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Journal Article

Citation

Morgan O. Evid. Based Healthc. Public Health 2005; 9(3): 197-199.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.ehbc.2005.03.030

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Question
Does legislation to limit the size of paracetamol packs reduce death, liver transplantation or referral and non-fatal self poisoning?Study design
Before and after study.Main results
In the first 4 years after legislation to limit the size of paracetamol packs, death from overdose, non-fatal self poisoning and admissions for liver transplant were reduced compared with before legislation. In the first 2 years after legislation, listing for liver transplants and actual transplantation rates were reduced compared with before legislation, but there was no significant difference after 3 and 4 years (see results tables 1 and 2). Mean pack sizes of paracetamol decreased significantly from before to after legislation (35 before v 24 after). However, sales rose after legislation, so total numbers of tablets sold were similar (520 million before v 580 million after).Authors' conclusions
Legislation to limit the size of paracetamol packs reduced the risk of death from overdose, non-fatal self poisoning, admissions and listing for liver transplant and actual transplantation.

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