Minor tranquillisers and road accidents.
In a prospective study of 43,117 people, prescriptions issued by general practitioners over two years were linked with records of hospital admissions and deaths. For 57 people injured or killed while driving cars, motorcycles, or bicycles the medicines that had been dispensed in the three months bef...
Hoofdauteurs: | Skegg, D, Richards, S, Doll, R |
---|---|
Formaat: | Journal article |
Taal: | English |
Gepubliceerd in: |
1979
|
Gelijkaardige items
-
MINOR TRANQUILIZERS AND ROAD ACCIDENTS - REPLY
door: Skegg, D, et al.
Gepubliceerd in: (1979) -
Rapid tranquillisation: a global perspective
door: Pallavi Nadkarni, et al.
Gepubliceerd in: (2015-11-01) -
Review of Rapid Tranquillisation Guidelines Across NHS Trusts in England
door: Claudia Chavasse, et al.
Gepubliceerd in: (2024-06-01) -
Assessment of the "E' book as a tool for drug monitoring.
door: Skegg, D, et al.
Gepubliceerd in: (1981) -
Rapid Tranquillisation Practice and Debriefing; an Observational Study in Adult Psychiatric Inpatients
door: Georgina James, et al.
Gepubliceerd in: (2024-06-01)