Welcome Support For Drug Prescribing Research


Advances in healthcare mean that people are living longer, and as we age, people are often prescribed an increasing number of medicines to prevent and manage disease. This increase in the number of medicines can lead to an increased risk of medication-related side effects. It is therefore important to develop robust approaches to identify medicines that are no longer needed or may contribute to drug-related harms and that can be safely stopped or removed from prescription.

The research funded under this award will utilise the large amount of information already collected as part of routine healthcare, such as GP and hospital visits. New methods from pharmacoepidemiology will be used to analyse these datasets and improve our understanding of over-the-counter prescribing practices. As the focus of healthcare shifts towards more personalised medicine and patient-centred approaches, research in this area will inform the decisions of patients and healthcare professionals and support optimal treatment. Ultimately, this will help people age better with the right medicines for them.

Furthermore, as part of the project known as DIAMOND (Developing Innovative Analytical Methods for research ON Deprescribing), a tool will be developed to identify patients who are most at risk of side effects from antidepressant medicines. Given that people can react very differently to these medicines, this tool will help support the monitoring and review of antidepressants to promote the best outcomes for patients with mental health problems.

Commenting on the announcement, Dr Moriarty said: "The support from this award will enable me to build a team that will pave the way for high quality OTC prescribing research and clinical practice. The evidence we hope to generate through innovative, data-driven approaches will improve the quality of healthcare to benefit public health. We are incorporating open science into this project by sharing our methods and tools for other researchers to use in future studies and maximise our impact."

The grant award will run for 8 years, starting next year. In addition to supporting research endeavours and access to datasets, it will also facilitate the recruitment, training and development of new researchers.

Professor Fergal O'Brien, RCSI Vice-Chancellor for Research and Innovation, said: "I congratulate Dr Moriarty on this prestigious funding and thank Wellcome's support for giving RCSI our first Career Development Award. This is an important milestone that demonstrates our commitment to advancing cutting-edge research and encouraging talented scientists."

"I look forward to seeing how this project will apply big data to a field where it has exciting potential not only to improve medical practice, but also to positively impact patients' lives."

Wellcome Career Development Awards are highly competitive grants that support the career progression of mid-career researchers in biomedical sciences, health and related fields. This award further enriches the RCSI research environment, demonstrating the university's continued commitment to excellence in scientific discovery and complementing previous successes in other Wellcome grant programmes. RCSI will collaborate on this project with researchers from University College Cork, University College London, Queen's University Belfast, University of British Columbia and Complutense University of Madrid. Dr Sophie Hawkesworth, Senior Research Manager for Discovery Research at Wellcome, said: "I am delighted that Wellcome is supporting this exciting award in such an important area of research. Our Discovery Research programmes are designed to enable a wide range of research questions that have the potential to transform our understanding of health and disease.  This award is a great example of the research we aim to support that will bring new knowledge and new research tools to a really important and understudied area. I will follow the progress of the project with interest."