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BMJ 2004;329 (3 July), doi:10.1136/bmj.329.7456.0
One in 16 admissions to hospital is due to adverse drug reactions. Analysing 18 820 admissions to hospital in Merseyside, Pirmohamed and colleagues (p 15) found that 1225 admissions (6.5%) were related to adverse drug reactions. Patients were in hospital for eight days on average, accounting for 4% of bed capacity, and 28 (0.15%) died. Most reactions were due to aspirin, diuretics, warfarin, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; the most common reaction was gastrointestinal bleeding. Adverse drug reactions are likely to cost the NHS £466m every year, say the authors, and most are avoidable.
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Credit: SPL
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