Jamie J Coleman
University of Birmingham
141 Papers
329 Citations
Jamie J Coleman is an academic researcher from University of Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electronic prescribing & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 132 publications. Previous affiliations of Jamie J Coleman include Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust & University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust.
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Papers
Does acute kidney injury alerting improve patient outcomes?
Jolene Atia,Felicity Evison,Suzy Gallier,Peter Hewins,Simon Ball,Joseph Gavin,Jamie J Coleman,Mark Garrick,Tanya Pankhurst +8 more
TL;DR: In this article , the impact of electronic alerts for acute kidney injury (AKI) on patient safety, specialist referral and clinical management was investigated in hospitalised patients with AKI, and the impact on prescription of high risk drugs, fluid administration and referral to renal services was analyzed.
Pharmacist-Physician Communications in a Highly Computerised Hospital: Sign-Off and Action of Electronic Review Messages
TL;DR: An established pharmacist-physician collaborative working relationship is likely to influence the prioritisation and response to messages, since a more desirable outcome was observed in settings and with grades of pharmacists where this was more likely.
An evaluation of UK foundation trainee doctors’ learning behaviours in a technology-enhanced learning environment
Hannah L. Brooks,Sarah Pontefract,James Hodson,Nicholas Blackwell,Elizabeth Hughes,John F. Marriott,Jamie J Coleman,Jamie J Coleman +7 more
TL;DR: Investigating how learner behaviours were affected by temporal, module, and individual factors for 16 mandatory TEL modules related to prescribing and therapeutics can help guide future developments of this TEL programme and the integration of other TEL programmes into curricula.
Developing consensus on hospital prescribing indicators of potential harm for infants and children.
TL;DR: A set of 41 paediatric prescribing indicators describing potential harm for the hospital setting has been identified by an expert panel and provide a standardized method of evaluation of prescribing data on both paper and electronic systems.
Acute kidney injury following unselected emergency admission: role of the inflammatory response, medication and co-morbidity.
TL;DR: The effect of CRP in these analyses supports the role of systemic inflammation in susceptibility to post-admission AKI, accounts for the greater part of univariate associations between AKI and some nephrotoxic agents, placing the risk attributable to their use in context.
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