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Matthew Doogue

Clinical Pharmacologist

BSc MB ChB DipPaed FRACP

Email matt.doogue@otago.ac.nz

Matt Doogue is a consultant physician at Christchurch Hospital in Clinical Pharmacology and General Medicine. He is a member of the Department of Medicine, University of Otago, Christchurch and co-convenes clinical pharmacology teaching. He has roles in medicines governance.

His interests are broadly in quality use of medicines and include: medicines systems, adverse drug reactions, pharmacogenetics, applied pharmacokinetics, clinical decision support, and pharmacoinformatics.

Publications

Sundermann, M., Pairman, L., Clendon, O., Fan, D., Doogue, M., & Chin, P. K. L. (2025). Vulnerability of a New Zealand hospital computerised provider order entry system to prescribing error: A comparative study with other systems. Internal Medicine Journal. Advance online publication. doi: 10.1111/imj.70053 Journal - Research Article

Kew, B. M., Doogue, M. P., McNeill, R., Zhang, M., Rucklidge, J. J., Frampton, C. M., Mulder, R. T., & Beaglehole, B. (2025). Investigation of a broad-spectrum micronutrient formulation as a possible precipitant of pharmacokinetic micronutrient-drug interactions. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology. Advance online publication. doi: 10.1002/bcp.70014 Journal - Research Article

Pairman, L., Chin, P., & Doogue, M. (2024). Evaluating the effect of making the indication field compulsory in electronic prescriptions: A pre-post study in a hospital prescribing system. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology. Advance online publication. doi: 10.1111/bcp.16370 Journal - Research Article

Newman, N., McKenzie, F., Wells, J. M., Wilkinson, T., Dean, J., Doogue, M., & Beckert, L. (2024). Consent to medical student teaching: An observational, cross-sectional study exploring the patient view. BMC Medical Education, 24, 1525. doi: 10.1186/s12909-024-06557-x Journal - Research Article

Alfeld, K., Barclay, M., Dalrymple-Alford, J., McNeill, R., Frampton, C., Doogue, M., & Stamp, L. (2024). In-patient management of gout: We are still failing. International Journal of Rheumatic Diseases, 27(Suppl. 2), O01. doi: 10.1111/1756-185X.15171 Conference Contribution - Published proceedings: Abstract

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