Attitudes to prescribing iron supplements in general practice.
- 10 January 1987
- Vol. 294 (6564) , 94-96
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.294.6564.94
Abstract
In response to a postal questionnaire general practitioners in the Southampton and New Forest area indicated a considerable understanding of the principles of iron prescribing and use of laboratory tests to determine iron deficiency. Many respondents, however, chose slow release and compound iron preparations as first treatments for iron deficiency. The role of parenteral iron appeared to be poorly understood. The use of and response to laboratory investigations for iron deficiency were generally appropriate, but many practitioners probably do not check for a response to oral iron sufficiently early during treatment or stop prescribing supplements before iron stores have been replenished. There is scope for further education in the biology and management of iron deficiency in general practice.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clinical evaluation of iron deficiency.1982
- Quick- and slow-release iron: A double-blind trial with a single daily dose regimenBMJ, 1969
- The Treatment of Iron Deficiency Anaemia by Iron-Dextran Infusion: A Radio-Isotope StudyBritish Journal of Haematology, 1968
- Studies on the Absorption of Orally Administered Iron from Sustained-Release PreparationsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1966
- SIDE‐EFFECTS OF ORAL IRON THERAPY A double‐blind study of different iron compounds in tablet form.Acta Medica Scandinavica, 1966
- The Natural History of Iron Deficiency Induced by PhlebotomyBlood, 1962
- ABSORBABILITY OF DIFFERENT IRON COMPOUNDSActa Medica Scandinavica, 1962
- Treatment of Iron Deficiency with Ferrous FumarateBMJ, 1959
- Absorption of Inorganic Iron from Graded Doses: Its Significance in Relation to Iron Absorption Tests and the ‘Mucosal Block’ TheoryBritish Journal of Haematology, 1958
- GASTROINTESTINAL INTOLERANCE TO ORAL IRON PREPARATIONSThe Lancet, 1958