Time critical medication and Get It On Time campaign resources

Let's make hospitals safer for people with Parkinson's. Discover tools, resources and learning to support you to deliver time critical medication to people with Parkinson's.

Topic
  • Inpatient care and medicines management
  • Service improvement
Resource type
  • Tools
Profession
  • All professions

Time critical medication webinar: register now!

Join us on 26 February 2025 for a webinar focusing on the tools and knowledge you need to improve the delivery of time critical Parkinson’s medication in your organisation.

Find out more and register for the event.

What is time critical Parkinson's medication?

Patients with Parkinson’s are at risk of significant harm if they don’t get their medication on time, every time. ‘On time’ means within 30 minutes of the patient’s prescribed time. Even short delays can worsen symptoms. These can include rigidity, pain and tremors, increasing the risk of falls, as well as causing stress, anxiety and swallowing issues, increasing the risk of aspiration. 

Over half of people with Parkinson’s don’t get their medications on time, every time they're in hospital. This leads to worse patient outcomes, longer recovery times and increased costs to the NHS. 

We're here to help healthcare professionals give great care and improve medicine administration standards. Here is a range of tools, resources and learning developed especially for you. 

You can also contact us at [email protected] if you have any time critical medication questions or want to chat more about one of these resources.

Time critical medication resources

Guides for healthcare professionals 

 

Best practice case studies for health professionals

 

Resources for healthcare professionals

How your hospital can make time critical medication improvements

  • Time critical medication: 10 recommendations for your hospital

These recommendations will allow NHS staff to support timely, safe and appropriate medicine management for people with Parkinson's. 

See the Time critical medication: 10 recommendations for your hospital

  • NHS action on time critical medication: interactive map

Join the NHS organisations that have pledged to take action on time critical Parkinson's medication. Our interactive map page shows which organisations have pledged, and which are actively benchmarking against the 10 recommendations, and tells you how your organisation can get involved.

Visit the NHS action on time critical medication: interactive map

  • Rapid Response Report NPSA/2010/RRR009: Reducing harm from omitted and delayed medicines in hospital. National Patient Safety Agency (2010). Read the NPSA report.
  • Commissioner’s Guide to the NCEPOD Report - ‘Hard to Swallow?’. A review of the quality of dysphagia care provided to patients with Parkinson’s disease aged 16 years and over who were admitted to hospital when acutely unwell. The National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcome and Death (NCEPOD). Go to the Commissioner's Guide to the NCEPOD report.
  • Hard to Swallow? A review of the quality of dysphagia care provided to patients with Parkinson’s disease aged 16 years and over who were admitted to hospital when acutely unwell. A report published by the National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcome and Death (2021). Read the 'Hard to Swallow?' review.
  • A comprehensive review of the diagnosis and treatment of Parkinson's disease dysphagia and aspiration. Patel et al 2020. Expert Review of Gastroenterology & Hepatology: Vol 14, No 6 (tandfonline.com). Read the comprehensive review.
  • A New Simple Screening Tool - 4QT: Can It Identify Those with Swallowing Problems? A Pilot Study. Tsang, K et al 2020. PMC (nih.gov) Geriatrics. March 5(1):11. View the screening tool.
  • NICE Parkinson's disease quality standard [QS164]. This quality standard covers the management of Parkinson's in adults. It describes high-quality care in priority areas for improvement. Read the quality standard.

Contact us

If you didn't find the time critical medication help you needed on this page, contact us at [email protected] and we will be happy to help.