Medication updates
Changes that alter prescribing thresholds.
Index
Track prescribing changes with severity tagging and review notes.
Changes that alter prescribing thresholds.
Highlight high-risk updates for rapid review.
Evidence review and acknowledgement.
Prescribing changes refer to modifications in clinical guidelines, drug formularies, or safety recommendations that directly impact medication management. These updates are issued by authoritative bodies such as NICE (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence), MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency), and regional NHS trusts. Changes can range from new indications and dosage adjustments to contraindications and black triangle drug alerts.
Systematic tracking of prescribing changes is a fundamental component of clinical governance and patient safety. Failure to implement updates promptly can lead to:
The CliniSearch Prescribing Changes Index provides a structured, centralised repository for these updates. It is designed to integrate into clinical workflows, enabling healthcare professionals to:
Use this checklist to ensure a robust process for implementing prescribing updates within your organisation or practice.
The information within the Prescribing Changes Index is curated from authoritative UK healthcare sources to ensure accuracy and reliability.
This index supports key pillars of clinical governance:
Prescribing changes can be categorised into several distinct types, each requiring different levels of attention and implementation strategies.
These are comprehensive revisions to national or local clinical guidelines that may introduce new first-line treatments, change diagnostic criteria, or update management pathways for specific conditions. Examples include NICE guideline updates for hypertension management or diabetes care.
Issued primarily by the MHRA, these alerts highlight new safety information about medicines. This can include new contraindications, warnings about drug interactions, or restrictions on use in specific patient populations. Black triangle drugs (▼) denoting intensive monitoring require particular attention.
Changes to local formularies managed by Drug and Therapeutics Committees, which may add new drugs, restrict existing ones, or change prescribing hierarchies. These changes often have direct operational implications for prescribing within specific NHS trusts or ICBs.
Updates to recommended dosages, frequency of administration, or routes of administration based on new evidence. These changes require careful implementation to avoid dosing errors.
Changes to which treatments are commissioned by NHS England or local commissioners, affecting availability and funding for specific medications or treatments.
Successful implementation of prescribing changes requires a structured approach tailored to the specific type and impact of the change.
Changes with significant patient safety implications require immediate action. Consider:
Changes that affect clinical practice but with less immediate risk require systematic implementation:
Minor updates or clarifications can be managed through routine channels:
Evaluating the success of prescribing change implementation is crucial for quality improvement and governance assurance.
Consider tracking these metrics to assess implementation effectiveness:
Several approaches can be used to audit compliance with prescribing changes: