J
Judith A. Cantrill
Researcher at University of Manchester
Publications - 73
Citations - 2835
Judith A. Cantrill is an academic researcher from University of Manchester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pharmacy & Health care. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 73 publications receiving 2653 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Health information-seeking behaviour in adolescence: the place of the internet.
TL;DR: Although it is unlikely to supplant the role of trusted peers and adults, the internet has found an important place among adolescents' repertory of health information sources.
Journal ArticleDOI
A pharmacist-led information technology intervention for medication errors (PINCER): a multicentre, cluster randomised, controlled trial and cost-effectiveness analysis
Anthony J Avery,Sarah Rodgers,Judith A. Cantrill,Sarah Armstrong,Kathrin Cresswell,Martin Eden,Rachel Elliott,Rachel Howard,Denise Kendrick,Caroline Morris,Robin J Prescott,Glen Swanwick,Matthew Franklin,Koen Putman,Matthew J. Boyd,Aziz Sheikh +15 more
TL;DR: The PINCER intervention is an effective method for reducing a range of medication errors in general practices with computerised clinical records and has a 95% probability of being cost effective if the decision-maker's ceiling willingness to pay reaches £75 per error avoided at 6 months.
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Why is pain management suboptimal on surgical wards
TL;DR: Two types of potential barriers to effective pain management are identified, recognized and more subconscious ones, and both need to be addressed before introducing systems aimed at improving pain management.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Internet: A window on adolescent health literacy
TL;DR: Exploring the challenges faced when adolescents search for online health information indicates deficiencies regarding health literacy skills, and the Internet may offer opportunities for identifying such deficiencies and building better health Literacy skills among adolescents.
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Indicators of the appropriateness of long-term prescribing in general practice in the United Kingdom: consensus development, face and content validity, feasibility, and reliability.
TL;DR: 9 indicators of prescribing appropriateness were produced suitable for application to the medical record of any patient on long term medication in United Kingdom general practice, currently the only available method to assess a patient's drug regimen in its entirety.