Imperial study reveals 76.5% reduction in prescribing errors using Dosium

A new study from a team of Imperial College researchers - including Lord Ara Darzi - has shown that the use of Dosium reduces prescribing errors by 76.5% compared with standard clinical practice.

  • Study from a team of Imperial College researchers, including Lord Ara Darzi
  • 76.5% reduction in prescribing errors
  • 20% reduction in time to prescribe
  • 96% felt Dosium reduced their workload around prescribing

A new study from a team of Imperial College researchers has shown that the use of Dosium reduces prescribing errors by 76.5% compared with standard clinical practice. 

The real-world simulation study was conducted at a large London NHS trust and published as a preprint in summer 2024, awaiting peer review. It observed prescribers making 240 simulated medication orders designed to reflect real-world scenarios and noted how existing workflows were prone to error, for example due to high complexity, unreliability of current systems, and the need to cross-reference the British National Formulary (BNF) with local guidelines. 

The use of Dosium, which has an exclusive integration with the BNF and automates precise dosing recommendations based on individual patient factors, was associated with 76.5% fewer prescribing errors compared to standard practice. Additionally, using the solution reduced the time it took to prescribe by 20%. 96% of users felt the tool reduced their workload around prescribing.

Medication errors are a serious and pervasive issue, totalling 237M in England every year, with approximately 1.8M serious prescribing errors (NHS England data).

Professor Bryony Franklin, Director of the Centre for Medication Safety and Service Quality, and Co-Author of the study, said:

“Prescribing is a complex process, requiring tailored doses for each individual patient - and unfortunately, errors do occur. Previous interventions to increase prescribing safety have had variable success and can even increase prescribers’ workload.  It’s therefore really exciting that Dosium’s Touchdose has been seen to reduce dosing errors and workload around prescribing. It’s especially good to see its impact on larger dosing errors that are most likely to result in patient harm.”

Dr Nicholas Appelbaum, Co-Founder of Dosium, said:

“Despite the NHS investing hundreds of millions of pounds in electronic prescribing and clinical decision support systems, the data is unforgiving. These technologies have not significantly impacted patient safety. The focus to date has often been on more peripheral issues in electronic prescribing, such as drug interaction checking, which only accounts for a small percentage of medication errors. But no software system can tell me, as a prescribing clinician, the correct dose for my patient, from the national formulary, across the breadth of conditions I might encounter in a day. This study proves that drawing this crucial information live, directly from the BNF, on an ongoing basis, significantly improves safety.”

Users appreciated the system's potential to reduce prescribing errors in real-world practice, streamline workflows, and remove the need for complex calculations (such as for body surface area or ideal body weight). They also praised the user-friendly interface and layout, noting clarity, ease of navigation, and better presentation of BNF data compared to current methods.

Read the full study here, or contact us to discuss bringing Dosium to your clinical practice.

About the researchers

Professor Lord Ara Darzi

Professor Darzi holds the Paul Hamlyn Chair of Surgery at Imperial College London, the Royal Marsden Hospital and the Institute of Cancer Research. He is Director of the Institute of Global Health Innovation at Imperial College London and Chair of Imperial College Health Partners. He is an Honorary Consultant Surgeon at Imperial College Hospital NHS Trust.

Professor Darzi is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences, and a Fellow of the Royal Society. He was knighted for his services in medicine and surgery in 2002. 

Professor Darzi sat as the United Kingdom's Global Ambassador for Health and Life Sciences until March 2013, during which time developed his status as a leading voice in the field of global health policy and innovation. Professor Darzi was appointed and remains a member of Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council since June 2009.

Professor Bryony Franklin

Professor Franklin is Director of the Centre for Medication Safety and Service Quality (CMSSQ), a joint research unit between Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, where she is also Executive Lead Pharmacist for Research, and UCL School of Pharmacy, where she is Professor of Medication Safety.  

She is Director of the NIHR North West London Patient Safety Research Collaboration, and a theme lead within the NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Healthcare Associated Infection and Antimicrobial Resistance at Imperial College London. She is visiting Professor at Imperial College, and Co-Editor-in-Chief for the journal BMJ Quality and Safety.

Dr Jonathan Clarke

A general surgeon by training, Jonathan is a Member of the Royal College of Surgeons and holds a Masters in Public Health from Harvard University where he was a Kennedy Scholar. More recently he returned to Harvard University as a Visiting Fellow in Biostatistics with the Onnela Lab.

Jonathan has worked internationally with the United Nations, World Health Organization, Médecins du Monde and the Francois Xavier Bagnoud Centre for Health and Human Rights at Harvard University to document the human rights infringements across Europe that result from discriminatory health policies towards migrants. He currently serves as an advisor to the Institute for the Future of Work and is also a Scientific Advisor to the Helix Centre for Design in Healthcare where he examines how the generation, synthesis and utilisation of clinical guidance affects patient care.

Calandra Feather

Calandra is currently completing her PhD, using user-centred, mixed-method studies to evaluate prescribing practice, indication documentation, and the use of Dosium’s Touchdose compared with current practice. As the Clinical Safety Officer for Dosium, she works to identify and document potential hazards and ensure controls are in place to minimise the risk of errors and harm.

In addition to this, she is an honorary health services researcher role in the Centre for Medication Safety and Service Quality at Imperial College NHS Healthcare Trust and an honorary Clinical Research Fellow at Imperial College London. She has also been a guest lecturer on the Imperial College Masters programs in Patient Safety and Healthcare Design.

Calandra is a registered Paediatric Nurse and specialised in Intensive Care before moving into clinical academic research. 

Dr Nicholas Appelbaum

Nicholas trained as a doctor in South Africa’s Cape Town, working as a general surgeon before relocating to the UK to complete a PhD at Imperial College London. He made this move in direct response to witnessing the high risk and prevalence of drug errors in his daily clinical practice, and to the “terror” he felt when prescribing drugs, particularly for children. Nicholas worked on his research project directly alongside Lord Ara Darzi to focus on innovative strategies to enhance patient safety and reduce unnecessary variation in guideline-influenced care.

He went on to co-found Dosium in 2017 at the HELIX Centre, the research lab of Imperial College London and the Royal College of Art, where he led an NIHR-funded project to build a frontline decision support tool for paediatric emergency medicine. At that time, he also began Dosium’s long-standing and unique collaboration with the Royal Pharmaceutical Study to put the BNF at the heart of UK-centric medication safety software.

Nicholas has also worked as the Clinical Lead for the HELIX Centre, where he oversaw the clinical research portfolio, providing strategic direction and ensuring the integration of interdisciplinary projects. He is also an Honorary Research Fellow at Imperial College London’s Institute of Global Health Innovation.