
Talking Meds - A PrescQIPP podcast
Engaging conversations about medicines-related dilemmas.
Talking Meds is hosted by Jonathan Underhill who, every two weeks, will chat to a fantastic guest about current medical issues and clinical dilemmas.
Jonathan has a background as a hospital clinical pharmacist but worked for many years at the National Prescribing Centre (NPC) developing innovative ways of teaching therapeutics, evidence-based medicine and clinical decision making to prescribers and their support teams. Until recently, he worked at NICE as a consultant clinical adviser in their Medicines Optimisation Team. He is now Medicines Clinical Adviser at PrescQIPP.
Jonathan and his guests will discuss topics such as new guidance from NICE on menopause, asthma, depression deprescribing and insomnia; how to tackle penicillin allergy de-labelling.
There will also be a series on ’Sensible prescribing in Older people with Jonathan and Lucy’, with consultant geriatrician and author Lucy Pollock.
PrescQIPP is a Community Interest Company. We operate on a not-for-profit basis for the benefit of NHS patients and organisations and help NHS organisations to improve medicines-related care to patients. Find out more here: https://www.prescqipp.info/
Talking Meds - A PrescQIPP podcast
13. Using the GP Evidence website with Dr Julian Treadwell
Welcome to the latest episode of Talking Meds and the PrescQIPP podcast, engaging conversations about medicines-related dilemmas. Today, your host Jonathan Underhill, Medicines Clinical Adviser at PrescQIPP, talks to Dr Julian Treadwell, an academic GP who has developed the absolutely fabulous resource GP Evidence.
Julian has worked for many years in UK General Practice and is keenly interested in polypharmacy, multiple long-term conditions and evidence-based practice. He developed the website GP Evidence which provides easily accessible and understandable information on the benefits and harms of treatments for long-term conditions. He has additional roles with NICE as a moderator of their GP Reference Panel, was a founding member of the Royal College of General Practitioners standing group on Overdiagnosis (see below if you want to join) and is an associate editor of the Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin.
PrescQIPP resources mentioned in this episode:
- PrescQIPP webinar March 2023: Making evidence understandable - why you need to use GP Evidence.
- PrescQIPP Clinical Masterclass 25th February 2025: The GP Evidence website: user-friendly clinical evidence to support shared decision making about treatments for long-term conditions.
Other resources mentioned in this episode:
- GP Evidence website
- Do clinicians overestimate benefits and underestimate the risks of treatments? BJGP Open - GPs’ understanding of the benefits and harms of treatments for long-term conditions: an online survey
- NICE Shared decision making guideline and eLearning:
Shared decision making NICE guideline [NG197]
Shared decision making eLearning package - Seminal paper by Gabbay and Le May (and their updated book as reviewed by Trish Greenhalgh)
Original BMJ paper from 2004 - Evidence based guidelines or collectively constructed “mindlines?” Ethnographic study of knowledge management in primary care
Mindlines: making sense of evidence in practice, John Gabbay and Andrée le May, BJGP 2016
Knowledge Transformation in Healthcare: Putting Mindlines to Work edited by John Gabbay and Andrée le May
A new episode of Talking Meds will be available every other Friday.
If you have feedback or suggestions for future topics and guests please submit them to talkingmeds@prescqipp.info
PrescQIPP is funded by the NHS for the NHS, and our aim is to improve medicines-related care for patients. We do this by producing high quality evidence-based resources and training, and by facilitating networks between NHS organisations and professionals.
The majority of pharmacists and other healthcare professionals across the UK can access our resources by registering and logging on to our website. If you have any difficulty accessing the website you can email help@prescqipp.info and we’ll aim to sort things out for you.
Find out more about PrescQIPP here