Reid
Ward Service Team
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Abstract Title
Paracetamol safety
Background and Introduction
Paracetamol is used routinely as a first line medication for short term analgesia. There are recommendations for reduced doses in small adults, the elderly, alcoholics and those with pre-existing hepatocellular insufficiency for intravenous administration. There have been case studies in which adults weighing less than 50kg have been harmed after taking recommended doses of oral paracetamol. Due to familiarity of the drug safe prescribing is not always adhered to.
Despite guidelines and education there have been incidents where patients have been harmed from excessive doses of paracetamol. This improvement work is to reduce the risks of inappropriate dosing of paracetamol
Aims and Objectives
All wards will have appropriate scales/ weighing equipment for inpatients
100% of wards have the Poster for Paracetamol safety
100% of patients prescribed Paracetamol have their weight recorded to inform dosage
Appropriate prescribing advice on ESHT Electronic prescribing and medication administration system including for low weight patients and those with liver impairment
Develop educational materials and ensure all Healthcare Professionals involved in the prescribing, administering of Paracetamol have the training
Primary system for recording weight agreed by trust, communicated and used in the improvement work.
Data to show improvement in prescribing paracetamol in low weight patients
Method
Inpatient data was gathered across 4 different wards in two acute hospitals in 2023-2025.
Patients prescribed paracetamol were reviewed and their weight checked alongside their hepatic function and corresponding dose, route and frequency of paracetamol prescribed and administered. Weights recorded on electronic patient records were compared to those transferred on to paper drug charts or the trust electronic prescribing and administration system. Incident data was reviewed over 3 years.
Improvements were driven by increased communication of safe prescribing , extra prompts and templates on ePMA, spot checks for weighing equipment on wards and questions added to automated medicines storage cabinets
Results
Data showed an improvement in recording of patients weights in patient records from 56% in 2023 to 80% in 2025. Baseline data showed 96% of paracetamol doses were appropriate in 2023, this increased to 98% in 2024 and 99% in 2025.
The number of paracetamol prescribing or administration incidents were reduced significantly from August 2024 onwards.
Spot checks were used to ensure ward scales were calibrated and functioning.
Foundation doctors were set a paper prescribing assessment during the improvement work and this resulted in a 10% increase in the number of low weight patients prescribed a safe dose of paracetamol.
Authors and affiliation
Jane Starr, Medication Safety Officer, East Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust
Joby Russell, Lead Pharmacy Technician- Medicines Governance, East Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust
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Abstract Title
Evaluation of Intravenous Immunoglobulin (IVIg) Use and Compliance with NHS England Commissioning Guidelines in Kingston and Richmond NHS Foundation Trust.
Background and Introduction
Intravenous Immunoglobulins (IVIg) are a pooled human product predominantly containing IgG. (1) They can be used for a wide variety of indications, either as immunomodulation or immunoreplacement. IVIg is expensive, and its prescription must be approved by panel under strict indications and rationales. The indications and rationales, as well as the dosages and the prescribing guidelines are outlined in the Clinical Commissioning Policy published by NHS England in March 2025. (2)
This audit assessed how well the administrations adhered to the guidelines as laid out by the Clinical Commissioning Policy.
Aims and Objectives
To assess the compliance of Kingston and Richmond NHS Foundation Trust with national NHS England guidelines for the prescribing and monitoring of IVIg therapy.
Objectives: to gather data about IVIg issues over the time period and identify if they met 5 standards:
1: IVIg initiation is appropriate for the patient’s indication.
2: Patient weight and height are recorded prior to initiation.
3: Prescribed IVIg doses are based on ideal body weight.
4: IVIg administrations are recorded on the national immunoglobulin database.
5: Patients on long-term immuno-replacement therapy have a clinical review at least 6-monthly to assess ongoing need and dosing.
Method
The data was collected retrospectively as the data retrieval began after 31.10.2025. The data was collected using various computer records.
An Excel Spreadsheet of all issues of IVIg within the specified timeframe was compiled. With the list of names and MRN numbers, further information regarding the supplies of the IVIg were accessed using CRS (hospital clinical system) and the immunoglobulin database (national database) Information relevant to the standards (such as clinical notes) was extracted and used to ascertain compliance.
Results
Standard 1 36/39 92.3 Standard NOT met
Standard 2 33/39 84.6 Standard NOT met
Standard 3 29/39 74.4 Standard NOT met
Standard 4 39/39 100 Standard met
Standard 5 6/6 100 Standard met
Authors and affiliation
Joel Shillito
Trainee Pharmacist
Kingston and Richmond NHS Foundation Trust
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Abstract Title
Pharmacy input to the new Elective Surgical Hub (ESH) to support patient flow
Background and Introduction
As part of the NHS England National Recovery plan to reduce waiting times and create additional capacity for elective surgery, Wye Valley NHS Trust had a new purpose built Elective Surgical Hub (ESH) which opened in July 2024.(1)
This was for 1 ophthalmology and 2 General Surgery Theatres. A multi-stakeholder team worked on the build design and delivery of this project which pharmacy was part of, with system partners to ensure seamless patient flow and operational delivery, adopting GIRFT based principles. (2)
Aims and Objectives
To ensure the operational delivery of medicines for a new ESH for high-volume low-complexity day case elective surgery service to support patient flow.
Utilisation of TTO pack medication to support 95% ward based discharges, with streamlining the dispensary workload.
To ensure monitoring of ESH activity to adapt TTO pack offerings and pharmacy input accordingly.
Method
- Early collaboration and regular meetings for building design, visits to external ESHs
- Workforce business cases developed – 0.5wte Band 8a Pharmacist, 1wte Band 6 Pharmacy Technician, 1.5wte Pharmacy ATO
- Multi-Stakeholder speciality groups identified and agreed lists of common post-surgery medications based on BADS procedures
- Created new TTO pack registers for each specialty, with nurse training
- Liaised with procurement team for supply of new TTO packs, in-house over-labelling for lower volume packs.
Monitoring
Number of prescriptions processed in ESH vs. pharmacy dispensary using TTO packs
Type and number of non-TTO packs
Relative pharmacy time-cost savings
Results
Over 11 months; 2100 prescriptions processed with 6500 items supplied at ESH level, bypassing pharmacy.
Only 6% opthalmology prescriptions (102/1623) required pharmacy dispensary input and 17% (112/545) of general surgery prescriptions. Overall through TTO pack use; 95% discharges achieved for opthalmology, but not for general surgery with further work required.
Relative time-saving benefits per month; 20 hours pharmacist time, 62 hours dispensing time, 42 hours ACT time. Equating to £20.5k cost savings over 11 months, if pharmacy processes hadn't changed.
6 new potential TTO packs identified through continual monitoring, continuing to improve the ESH outputs.
Authors and affiliation
Kate Leonardo (Lead Pharmacist)
Amelie Bright (Senior Pharmacist Elective Surgical Hub/Orthopaedics)
Kirsty Richards (Lead Pharmacy Technician Elective Surgical Hub)
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Abstract Title
Implementing a Student-Led Inhaler Technique Clinic in a NHS Hospital Outpatient Pharmacy Setting: A Pilot Service Evaluation Aligned to Entrustable Professional Activities (EPA)
Background and Introduction
Outpatient pharmacy waiting times present opportunities for patient education, while experiential learning must remain tariff-compliant. This pilot aimed to provide patient benefit and enable students to demonstrate EPAs under arm’s-length supervision. Inhaler technique was selected as a low‑risk, high‑impact intervention.
Aims and Objectives
To evaluate the feasibility, educational impact, patient outcomes and EPA alignment of a student-led inhaler technique clinic.
Method
Seventeen students (Year 2 UoB; Year 3 UoW) participated. Students completed pre- and post-training knowledge and confidence assessments and received training from the Lead Specialist Respiratory Pharmacist. Clinics were delivered in pairs in 2-hour sessions under arm’s-length supervision, with a responsible pharmacist available for escalation. Using a Make Every Contact Count approach, outpatient pharmacy attendees were opportunistically screened and inhaler users were offered assessment and counselling. Technique was evaluated before and after counselling, patient satisfaction was collected and reviews documented using MS Forms. Students produced a consultation framework to support consistent delivery.
Results
Of 124 patients, 106 did not use an inhaler or consent, and 18 agreed to assessment and counselling; 38.9% demonstrated inhaler technique errors at baseline. Improvements were observed following student-led counselling and patient satisfaction was consistently high.
Authors and affiliation
Lobna Harb
The Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust, Dudley, United Kingdom
Jessica Poole
The Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust, Dudley, United Kingdom
Yunzheng Jiao
The Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust, Dudley, United Kingdom
Sarah Baig
The Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust, Dudley, United Kingdom
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Abstract Title
Evaluating the consultations conducted by Pharmacist Independent Prescribers in outpatient hypertension clinics at a large NHS Trust
Background and Introduction
Hypertension is a chronic condition and a major factor leading to premature death [1]. Approximately 80% of people with hypertension have poor control leading to secondary health conditions and polypharmacy [1]. Uncontrolled hypertension requires management in specialist hypertension clinics which increases clinical and financial pressure on the NHS. To address these pressures, Pharmacist Independent Prescribers, a key part of the NHS 10-year plan, were upskilled to deliver hypertension clinics at large NHS Trust [2]. Although pharmacist-led clinics are already taking place, this is a novel approach, and further research is needed to demonstrate value.
Aims and Objectives
The aim of this service evaluation was to evaluate the quality of the consultations and patient outcomes from the Pharmacist-led hypertension clinics at a large NHS Trust. The quality of the consultations would be determined by factors such as clinical interventions made and lifestyle advise provided by the pharmacist. The objectives were as follows:
- To determine the proportion of patients who are discharged back to their General Practitioner (GP) after being seen by the Pharmacist
- To determine the proportion of patients who are offered lifestyle advise and/or have a pharmacological intervention made by the Pharmacist
Method
This was a prospective service evaluation from May to December 2025 at a large NHS Trust. Four pharmacists were upskilled through training and shadowing to lead hypertension clinics every fortnight. Triage criteria developed by the medical consultant team guided patient referrals to the Pharmacist. Each pharmacist was allocated 30 minutes per consultation and the main aim was to optimise their anti-hypertensive medications and provide tailored lifestyle advise so that the patient can be discharged back to their General Practitioner (GP). Quantitative data about pharmacological interventions and patient outcomes were collected prospectively using a spreadsheet that was piloted.
Results
31 patients were referred to the pharmacist during the study period, 6 of which did not attend. More than half the patients (14/25 patients) were taking 5 or more medications. Medication was optimised for 10 patients by starting a new medication (6 medications, 6 patients), discontinuation (3 medicines, 3 patients) or changing the dose (7 medicines, 4 patients). 17 (85%) patients had medication adherence support (11) or one or more type of lifestyle advice offered including dietary (15), exercise (19), alcohol/smoking (5) or stress management (12). 11 (44%) patients were discharged to their GP and the rest booked for follow-up.
Authors and affiliation
Mansi Amin- University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Sejal Amin- University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Agnes Niemet- University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Fatema Mamdani- University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Laura Jones- University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
George Bond- University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Marc George- University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Yogini Jani- University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and University College London
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Abstract Title
Pharmacy interventions for mental health patients in the emergency department
Background and Introduction
Individuals with severe mental illness experience significant physical health inequalities, and medication omissions during acute presentations can pose serious safety risks. At Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust, patients presenting to the Emergency Department (ED) in mental health crisis remain under psychiatric care while awaiting mental health beds. However, psychiatry teams typically prescribe only psychotropic medicines, and physical health medicines are often not reconciled. Following incidents involving omitted insulin, a pharmacist-led intervention was introduced to review these patients daily and advise ED consultants on required physical health prescribing.
Aims and Objectives
Aim
To improve medicines management for mental health patients in the Emergency Department (ED).
Objectives
• Primary: To characterise the number and type of pharmacist interventions for mental health patients in the ED.
• Secondary: To determine the prevalence of unreconciled or omitted medicines.
• To compare interventions involving physical health versus psychotropic medicines.
• To assess time to prescribing of regular medicines, particularly high-risk or time-critical medicines (e.g. insulin, anticoagulants, antiepileptics), against the 24-hour NICE benchmark.
• To measure prescriber acceptance of pharmacist interventions.
• To identify issues with medicines administration following intervention.
Method
A prospective service evaluation was conducted at Queen Elizabeth Hospital. Adult patients presenting to the Emergency Department (ED) with primary mental health complaints between 29 April 2025 and 3 March 2026 were identified using the Electronic Prescribing and Medicines Administration system. Pharmacist review occurred during weekday working hours. Medication charts were compared with GP medication lists, previous discharge summaries, and mental health documentation to identify discrepancies or omissions. Recommendations were communicated to ED clinicians. Data collected included intervention type, medicine category, prescriber acceptance, time to prescribing, involvement of high-risk medicines, and administration issues.
Results
A total of 316 mental health patients were reviewed between 29 April 2025 and 3 March 2026. Pharmacist interventions were required for 40/316 patients (13%), most commonly medicines reconciliation (26/40, 65%). Interventions involved physical health medicines (21/40, 53%), psychotropic medicines (11/40, 28%), or both (8/40, 20%). Of the 40 interventions, 24 (60%) were urgent and 13 (33%) involved critical medicines. Prescribers actioned 29/40 interventions (73%), including 20/24 urgent (83%) and 9/13 critical medicines (69%). Regular medicines were reconciled within 24 hours for 21/40 patients (53%), critical medicines for 6/13 (46%), and 28% of patients experienced administration issues.
Authors and affiliation
Maria Boltova
Tarin Farhana
Anthenia Gumbo
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Abstract Title
Advancing Practice: Implementation and Evaluation of Pharmacy Technician Clinical Verification and Validation of Homecare Prescriptions
Background and Introduction
The roles of all pharmacy team members are changing. With all Pharmacists qualifying as non-medical prescribers this year, the traditional role of Pharmacy Assistants and Technicians must evolve. Historically, clinical validation of Homecare Prescriptions has always been carried out by Pharmacists. As Pharmacists will take on an expanding role in prescribing, Pharmacy Technicians as trained, knowledgeable healthcare professionals and are perfectly placed with the appropriate skills to clinically validate homecare prescriptions. At NBT, the Respiratory Team is established with Specialist Pharmacy Technician carrying out ward, clinic and homecare duties and was therefore chosen to pilot this change.
Aims and Objectives
To implement and evaluate enhanced pharmacy technician clinical verification of homecare prescriptions and assess its impact on:
Turnaround time (TAT)
Workflow efficiency
Clinical intervention activity
Service sustainability
Governance and safety
Method
A multidisciplinary working group including the Director of Pharmacy, Associate Director of Pharmacy, Senior Specialist Pharmacists, Specialist Pharmacy Technicians, and the Lead Homecare Pharmacy Technician defined scope of practice and governance frameworks.
Key components included:
Implementation of the PWDS Homecare Prescription Verification and Clinical Validation training programme
Development of Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) and defined escalation pathways
Risk stratification model (Green/Amber/Red tiering)
Competency-based authorisation
Comparative evaluation was undertaken between:
December 2025 – January 2026 (Technician-enhanced model)
December 2025 – January 2026 (Pharmacist comparator)
December 2024 – January 2025 (Historic pharmacist model)
Results
Between December 2025 and January 2026, 56 homecare prescriptions were clinically screened by a Specialist Pharmacy Technician, with 98% processed on the same day. Median turnaround time (TAT) was 0 days (range 0–1), compared with 2–3 days (mean 2.8; range 0–8) for pharmacist screening during the same period. Historical pharmacist data (December 2024–January 2025) demonstrated a median TAT of 3 days (mean 3.2; range 0–8). Six dose reductions and one urgent case were identified and appropriately managed. Findings demonstrate substantial reduction in processing time while maintaining documented clinical intervention and safe escalation practice.
Authors and affiliation
Mitchell Chilton – Homecare Services Manager (Lead Pharmacy Technician – Homecare)
Tia Wilson – Specialist Pharmacy Technician – ILD
North Bristol NHS Trust (NBT)
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Abstract Title
Improving access to postpartum VTE prophylaxis through pharmacy-led discharge planning in maternity
Background and Introduction
Postpartum patients are at increased risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) and often require enoxaparin on discharge. On busy maternity wards, medications are usually processed only once clients are ready to leave, causing delays and occasional missed doses. Late identification of VTE risk assessment or prescribing errors further slows discharge. Pre-labelled enoxaparin packs are commonly used to expedite discharge but are costly and may be unnecessary. Delayed or missed thromboprophylaxis increases VTE risk, highlighting the need for a safer, more efficient discharge process.
Aims and Objectives
To evaluate the impact of pharmacist-led discharge planning on the timeliness of discharge medication provision for maternity patients and to determine whether this intervention reduces reliance on pre-labelled enoxaparin packs and decreases prescribing errors related to VTE prophylaxis.
Method
A quality improvement intervention was implemented using a Plan–Do–Study–Act approach. Each morning, a pharmacist screened maternity patients for potential discharge and identified those needing medications, documenting interventions in a log. Discharge prescriptions were prepared in advance and submitted as urgent requests to ensure medications were available prior to patient discharge. Pre-labelled enoxaparin packs were used for patients with a VTE score of 2, while higher-risk patients received pharmacy-dispensed enoxaparin. Data on dispensing times and estimated cost savings were collected to evaluate the impact of the intervention.
Results
Following implementation, 95% of discharge medications were dispensed before 14:30, ahead of the 15:00hrs patient turnover time, ensuring medications were available on the ward prior to planned discharge. This reduced discharge delays and minimised reliance on pre-labelled enoxaparin packs. A total of 46 pharmacist interventions were recorded, demonstrating the clinical impact of pharmacist screening; 15% of these interventions were related to correcting incorrect VTE risk scores or inappropriate treatment durations, improving prescribing accuracy and patient safety. Reduced reliance on pre-labelled enoxaparin packs generated an estimated cost saving of £600 within one week, equivalent to over £30,000 annually.
Authors and affiliation
Mwenya Chile, Naemah Haji
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Abstract Title
Evaluating Chemotherapy Workflow to Identify Delays in Treatment
Background and Introduction
Long chemotherapy waiting times stem from rising workload and delays in scheduling, clinical tests, prescription screening, drug preparation, and treatment delivery. These delays can worsen patient outcomes, reduce service quality, and increase anxiety‑related issues such as anticipatory nausea. At St George’s Hospital, chemotherapy is prescribed through Chemocare and must be authorised and clinically screened before release. Two pathways exist: fully screened prescriptions (white scripts) and preview prescriptions prepared in advance (orange scripts). Auditing the workflow helps assess adherence to standards, identify bottlenecks, and improve continuity of care. This audit measures time spent from prescription authorisation to final pharmacy release.
Aims and Objectives
Aim: Evaluate the current chemotherapy workflow and identify where delays may be occurring in patients receiving their chemotherapy treatment within the hospital organisation.
Objectives
1. To evaluate adherence to the technical services practices for the authorisation, screening and preparation of Chemocare prescriptions over a 2-week period
2. To identify any discrepancies from the established standards
3. To identify the reasons for any discrepancies
4. To provide recommendations for improvement
Method
During 2 weeks, retrospective data was collected for the first 170 patients scheduled for treatment in November 2025 at Trevor Howell Day Unit. The exclusion criteria were other wards managed by the technical service team in the preparation and dispensing of chemotherapy.
Data was collected using Chemocare and an Excel spreadsheet titled ‘Day list’. The information gathered included: the scheduling time of the patient's appointment, when their prescription was authorised and screened, and when the dispensed medication was checked and released. Qualitative data was also collected via discussions with various pharmacy staff members to identify where delays may be occurring.
Results
Out of 170 patients 42 patients received their chemotherapy late. Patients whose chemotherapy treatment was delayed due to delays in authorisation was 52% (n=22/42). Patients whose chemotherapy treatment was delayed due to delays in screening was 33% (n=14/42). Patients whose chemotherapy treatment was delayed due to delays in the preparation and final checking of prescription was 14% (n=6/42). In total 24% of patients’ chemotherapy treatment were delayed.
38% (16 patients) waited less than or 30 minutes, 21% (9 patients) waited less than 60 minutes and 41% (17 patients) waited more than 1 hour for their chemotherapy treatment.
Authors and affiliation
Author: Kazi Nafisa Anan
Supervisor: Linda Ojan
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Abstract Title
Abstract: An Audit into Compliance of Rheumatology undertaking Annual Monitoring for Continuation Patients on Biologics
Background and Introduction
The use of biologic therapy in secondary care offers targeted treatment of chronic and complex conditions. Biologics and biosimilars are typically prescribed and initiated by specialist clinicians as they often require careful monitoring and specialised administration. Our Trust guideline ‘Clinically Screening and Processing Homecare Prescriptions’ identifies annual monitoring for patients on biologic continuation prescriptions as a core requirement for safe and evidence-based care. This audit provides the a systematic evaluation of current practice to identify process gaps and support patient safety.
Aims and Objectives
The objectives of this audit were to:
- Determine the compliance rate with Trust guidelines requiring annual monitoring for rheumatology patients prescribed biologic continuation homecare medications.
- Establish whether annual monitoring was completed before continuation prescriptions were authorised.
- Review the proportion of satisfactory, abnormal, or missing monitoring results among patients who needed annual tests completed.
- Identify potential safety risks or gaps in current screening processes to support quality-improvement and future service-development initiatives, including potential transfer of continuation-prescription screening to homecare providers.
Method
Data for this audit was collected retrospectively. A list of rheumatology patients who received biologic continuation prescriptions during the audit period was generated from the homecare prescription filing system and a random sample of 70 patients was selected. For each patient, the most recent biologic continuation prescription issued within was identified and annual monitoring results corresponding to this prescription were reviewed using CRS electronic clinical records. The dataset collected included the prescription date, completion status and date of annual monitoring, and classification of laboratory results as normal, abnormal, or missing for patients.
Results
Overall, compliance was moderate. Standard 1 assessed the proportion of biologic continuation prescriptions authorised only after annual monitoring had been completed - compliance was 80% (56/70 patients), meaning 20% of patients had no recorded annual monitoring prior to prescribing. Standard 2 assessed completion of all required monitoring parameters - compliance was 78%, indicating that some monitoring occurred but a proportion of patients had incomplete panels. Standard 3 assessed the proportion of monitored patients whose laboratory results were within acceptable safety thresholds for continuation of biologic therapy - among those who underwent monitoring, 89.7% of parameters were satisfactory.
Authors and affiliation
Nhi Dinh
Catrin Thomas
Colene Ferreira
Kingston and Richmond NHS Foundation Trust
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Abstract Title
Less is more: Reflecting on protocol-embedded decision support to improve prescribing safety within ePMA.
Background and Introduction
In October 2025, Electronic Prescribing and Medicines Administration (ePMA) was implemented at North Bristol NHS Trust, a large tertiary acute trust. Implementation was complex, requiring the embedding of safe, standardised electronic protocols for high-risk medicines across specialist services. Early builds replicated existing paper Patient Specific Directions (PSD) and incorporated extensive decision support to promote gold-standard prescribing and reduce error. However, the impact of information-dense, protocol-embedded decision support on real-time prescribing required evaluation. Gentamicin was selected as an exemplar high-risk medicine to explore whether complex decision support improves safety, and inform optimisation of decision support across the wider ePMA system.
Aims and Objectives
1. To evaluate how the design and volume of embedded decision support within the ePMA system influences prescribing behaviour.
2. To assess whether protocol simplification and targeted decision support could improve usability and safer prescribing.
3. To use gentamicin as a case study to inform a broader framework for decision support design across other high-risk medicines.
Method
Following ePMA go-live, a 10-day snapshot audit examined whether gentamicin levels were prescribed at the correct time in relation to dosing. In addition, RADAR incident reporting data over a two-month period were reviewed to identify themes in gentamicin-related prescribing errors. Findings were analysed to explore potential associations between protocol design, embedded decision support, and real-time prescribing behaviour.
Results
During the 10-day period, 25 elevated gentamicin levels were identified. Only 3 were prescribed at the correct time within CMM despite embedded decision support advising prescribers to amend timing accordingly. RADAR data identified 11 gentamicin-related prescribing errors. Thematic analysis found recurrent patterns including incorrect level timing, dosing interval errors, and omission of gentamicin prescriptions once levels were available. These findings suggest that information-dense decision support alone did not reliably influence prescribing behaviour.
Authors and affiliation
Nia Rees
Jenna Auchraje
North Bristol NHS Trust (NBT), Bristol, UK
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Abstract Title
Improving the Care of Type 2 Diabetes Patients Using SGLT2 Inhibitors in Primary Care
Background and Introduction
An optimisation service was implemented across North West Leicestershire PCN (115,000 patients, 12 practices) to improve outcomes for patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) not meeting HbA1c targets on monotherapy. SGLT2 inhibitors, including Dapagliflozin, Empagliflozin and Canagliflozin, offer glycaemic improvement with cardiovascular and renal protection in line with National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance. The service incorporated digital booking, provided within enhanced access, and AI supported education to enhance patient engagement. 463 eligible patients identified, 230 attended for review.
Aims and Objectives
To identify patients with T2DM and HbA1c >58 mmol/mol on maximum tolerated monotherapy and assess suitability for SGLT2 therapy. To optimise diabetes management through medication titration or initiation of medication in line with NICE Guidelines where clinically appropriate. To evaluate prescribing impact on patients participated in the service, HbA1c reduction, and patient engagement. To assess operational challenges and identify opportunities for improving efficiency, digital engagement, and enhanced access hours service delivery within Primary Care.
Method
A SystmOne search identified T2DM patients aged <65 years with HbA1c 58–69 mmol/mol on metformin monotherapy, no prior SGLT2 use, no DKA history, not on insulin, and not receiving palliative care. Eligible patients received SMS invitations with self booking links for evening clinics between 6:30pm and 8:00pm and weekend clinics from 9am to 5pm. Consultations included lifestyle advice, shared decision making, review of current diabetic management and initiation of SGLT2 inhibitors where appropriate. HbA1c outcomes and prescribing changes were analysed post intervention.
Results
Of 463 eligible patients, 230 attended. Seventy-five initiated an SGLT2 inhibitor, 49 chose lifestyle measures alone, and 26 had alternative therapy adjustments. All patients who had a HBA1C of more than 7% had an average decline of 0.74% in Hba1c over a three month period. Non initiation reasons included patient preference, safety concerns (e.g., UTIs, foot ulcers), or recent alternative therapy adjustments. Engagement was enhanced through digital booking and enhanced access clinics.
Authors and affiliation
Nikesh Karia, PCN Senior Clinical Pharmacist, North West Leicestershire PCN, Leicestershire
Anthony Singh, PCN Lead Clinical Pharmacist, North West Leicestershire PCN, Leicestershire
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Abstract Title
Lipid Management in Primary Care (England): A Real-World Analysis of Lipid Lowering Pathway Implementation
Background and Introduction
Primary care plays a central role in the prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and long-term lipid management in England. NICE NG238(1) and the Accelerated Access Collaborative (AAC) lipid pathways(2), alongside multiple national and local Integrated Care Board (ICB) guidelines, outline stepwise lipid lowering strategies for both primary prevention and ongoing secondary prevention managed in general practice. However, there is limited contemporary real-world evidence describing how these pathways are implemented at scale in primary care. This study aimed to assess lipid goal attainment, treatment patterns and implementation gaps using a large primary care lipid dataset looking at >2 million patient population.
Aims and Objectives
This study aimed to evaluate real‑world lipid management in English primary care. The primary objectives were to quantify guideline-recommended low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) / non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (non-HDL-C) goal attainment in primary and secondary prevention populations and characterise lipid‑lowering treatment (LLT) intensity and combination LLT use. Secondary objectives were to examine variation by cardiovascular risk and comorbidity burden, and to evaluate implementation of lipid pathways using treatment cascades. By identifying points of treatment drop‑off and under‑escalation, this analysis sought to define residual unmet need and highlight opportunities to optimise lipid‑lowering care within general practice.
Method
This observational analysis used routinely collected lipid profile data from >2 million adults managed in English primary care. Patients were stratified into primary and secondary prevention cohorts based on general practice coding of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Non-HDL-C) and LDL-C were used as the primary lipid metrics, with goal attainment assessed against Joint British Societies (JBS3) targets(3) of non-HDL-C < 2.5 mmol/L or LDL-C < 1.8 mmol/L. LLTs were categorised by treatment intensity and combination LLT use. Pathway implementation gaps were assessed using treatment cascades: (i) secondary prevention escalation and (ii) primary prevention statin intolerance.
Results
43% of secondary prevention patients and 68% of primary prevention patients remained above lipid targets, with attainment varying by cardiovascular risk and comorbidity. Statins were widely used (60%), yet 23% remained on non high intensity therapy despite 68% failing to reach targets. Among statin treated patients not at goal, only 5% received non-statin therapy. Treatment escalation showed marked drop off, leaving 43% of secondary prevention patients without non-statins. In primary prevention, 5% of statin intolerant patients received non-statins; ezetimibe and bempedoic acid combination therapy was minimal (0.4%). Overall, non-statin use was 5%, and 65% remained above targets, highlighting persistent unmet
Authors and affiliation
Niraj Lakhani- Director of Pharmacy, Willows Health, Leicester
Daniel Robinson – Senior Medical Advisor, Daiichi Sankyo
Shamaila Afzal – Market Access Marketing Manager, Daiichi Sankyo
Amelia Reed – Senior Medical Advisor, Daiichi Sankyo UK Ltd
Dev Chadha- Service Design Pharmacist, Interface Clinical Services, an IQVIA Business
Jonny Tough, National Account Manager, Interface Clinical Services, an IQVIA Business
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Abstract Title
Standardising OPAT prescribing in a legacy EPMA system: a quality improvement project
Background and Introduction
OPAT services are expanding across the NHS to ease bed pressures and reduce discharge delays, but prescribing complexity presents real safety challenges.
At University Hospitals Birmingham, we were seeing incident reports linked to incomplete OPAT prescriptions—missing flushes, incorrect diluent volumes, wrong doses—all delaying safe discharges.
Our 30-year-old Electronic Prescribing System (EPMA-PICS) system, built for inpatient use, had no commercial OPAT module available. Prescribers had to separately document antibiotics, diluents, and flushes as free-text entries, creating opportunities for error and considerable medication waste.
Aims and Objectives
Aims: To improve the safety, completeness, and efficiency of OPAT prescribing within a legacy EPMA system by implementing structured, standardised prescription templates.
Objectives: Implement pre-populated prescribing templates including antibiotic, diluent, and flush components.
Reduce prescribing errors and omissions.
Improve workflow for prescribers, nursing, and pharmacy teams.
Reduce medication waste and support safe discharge.
Method
We applied COM-B behavioural theory to understand the problem. Junior doctors rotating through specialties lacked consistent knowledge, whilst the EPMA system provided no structured support. We built 22 pre-populated prescription templates within PICS, each containing the complete regimen: antibiotic with correct dose and frequency, appropriate diluent volume, and sodium chloride flushes with automated supply instructions. After an initial stall in 2023, we relaunched in June 2024 with just two antibiotics, building stakeholder confidence before expanding.
Results
Between September and November 2024, we recorded 109 structured prescriptions across 17 different antibiotic regimens, averaging 11 per week. All prescriptions were complete first time—zero component omissions. OPAT nurses reported less time querying prescriptions. Prescribers found the system faster and less stressful. Pharmacy colleagues noted easier clinical screening and dispensing. Flush wastage reduced significantly through correct volumes being prescribed.
Authors and affiliation
Mr Nirlep Agravedi- Antimicrobial Pharmacist
Mr Derek Robertson - EPMA Technician
University Hospitals of Birmingham - Birmingham
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Abstract Title
Better data, safer dispensing: Strengthening error monitoring in pharmacy
Background and Introduction
Medication dispensing errors remain a significant concern in hospital pharmacy practice, as they can lead to adverse drug events, treatment delays, and potential harm to patients. In busy inpatient dispensaries, staff pressures and workflow interruptions increase the risk of errors during dispensing process. Effective monitoring and reporting systems are essential to identify error patterns, understand contributing factors, and support continuous improvement in dispensing practices. At Whipps Cross inpatient dispensary, a quality improvement initiative was undertaken to strengthen error monitoring by reviewing incident reports and internal error records to identify trends and implement strategies to improve dispensing accuracy and patient safety.
Aims and Objectives
This project aims to reduce the near miss dispensing error rate in Whipps Cross pharmacy dispensary from 11% to 5% by March 2026. The objectives are to:
• Identify the main causes of dispensing errors using error and near-miss data.
• Improve the reporting of errors and near misses to provide accurate, real-time information.
• Implement changes in workflow, staff training, and procedures to prevent errors.
• Review and analyse error data regularly to monitor progress and measure the impact of interventions.
• Share learning and feedback with staff
Method
Using Quality Improvement methodology, baseline data on dispensing errors were collected from error monitoring forms. Staff brainstorming sessions were held to perform root cause analysis. Errors were analysed using pareto charts, and a fishbone diagram identified contributing factors, including interruptions and environment, staff knowledge, stock issues, and unclear prescriptions or labelling. Discussions with dispensary staff provided qualitative insights, and a process map of dispensing workflow was developed. Additional observations captured types of interruptions. Findings informed a driver diagram outlining system drivers and the theory of change. Multiple Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles were implemented to support iterative learning and refinement.
Results
A review of pharmacy near-miss reporting from April to September 2025 showed logs were completed on only 18 days, limiting real-time data on errors. Contributing factors included high workload, difficulty locating logs, reluctance to document colleagues’ initials, incomplete forms, and unclear guidance on minor mistakes. In response, a QR code system and simplified questionnaire were introduced, increasing reporting from 0.6 to around 3 reports per day. A newly appointed Education and Training Lead (ETD, Band 5) delivered structured labelling and dispensing training for new starters, with refresher sessions reintroduced. Ongoing focus remains on embedding error reporting and reducing dispensing errors.
Authors and affiliation
Parvathi Rajput, Lucie Lea, Victoria Rainey, Ana Nogueira and Manpreet Randhawa
Barts Health NHS Trust
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Abstract Title
Medicines Industry Partnership Programme (MIPP)
Background and Introduction
Medicines prescribing costs the NHS £19.9 billion annually in 2023/24 (1), with around 7%
yearly growth. Medicines optimisation enhances patient outcomes and NHS value. The
NHSML Medicines Industry Partnership Programme (MIPP) addresses gaps between thirdparty optimisation work and the NHS. Through NHS-Industry Partnerships (2), the service
provides pharmacist-led medication reviews, focusing on cost-effective prescribing and
quality improvement in key therapy areas. Delivered with partners and in line with ABPI,
NHS and industry guidance, it aligns with the Life Sciences Sector Plan and the NHS tenyear Health Plan to ensure quality, effective support for GP practices and better patient
care.
Aims and Objectives
This pilot involved partnering with a pharmacy provider and an ICB to deliver high quality,
pharmacist-led remote medication reviews in a range of therapeutic areas. With
independent NHS governance and oversight, pharmacy provider staff were contracted to GP
practices to conduct reviews in line with agreed procedures and local formularies. The
service supports practices in delivering ICB aims by improving outcomes through costeffective prescribing, enhancing treatment quality, and implementing clinical quality
initiatives. By aligning with local guidance, the service optimises medicine use, generates
savings, and provides robust governance, ultimately supporting sustainable improvements
for patients, practices, and the wider NHS.
Method
A partnership contract is in place between NHS ML and a third-party provider. NHS ML
supports the governance and oversight of the service. This includes identifying QIPP
opportunities via ePACT data & horizon scanning, oversight of programme delivery,
governance & quality review of standard operating procedures (SOPs), quality improvement
audits and reporting to allow ICB monitoring and management of the service locally.
The ICB role includes informing GP practices about the service and confirming that it is in
line with local NHS guidance. The third-party provider manages the contracts with industry
and is responsible for the remote reviews
Results
Twenty-five practices in SSOT ICB joined the free medication review service. Early data
shows 4,688 patient reviews completed across five therapeutic areas, with 76% therapy
changes, 5% medicines deprescribed, 5% confirmed on first-line products, and 14% of
patients excluded. Annualised NHS prescribing cost reduction is forecast at £226,883.
NHS ML conducts quarterly audits, confirming reviews meet SOP standards and patients are
contacted about changes. A direct query process for patients reduces GP workload. Minor
improvements were identified for coding outcomes and clinical monitoring. The partnership
confirms a high-quality, collaborative service with measurable benefits for all stakeholders.
Authors and affiliation
Jonathan Horgan, NHS ML
Gurjinder Samra, NHS ML
Paula Wilson, NHS ML
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Abstract Title
Enhancing the Rheumatology Homecare Prescription Process Using Leeds Improvement Methodology
Background and Introduction
Half a million people with chronic conditions in England rely on homecare medicines. The UK Parliamentary Inquiry emphasised a lack of consensus on the scale of patient harm due to service failures. This calls for improved transparency, standards, and accountability. In response, Leeds Teaching Hospitals used the Leeds Improvement Methodology (LIM) to review its services. Over half of our medicines spend is on homecare for over 16,000 patients: rheumatology being the largest group. A collaborative improvement event involving rheumatology and pharmacy teams aimed to enhance service delivery, ensuring safe, high quality and patients-centred care across the Trust’s homecare medicines provision.
Aims and Objectives
Aligned with the LTHT’s commitment to improving patient care, this improvement event aimed to optimise key aspects of the Rheumatology homecare service. This includes:
• Workflow management for prescription batching.
• Workflow management for queries and tracking.
• The communication model between patients and staff.
• Medicine availability at the patient level.
This was achieved through a week-long event with a plan to sustain changes beyond this time. Metrics, such as prescription lead times and incident reports, are taken at timed intervals to measure sustained improvements post-event to demonstrate further intervention areas to promote continuous improvements.
Method
LIM promotes continuous improvement by empowering frontline staff to drive improvements through small-scale tests of change that enhance care quality. A Rapid Process Improvement Week (RPIW), was launched to review the homecare process. This was an intensive review of the process involving the multidisciplinary team and patient partner, and used iterative Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles collaboratively identify inefficiencies and test improvements. The team examined workflow, communication, and medicine availability, using evidence-based and patient-centred improvements. Data on prescription delays, errors and complaints informed this RPIW, with comprehensive data sets such as emotional touchpoint surveys and Value Stream Mapping which identified non-value-adding steps.
Results
The key improvements following this RPIW are as follows:
- Establishment of an electronic communication system; enabling rapid text messaging alerting patients when their blood tests are due.
- Reduced paper usage in line with sustainability efforts and minimised motion waste.
- Establishment of an MDT homecare hub supported by individualised roster management and allocation of tasks, enabling streamlined workflow, improved communication, and faster resolution to queries, and promoting the Kaizen vision of one-piece flow.
- Initiation of a culture of continuous review and improvement. E.g. transition from three to six-monthly blood testing.
Authors and affiliation
Penny Chu, Wayne Short, Lynda Bailey, Dawn Moss, Sophie Williams, Lesley-Anne Bissell
Affiliation: Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
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Abstract Title
Improving the identification of patients on High Dose Antipsychotic Therapy (HDAT)
Background and Introduction
High Dose Antipsychotic Therapy (HDAT), defined as prescribing one or more antipsychotics above the British National Formulary (BNF) maximum dose or a cumulative BNF percentage exceeding 100%, is associated with increased physical health risks. National guidance recommends clear documentation, regular clinical review, and enhanced physical health monitoring for patients receiving HDAT. An initial review within Redbridge Mental Health and Wellness Teams (MHWTs) identified inconsistent identification and documentation of HDAT on the electronic patient record (RIO), posing a risk to patient safety. There was a Serious incident where the HDAT guidelines were not followed and it was felt this project was
Aims and Objectives
Aim: To ensure 100% of patients receiving HDAT under Redbridge MHWTs were accurately identified and documented on RIO by 28 February 2025.
Objectives: Improve identification of HDAT patients shown via documentation on Electronic Patient Record (EPR), increase number of clinicians reviewing rationale for HDAT and actively optimising treatment regimen with the support of pharmacy team and increasing physical health monitoring frequency for this group of patients on high risk medications.
Method
A quality improvement (QI) project using multiple Plan–Do–Study–Act (PDSA) cycles was undertaken between April 2024 and May 2025 across three MHWTs. Interventions included a manual audit of over 3,000 patient records to identify HDAT prescribing, reminder communications to clinicians, provision of HDAT guidance and BNF maximum calculation tools, teaching sessions for doctors and medical secretaries, and engagement with the RIO team regarding HDAT-specific documentation and alerts. Outcome measures were the proportion of HDAT patients correctly identified and documented on RIO by doctors.
Results
30 patients receiving HDAT were identified across three MHWTs. Identification rates improved from 20% to 71% in MHWT South, from 38% to sustained 100% in MHWT North, and from 42% to 100% in MHWT West during 2024, although this was not sustained by May 2025 for the West team. For the MHWT West team, the reason identified for this decrease was due to the HDAT review not being explicitly documented on the EPR by doctors hence could not be included in the results, however monitoring of Physical health and medication was continually occurring.
Authors and affiliation
Priyanka Naik Parekh - Advanced Level Pharmacist - Redbridge MHWT
Dr Shayanti Chaudhuri - Speciality Doctor - Redbridge MHWT
Dr Qaila Tabraiz - Trust Fellow Doctor - Redbridge MHWT
Dr Shweta Anand – Redbridge Associate Medical Director (AMD)
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Abstract Title
IVIG prescribing and stewardship in paediatric patients
Background and Introduction
Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) is a plasma-derived product used for immunological and inflammatory conditions. Due to limited national supply, high cost, and potential adverse effects, its use is governed by NHS England guidance and local Trust policy. The Barts Health IVIG Policy sets standards for indication approval, weight-based dosing, dose rounding, and documentation of clinical response. In paediatrics, dosing is weight-dependent, and variation between actual and ideal body weight may affect utilisation and governance compliance. This audit evaluated current practice against Trust standards.
Aims and Objectives
This service evaluation assessed compliance with Barts Health paediatric IVIG policy, (1) including IBW-based dosing where required, dose rounding, and documentation of indication and outcome
Method
56 paediatric IVIG courses (Nov 2024–Nov 2025) were retrospectively reviewed using EPMA, dispensing records, and Immunoglobulin Panel documentation. Prescribing weight basis, dose rounding, and documentation of clinical response were assessed. Projected IVIG utilisation was recalculated using IBW with the same prescribed regimens and rounding rules.
Results
19 of 56 courses (34%) were prescribed using actual body weight contrary to policy. Applying IBW to all appropriate courses reduced total utilisation from 1,247 g to 1,126 g (difference 121 g). Dose rounding errors were uncommon (1/56). In two out-of-hours cases, pharmacy advised the correct IBW-based dose, but the incorrect dose was administered.
Authors and affiliation
Rushil Amin
Trainee Pharmacist
Barts Health NHS Trust
Ahmad Ashour
Senior Pharmacist
Barts Health NHS Trust
This audit was conducted as part of routine service evaluation activities within Barts Health NHS Trust. No external funding or industry sponsorship was received. The authors declare no industry affiliations or conflicts of interest related to this work.
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Abstract Title
A service evaluation on the change from Pochi machine to Pixcell Hemoscreen finger prick analysis at a clozapine clinic in a community mental health team.
Background and Introduction
Clozapine is an atypical antipsychotic that requires regular full blood count monitoring due to its risk of causing agranulocytosis (1). Currently this has been done by traditional venous blood sampling and analysed in a point of care analyser (pocH-100i). New technology has presented the option of being able to obtain full blood count samples via a finger prick sample utilising viscoelastic focusing, with a unique lab in a cartridge system called Pixcell Hemoscreen.
Aims and Objectives
The purpose of this study was to obtain patient feedback regarding the switch over from traditional venous blood sampling to finger prick full blood count sampling, with the view of rolling this new system out trust wide.
Method
A questionnaire previously used in another clinic to evaluate the impact of a point-of-care analyser machine was revised and piloted with a small sample of patients. All patients on clozapine medication and visiting the community mental health clinic and who consented to a finger prick full blood count test over a 4-week period received the questionnaire. Numerical data was obtained and analysed using Gather®.
Results
Seventy-eight patients participated. The majority (96%) rated themselves as being ‘very satisfied’ with their overall experience of the finger prick testing. Seventy-four (95%) rated the finger prick test as being ‘much more convenient’ than traditional venous sampling. Eighteen patients (23%) responded that the frequency of their clinic visits would be reduced, due to not having to attend other services for blood tests to attending the clinic or to return later following an unsuccessful blood draw. The majority of patients (97%) were either ‘very confident’ or ‘confident’ in the accuracy of the finger prick test results.
Authors and affiliation
Sam Manktelow - Lead Clozapine Technician - Kent and Medway Mental Health Trust
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Abstract Title
The Epic Conclusion: Long-Term Trends in Aseptic Error Reporting following Epic ePMA Implementation
Background and Introduction
Epic ePMA was implemented across King’s College Hospital aseptic services in October 2023 to standardise prescribing and preparation workflows.
Early evaluation demonstrated increased error reporting with earlier detection and reduced severity, suggesting improved visibility and reporting culture rather than declining performance. However, the longer-term impact of Epic within aseptic services remains unclear.
This follow-up evaluation examines how error reporting trends evolved over two years after implementation as the system became embedded within routine aseptic practice.
Aims and Objectives
To evaluate long-term trends in aseptic error reporting following Epic ePMA implementation and assess whether early changes in detection stage, error type, contributing factors and GMP failure severity were sustained over time.
Method
National Aseptic Error Reporting Scheme (NAERS) data from the Denmark Hill aseptic unit at King’s College Hospital were analysed across three time periods: Pre-Epic (Apr–Oct 2023), Early Post-Epic (Apr–Oct 2024) and Late Post-Epic (Apr–Oct 2025).
Errors were categorised by detection stage, error type, contributing factors and GMP failure severity. Data were analysed using a structured Excel dashboard with automated filtering and graphical comparison across all periods.
Results
Reported errors increased from 103 pre-Epic to 219 in the early post-implementation period and 296 in the later review period. Most incidents remained low severity, suggesting improved detection rather than declining performance.
Errors were increasingly identified earlier in the preparation workflow. Assembly-related errors remained the most common category but showed signs of stabilisation over time.
Contributing factors evolved across the study period, with workload pressures prominent early after implementation and automaticity emerging as the dominant factor in the later period.
Authors and affiliation
Sam Mensah (Pharmacy QA Specialist)
King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK
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Abstract Title
Review of Venous Thromboembolism Prevention Measures and Patient Outcomes Following Bariatric Surgery
Background and Introduction
Obesity may be managed with bariatric surgery. Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a serious and preventable cause of morbidity and mortality after bariatric surgery due to prothrombotic effects of obesity, major surgery and postoperative immobility, with presence of other patient-related thrombosis risk factors. Low VTE rates reported following bariatric surgery, with PE as the leading cause of death.
VTE prevention measures include VTE risk assessment to identify thrombosis, bleeding and patient-related risk factors, appropriate pharmacological and mechanical
thromboprophylaxis unless contraindicated, early mobilisation to optimise patient safety and postoperative outcomes.
Aims and Objectives
To assess VTE prevention measures in bariatric surgery patients during hospital admission and on discharge, and assess compliance to national and local guidance
To establish if any bariatric surgical inpatients develop thrombotic event(s) and/or bleeding event(s) during admission or within 90 days of hospitalisation to assess safety outcomes
Multidisciplinary team agreed local audit standards to assess clinical practice with local and national guidance
Method
Retrospective, single centre study (inclusion and exclusion criteria applied) was performed from January to August 2025 for patients undergoing planned bariatric surgery using electronic patient records in acute hospital.
Types of bariatric surgery procedures reviewed were sleeve gastrectomy, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, adjustable gastric band, revision procedures.
Data was collected on patient demographics, VTE risk assessment, medical documentation, pathology/radiology results, anticoagulation management during hospital and on discharge, and related discharge information.
Patients were followed up for 90 days to identify any thrombotic (venous and/or arterial) event(s) post discharge
Results
50 adult bariatric surgical patients included.
100% inpatients had a completed VTE risk assessment within 14 hours and 24 hours from admission, and recent weight documented
92% (n=46/50) inpatients prescribed appropriate pharmacological thromboprophylaxis during admission, unless contraindicated
82% (n=41/50) inpatients prescribed appropriate pharmacological thromboprophylaxis on discharge, unless contraindicated
92% (n=46/50) inpatients prescribed appropriate mechanical thromboprophylaxis during admission, unless contraindicated
22% (n=11/50) inpatients had enoxaparin counselling documentation or appropriate administration support arranged
68% (n=34/50) inpatients had documented VTE management plan in operation note
No patients developed thrombotic event
4% inpatients developed bleeding event
Authors and affiliation
Sarah Ficken (Resident Pharmacist)
Sheena Patel (Lead Pharmacist – Anticoagulation and Medication Safety/Clinical Governance)
Dr Rita Peralta (Consultant Haematologist)
Affiliation: Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom
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Abstract Title
Provision of a Pharmacy service into the Emergency Department
Background and Introduction
Longer stays within the Emergency Department (ED) lead to increased mortality and excess deaths. Medication errors in ED increase length of stay, risk severe harm and are associated with negative financial implications.
Royal College of Emergency Medicine national standards highlight:
All Emergency Departments must have a dedicated pharmacist
All Emergency Departments must have a dedicated Pharmacy Technician
As a minimum, the service must be available five days per week, and plans in place to increase to seven days per week by 2025
Currently there is no ED pharmacy service in place at New Cross Hospital. Lack of ED pharmacy services
Aims and Objectives
To prevent the clinical deterioration of patients whilst in the ED by reviewing, prescribing and supplying critical medications to prevent missed doses, therefore improving their condition to reduce their length of stay/ promote discharge directly from the ED.
Method
Senior prescribing pharmacist within ED between 8-4pm Mon-Fri
Pharmacy technician within ED between 8-12pm Mon-Fri
Identification of patients on time critical medications: prescription review & ensure appropriate supplies available to prevent missed doses.
Medicines reconciliation reviews for these patients to improve medical care, reduce errors and improve patient outcomes.
Results
204 chart reviews
82 enhanced clinical pharmacy reviews
101 time-critical medications supplied
129 unintentional prescribing issues identified
95% corrected by pharmacist prescriber (without need for additional physician support)
168 clinical interventions (average of 2 per patient seen)
Multiple interventions aimed at admission avoidance/ promoting discharge
Authors and affiliation
Shane Kailla- Principal Pharmacist: Acute & Emergency Medicine, The Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust
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Abstract Title
The impact of a dedicated pharmacist on patient flow and clinical care on a Surgical Admission Unit (SAU)
Background and Introduction
Medicines management at SAU is complex due to high patient turnover, multiple surgical specialties, and rapid decision-making about admissions, transfers, and discharges.
High patient turnover increases risk of prescribing errors, while missing or incomplete take-home medications can lead to delays in patient flow. An audit done on 45 hospitals in England found that prior to pharmacy screening, approximately two-thirds of discharge prescriptions contained errors or were incomplete. (1) This demonstrates the potential risks associated with unscreened prescriptions in fast-paced wards such as SAU. Integrating a pharmacist into SAU can improve patient safety and ensure TTOs are ready prior to discharge.
Aims and Objectives
To evaluate the impact of integrating a dedicated pharmacist at SAU on the multidisciplinary team, clinical care, medicines safety, and patient flow.
Method
A 10-day prospective evaluation of SAU (excluding weekends) assessed pharmacist impact.
Pharmacist interventions during drug history reconciliations were recorded and risk-stratified. Additional clinical interventions were also logged.
Discharge efficiency was evaluated by measuring the time from a patient being identified as medically fit for discharge (MFFD) to the completion of their TTO. Turnaround times for pharmacist-led discharge were compared with doctor-completed TTOs.
Data on missed medication doses was compared, pre- and post-integration of a dedicated ward pharmacist and ward stock review.
Qualitative feedback was collected from the nursing team to assess the impact of the integrated pharmacist on nursing workload.
Results
Over a 10-day period the SAU pharmacist made 52 clinical interventions. 19 involved drug history reconciliation (1 high-risk, 2 medium-risk, and 16 low-risk), and remaining involved therapeutic drug monitoring, weight-based dosing, resolving interactions, and providing medical advice.
Pharmacist-led discharges were also more efficient, with an average time from MFFD to TTO completion of 1 hour 33 minutes, compared with 2 hours 50 minutes when completed by a doctor. In addition, optimisation of ward stock and proactive pharmacist ordering reduced unavailable medications from 3.0% to 1.2%. Nursing staff also reported spending less time sourcing medications and greater confidence in prescribing safety.
Authors and affiliation
Ti SF, Chan J
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Abstract Title
A First-Cycle Audit of Compliance with the Trust Standard Operating Procedure for Processing Free-of-Charge Medicines within the Pharmacy Department
Background and Introduction
Free-of-Charge (FOC) medicines enable patients with serious conditions to access unlicensed or developing treatments at no or minimal cost.¹ NHS England policy guidance emphasises the need for robust governance due to the risks associated with ordering, supply, and monitoring of FOC medicines. Errors in FOC processes can directly affect patient care, potentially resulting in missed or delayed doses of critical medicines.²
In April 2025, a new Standard Operating Procedure was implemented to standardise FOC processes within the pharmacy department. However, anecdotal feedback and incident reports suggested delays in notifying clinical teams of low stock levels and in updating named-patient records.
Aims and Objectives
This audit assessed compliance with the FOC Standard Operating Procedure and identified process deviations that could delay medicine supply.
Objectives:
1. Outpatient pharmacists notified clinical teams on the same day when compassionate-use stock reached zero for a named patient.
2. Specialist pharmacists updated the named-patient medication spreadsheet at the point of ordering and receipt in line with EPIC transactions.
3. The named-patient medication spreadsheet was updated at the point of dispensing and checking, with entries matching EPIC transactions.
4. Quarterly cycle counts ensured alignment between physical stock, EPIC balances, and the named-patient medication spreadsheet for each FOC medicine.
Method
Pharmacy data reports identified all FOC transactions between April 2025 and November 2025, with each transaction treated as a single data point. Compliance was verified using email records, the named-patient medication spreadsheet, EPIC transaction reports, and cycle count records. A pilot of five transactions refined the dataset and data collection tool.
Of 231 eligible Denmark Hill transactions, a stratified random sample of 60 was selected to ensure representation of both dispensing pathways, comprising 46 outpatient and 14 inpatient transactions proportionate to their occurrence in the overall dataset. Compliance was measured against pre-defined audit standards. (Standards in Table 1 – attached).
Results
Sixty FOC medicine transactions were analysed. Compliance was lowest for Standard 1 (same-day notification when stock reached zero) at 39% (14/36), with inpatient compliance (17%) markedly lower than outpatient (57%). Documentation for ordering and receipt achieved 82% (49/60) and 75% (45/60) compliance respectively. Dispensing documentation (Standard 4) was 78% (47/60), while independent checking and running balance recording (Standard 5) achieved 70% (42/60). Cycle count compliance (Standard 6) was 76% (23/30), higher for outpatient medicines (83%) than inpatient (57%). Documentation by dispensers was generally more consistent than pharmacist checking and communication processes.
Authors and affiliation
Simnit Dhaliwal - Patient Services Senior Pharmacist
Kings College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
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Abstract Title
Optimisation of pharmacy stock management, maintenance and supply of Time Critical Medications
Background and Introduction
Time critical medicines (TCM) are those where early or delayed administration of maintenance doses of greater than 30 minutes before or after the scheduled dose may cause harm or result in substantial sub-optimal therapy or pharmacological effect(1). Missed or delayed administration of TCMs can result in deterioration in disease control, leading to increased morbidity, mortality and/or length of hospital stay. (2)
At DVH, we have a duty to safeguard vulnerable adults by ensuring they receive these medications on time, supporting the Trusts 2030 goal of 100% avoidable harm-free care for our in-patients and the NHS England Medicines Safety Improvement Programme(3).
Aims and Objectives
To ensure inpatients receive time critical medications with minimal delay or disruption to their drug therapy we must ensure that we have tight stock controls within the pharmacy department. Tightening these controls should minimise the risk of running stocks to zero, resulting in a reduction of the number of ‘to-follows’ created.
Data revealed that 67 to-follows were processed for TCMs during this period, resulting in 18 missed doses.
Project aim: To reduce the number of to-follows created for time critical medicines for inpatient drug requests by 25% (from weekly average of 3.67 to 2.75) by June 2025
Method
CQI methodology and tools applied to project aim, identifying process gaps, using data-driven analysis to implement improvements, and monitoring results for sustained impact.
Test of change: In-house TCM weekly stock check.
Prediction: This weekly in-house stock check will ensure that the most common TCM to-follows will not run it stocks to zero and in-patient stock requests will be in stock and dispensed for drug administration to patient.
Results
74% reduction in the number of TCM to-follows processed, 86% reduction in the number of missed doses, and no reported incidences of patient harm linked to stock unavailability
Authors and affiliation
Susannah Jarvis, Principal Pharmacy Technician, Unplanned Care, Pharmacy Department, Darent Valley Hospital, Dartford and Gravesham NHS Trust
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Abstract Title
Smarter, Faster, Safer: Using Artificial Intelligence to Improve the Timeliness and Quality of Electronic Discharge Notification Forms (eDNF)
Background and Introduction
Timely and accurate discharge communication is critical to patient safety and continuity of care. Delays or omissions in discharge summaries have been associated with medication errors, avoidable harm, and poor communication between secondary care, primary care, and community services.
Within CNWL, Electronic Discharge Notification Forms (eDNFs) were frequently delayed beyond 24 hours, variable in quality, and time consuming for clinicians to complete. Staff reported duplication of work, unclear ownership, and difficulty navigating extensive clinical notes. National learning highlights that poorly configured electronic systems and non standardised discharge processes increase the risk of medication related harm.
Artificial intelligence (AI) offers an
Aims and Objectives
Aim
To evaluate whether an AI enabled tool (Anathem) can support safer, faster, and more consistent completion of eDNFs.
Objectives
• To reduce clinician time spent completing eDNFs
• To improve completeness and clarity of clinical and medication information
• To increase the proportion of eDNFs sent to GPs within 24 hours of discharge
• To explore staff and patient acceptability of AI assisted discharge summaries
• To identify risks, limitations, and safeguards required for safe AI use
Method
• A quality improvement pilot was undertaken across selected inpatient wards at CNWL
• Anathem AI was used to automatically summarise relevant clinical information from patient records and populate sections of the eDNF clinical questionnaire
• Clinicians retained full responsibility for reviewing, editing, and approving all content before submission
• Feedback was gathered from doctors, pharmacists, nurses, and patients
• Key outcomes included timeliness, perceived accuracy, usability, and safety concerns
• Learning was reviewed through multidisciplinary discussion within the eDNF Working Group
Results
• AI successfully generated draft clinical summaries, reducing the need for manual transcription
• Clinicians reported significant time savings, allowing greater focus on direct patient care
• The AI assisted eDNFs were more structured and consistent compared with baseline practice
• Patients valued receiving a clear discharge summary before leaving hospital
• Improved visibility of medication changes supported safer transfer of care
• Identified challenges included:
- Occasional inaccuracies or over interpretation by AI
- Limitations in summarising very long inpatient records
- Need for clear guidance, training, and governance
- Additional licence costs per user
Authors and affiliation
Dr Sol Wong¹, Dr Jasna Munjiza¹, TF Chan¹, Dr Mark Brewerton¹, Dr Sofia Mastronikoli¹, Dr Ummul Alibhai¹, Katrina Powell¹, Dr Guy Northover*, Sam Cranwell¹
¹Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust (CNWL)
*Anathem AI
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Abstract Title
Association of a Penicillin Allergy Label on Post-COVID-19 Condition and Subsequent Clinical Outcomes: A Population-Based Cohort Study
Background and Introduction
Penicillin allergy labelling is common and has been linked to worse outcomes in acute COVID-19(1). Its relationship with post-COVID-19 condition (PCC) and subsequent clinical outcomes (≥90 days post-COVID-19), including nonfatal stroke, myocardial infarction, and all-cause mortality, remains unclear.
Aims and Objectives
To investigate whether penicillin allergy labelling is associated with increased risk of PCC and subsequent clinical outcomes, and whether PCC mediates these associations.
Method
We conducted a population-based cohort study using UK primary care data from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) Aurum (March 2020–July 2023). Adults (≥18 years) with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and ≥1 year of GP registration were included. PCC was defined using diagnostic codes or ≥1 WHO-listed symptom occurring 90–365 days post-infection, absent in the preceding 180 days. The secondary outcome was subsequent clinical outcomes ≥90 days post-COVID. Adjusted hazard ratios (aHRs) were estimated using Cox models, and mediation analysis evaluated whether PCC mediated the association between penicillin allergy labelling and clinical outcomes.
Results
Among 1,587,288 individuals, 36,350 had a penicillin allergy label. These individuals had a 10.8% higher 1-year risk of PCC (HR = 1.09, 95% CI: 1.07–1.12), consistent across subgroups. Penicillin allergy labelling was also associated with increased risk of subsequent clinical outcomes (aHR = 1.10, 95% CI: 1.01–1.21). Mediation analysis indicated that PCC did not explain this association.
Authors and affiliation
Ubonphan Chaichana, MSc1; Kenneth KC Man, PhD1,2,3,; Chengsheng Ju, PhD1,4, Yogini H Jani1,2, Prof Li Wei, PhD1,2
1Research Department of Practice and Policy, UCL School of Pharmacy, 29-39 Brunswick Square London, WC1N 1AX UK
2Centre for Medicines Optimisation Research and Education, University College London Hospitals National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust, 250 Euston Rd, London NW1 2PG UK
3Centre for Safe Medication Practice and Research, Department of Pharmacology and Pharmacy, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China
4Institute of Cardiovascular Science, University College London, London, UK
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Abstract Title
Kidney Health Hub: A Pharmacist-Led Chronic Kidney Disease Optimisation Clinic in Primary Care
Background and Introduction
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a common long-term condition associated with increased cardiovascular risk and progression to kidney failure. NICE NG203 recommends routine urine albumin:creatinine ratio (uACR) testing and optimisation of evidence-based medicines to improve patient outcomes. However, implementation of these recommendations in primary care remains inconsistent. Within North West Leicestershire GP Federation, annual CKD monitoring (74.3%) was below the Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland average (75.3%), and 21.9% of patients with CKD stages 3–5 had not received uACR testing within two years. A pharmacist-led CKD optimisation clinic was developed to address these gaps.
Aims and Objectives
• Restore overdue uACR testing in patients with CKD.
• Optimise kidney-protective medicines including ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB).
• Improve cardiovascular risk management through statin optimisation and blood pressure control.
• Deliver structured CKD education to improve patient understanding and self-management.
• Identify patients requiring specialist input through the LUCID virtual secondary care kidney multidisciplinary team.
Method
Patients with CKD stages 3a–3b were identified using Eclipse data and invited to a pharmacist-led CKD optimisation clinic across 12 practices within North West Leicestershire GP Federation. Reviews included medication review, blood pressure assessment, uACR testing where overdue, and optimisation of evidence-based medicines including ACE inhibitors/ARB and statins. Risk stratification used the Kidney Failure Risk Equation (KFRE), a validated prognostic tool. Complex or high-risk patients were discussed through the Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland Chronic Kidney Disease Integrated Care Delivery Programme (LUCID) virtual MDT. Patients with advanced frailty, housebound status, palliative care needs or active nephrology follow-up were excluded
Results
136 patients were invited for review. 120 (88%) attended and 102 (75%) completed a structured CKD review. The cohort had a mean age of 71 years (SD 9), with hypertension present in 133 patients (98%), cardiovascular disease in 68 (50%) and diabetes in 41 (30%). uACR testing was restored for 121 (89%) patients. ACE inhibitor / ARB and statin therapy was optimised in 83 (61%) and 106 (78%) patients, respectively. CKD education was provided to 105 patients (80%). 16 patients (12%) were discussed through the LUCID programme.
Authors and affiliation
Yaseen Ahmed – Specialist Kidney Pharmacist, North West Leicestershire GP Federation, University Hospitals of Leicester
Anthony Singh – Lead Pharmacist, North West Leicestershire GP Federation
Laura Harding – Lead Pharmacist, North West Leicestershire GP Federation
Damini Amin – Advanced Specialist Pharmacist - Renal and Transplant, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust
Jiji Jose – Advanced Specialist Pharmacist - Renal and Transplant, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust
Dr Hussain Mulla – Senior Research Pharmacist, Department of Pharmacy, University Hospitals of Leicester
Dr Rupert Major – Honorary Consultant Nephrologist, University Hospitals of Leicester
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Abstract Title
Review of Pharmacist-led Pre-operative diabetes optimisation clinic
Background and Introduction
Poorly controlled diabetes in patients undergoing surgery increases risk of infection, causes delayed wound healing & can lead to longer length of hospital stay. Therefore, according to national guidance, patients awaiting elective surgery should have a HbA1c less than 69mmol/mol within 3 months of surgery. The HbA1c is normally checked at pre-operative assessment clinic (POAC) and non-urgent surgery is usually delayed until HbA1c is optimised patients. POAC previously experienced long waiting times for diabetes reviews in primary & secondary care, with variable results in reducing HbA1c. A once weekly pharmacist-led pre-operative diabetes optimisation clinic was established to address this.
Aims and Objectives
To review the effectiveness of the pre- operative diabetes optimisation clinic at reducing HbA1c to below 69mmol/mol prior to surgery.
Method
HbA1c results at referral to pre operative diabetes clinic are compared to HbA1c results after being seen by the pharmacist for 81 patients that were seen in pre operative assessment clinic over 21 months. Tallying of interventions including; starting insulin, adjusting time of administration of insulin, prescribing new diabetes medication, adjusting doses of medication and advising on lifestyle and diet changes.
Results
The average HbA1c before being seen by the pharmacist was 87mmol/mol, and the average Hba1c after being seen by the pharmacist was 66mmol/mol. The largest improvement in HbA1c was by 59mmol/mol. The percentage of patients with HbA1c less than 69mmol/mol before being reviewed by the pharmacist was 6%, and after being seen by the pharmacist this increased to 67%. The main intervention was prescribing of a new medication, then dose adjustments of current medication and starting insulin.
Authors and affiliation
Zainab Ali
Yasmina Hamdaoui
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Abstract Title
Improving Controlled Drug (CD) Compliance Through Pharmacist Led Education for Ward Nurses – A Quality Improvement Project
Background and Introduction
Accurate management of Controlled Drugs (CD) is essential for patient safety, legal compliance, and effective governance. Routine CD audits on the Care of Older People wards identified recurring issues with CD documentation, balance checks, and adherence to legal requirements. CDs carry a heightened risk of misuse, diversion, and harm, and therefore require stringent controls across the entire medicine’s pathway. National legislation mandates robust systems of oversight, clear lines of responsibility, and regular monitoring to ensure safe practice. Feedback from nursing staff highlighted gaps in confidence and knowledge regarding CD processes. Pharmacist led education has been shown to improve medicines safety.1
Aims and Objectives
This project aimed to improve CD compliance and the quality of CD record keeping to achieve 100% compliance in all areas of the CD audit. This will be achieved by implementing structured and regular pharmacist led education sessions for nursing staff and creating a reference guide.
The areas of improvements are as follows:
• 100% reduction in the number of entries being crossed out in the CD register
• 100% of expired stock being stored separately from in date stock
• 100% of CD entries are signed by two nurses
• 100% compliance with weekly CD liquid volume measurement
Method
Baseline quarterly CD audit data was captured through Tendable audit tool. Ward based clinical pharmacists delivered small group workshop style education sessions to all ward nurses on the COOP wards. These sessions covered legal requirements, common documentation errors and practical case examples. A quick reference guide was distributed to support documentation practice. A repeat audit was conducted six weeks post intervention using Tendable followed by snapshot weekly CD audits to ensure standards were still being met. These snapshot audits focused on the areas on previously identified areas of non compliance and were recorded using Excel.
Results
40 out of 52 nurses attended the education sessions. The pre-intervention audit showed 50% compliance with CD indicators. Post intervention audit results demonstrated improvements across CD governance indicators.2 Documentation accuracy increased, with fewer transcription errors and more entries being signed by two nursing staff, although indicators currently stand at 75%. Full compliance was achieved for weekly liquid CD balance checks and the separation of expired CD stock from in date stock. Qualitative feedback highlighted greater confidence in CD processes, stronger understanding of legal responsibilities, improved documentation practices, and appreciation for enhanced collaboration between nurses and pharmacists.
Authors and affiliation
Zainab Noori
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Abstract Title
Optimise Governance Processes for pre-packed (TTA) medicines at Adult Emergency Department
Background and Introduction
The Trust TTA Pre-Pack Policy requires all supplies of TTA medicines to be recorded in a logbook to demonstrate good governance and support medicines safety. A recent annual audit identified a process gap with TTA log documentation at Emergency Department (ED). ED stocks 51 different TTA pre-pack medicines, with almost 16,000 TTA transactions per year and highly variable, unpredictable usage. The paper-based log was impractical in this high-turnover environment, leading to fragmented records, poor retention and disjointed documentation. This created a governance risk and incidents related to oversight of TTA pre-pack supply.
Aims and Objectives
The aim of this project was to improve compliance with TTA pre-pack documentation in the ED by embedding governance requirements into existing Omnicell workflow.
The objectives were to achieve sustained 100% documentation compliance, eliminate reliance on paper-based TTA logs, and improve traceability of TTA supplies to individual patients in line with Trust policy.
A further objective was to enhance patient safety by reducing incidents related to incorrect supply of TTA pre-pack medicines at ED to 2 or fewer per year. The project also aimed to improve auditability and accountability without increasing workload or delaying patient’s treatment.
Method
An ED specific solution was developed using the existing Omnicell medication cabinet. The system was optimised so that entry of the patient’s hospital number was required before TTA pre-pack medicines could be accessed.
This ensured each supply was recorded to a named patient and removed the need for a separate paper log.
A second biometric login will be built into the process as a witness check to ensure selection of the correct medicine, pack size and quantity against the prescription.
Omnicell transaction reports were used to monitor compliance and provide an auditable record of TTA supply.
Results
A total of 31,995 pre-packed medicines were issued Trust-wide, with nearly half supplied to ED (n=15,932) over 11 months. At this scale, documentation must support, not hinder, frontline care. By removing the paper log, the project saved an estimated 265.5 nursing hours (£4,548) and over 400 sheets of paper, assuming one minute per entry. Compliance improved from 0% to 86%. Review of 200 transactions demonstrated 95% hospital number recording, 92% accurate details and in which 99% with matching prescriptions. 7% of transactions without electronic prescriptions highlights focused training opportunities, strengthening governance, sustainability, and patient safety in a high-demand environment.
Authors and affiliation
Mandy Wong, Medication Safety Officer & Governance Lead
Suhera Yaslam, Pharmacist
Abdul Ali, Pharmacy Digital & Informatics –System Manager
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