1/90
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced |
|---|
No study sessions yet.
What are the community pharmacy workflow steps?
1. prescription is received by pharmacy
2. data entry
3. pre-check
4. dispensing
5. final check
6. patient receives prescription & counseling
what are the requirements for written prescriptions?
- full name and title of prescriber
- prescribers address
- prescribers phone number
- patients name and address
- drug name and strength
- quantity
- directions
- refills
- prescribers signature
- DAW
what is required for prescriptions of controlled substances?
- prescribers DEA
- quantity to dispense is written numerically AND alphabetically
- ICD-10 code
how to calculate validity of DEA#?
1. add the 1st, 3rd, 5th numbers
2. add together the 2nd, 4th, and 6th numbers and then multiply by 2
3. add these two numbers together, the number on the right should be the same as the last number of the DEA#
what do the first and second letters of the DEA# represent?
first letter: type of practitioner
second letter: the first initial of the practitioner's last name
can a pharmacist dispense a dangerous drug for the first time beyond 6 months from the date a prescription is written?
no
a prescription for an outpatient opioid analgesic (CII-CIV) must be filled for the first time within ___________ of the date the prescription was written
14 days
how many refills can CII prescriptions have?
ZERO
how long are refills for CIII and CIV valid from the date the prescription was written?
6 months
how long are refills for noncontrolled and CV drugs valid from the date the prescription was written?
one year
introduction to drug information:
1. drug information (DI)
- systematic approach to solve problems in patient care
2. evidence-based medicine (EBM)
- systematic approach to clinical problem-solving
3. basic drug information skills
- practiced by all pharmacists
what are the steps of the systematic approach to using and providing drug information?
1. classify the request
• Who is requesting? what is the timeframe for response?
2. obtain background information
• understand what the requester wants to know and why
3. systematic literature research
• tertiary, secondary, and primary literature
4. formulation and communication of a response
• evaluate literature, and formulate a response (written or verbal)
5. follow-up
• assess outcome and impact, recommend future changes in therapy
what is tertiary literature?
• information that has been gathered and summarized by editors, authors, experts...
• summarizes and interprets the original work(s) of others
what are examples of tertiary literature?
• textbooks
• reference books/databases
• drug monographs
• review articles
what are advantages and disadvantages of tertiary literature?
advantages:
• convenient
• accessible
• easy to use
disadvantages:
• may out of be out of date
• info reflects interpretation of author(s)
what to think about when evaluating tertiary resources?
• who are the authors
• year published
• any references?
• use of references/footnotes
• how easy to use?
what is the definition of a drug monograph?
a factual document on a drug product that describes the properties, claims, indications, and conditions of use of the drug and contains any other information that may be required for optimal, safe, and effective use of the drug
what are the parts of a drug monograph?
1. name (brand/generic)
2. pharmacology
3. pharmacokinetics
4. contraindications
5. warnings
6. pregnancy
7. lactation
8. adverse reactions
9. drug interactions
10. stability/storage
11. indications and usage
12. dosing
13. dosing in special populations
14. administration
15. overdose/toxicology
16. monitoring parameters
17. dosage forms
18. patient education
19. black-box warnings
what is the pharmacist's patient care process?
1. Collect
2. Assess
3. Plan
4. Implement
5. Follow-up: Monitor and Evaluate
what is the pharmacist's patient care process as it applies to the community pharmacy?
1. Collect
• pharmacy receives Rx + collects pt info
2. Assess
• pre-check and/or final check of the data entry
3. Plan
• dispensing
4. Implement
• patient receives Rx + medication counseling
5. Follow-up: Monitor and Evaluate
• evaluation of refill status, asking abt side effects/problems
what is the pharmacist's patient care process as it applies to the systematic approach to using/providing drug info?
1. Collect
• classifying the request, collecting background info
2. Assess
• do more searching + assess while doing it
3. Plan
• formulate the response
4. Implement
• communicating the response
5. Follow-up: Monitor and Evaluate
• follow up
what is the pharmacist's patient care process as it applies to documentation + evaluating patients/developing a patient care plan?
1. Collect
• subjective + objective data
2. Assess
• prioritized problem list + assessment statements
3. Plan
• recommendations + goals
4. Implement
• put your plan into action
5. Follow-up: Monitor and Evaluate
• how did it go? measure effectiveness, monitor safety, modify as needed
what is the purpose of documentation?
- communicate w other health professionals
- demonstrate our contribution to patient care
- ensure continuity of care
- protect their professional liability
- submit billing & receive reimbursement
what are characteristics of good documentation?
- accurate
- organized
- legible
- easy to understand
- includes relevant info only
what does SOAP stand for?
subjective, objective, assessment, plan
What is a SOAP note?
it documents a systematic thought process: pharmacists patient care process
what is subjective data?
- what the patient tells you
- CC
- HPI
- ROS
- PMH
- SH
- FH
- allergies
- pain scale
the quality of information comes from?
good communication skills
what is objective data?
- direct measurement/observation
- lab/diagnostic tests
- vital signs (temp, RR, HR, BP)
- physical assessment
- calculated data (age, BMI, IBW, CrCl)
how to calculate IBW in males?
50 + 2.3 (every inch > 5 ft)
how to calculate IBW in females?
45.5 + 2.3 (every inch > 5 ft)
what are the units for IBW?
kilograms (kg)
• round 1 decimal place
how to calculate BMI?
pt's weight (pounds)/(height in inches)^2 X 703
what is the units for BMI?
kg/m2
• round 1 decimal place
how to calculate CrCl in men?
(140-age)(IBW)/(72)(SCr)
--> if pt's ABW < IBW... use ABW!!!!!
how to calculate CrCl in women?
(140-age)(IBW)/(72)(SCr) x 0.85
--> if pt's ABW < IBW... use ABW!!!!!
what is the units for CrCl?
ml/min
• round to nearest whole number
what does NDC stand for?
National Drug Code
• 10 digit number
what combination can an NDC be?
5-4-1
5-3-2
4-4-2
what does the first number of the NDC indicate?
manufacturer
what does the second number of the NDC indicate?
drug/dose/dosage form
what does the third number of the NDC indicate?
package size
why are NDCs important?
ensures proper dispensing
what is the "proprietary name"?
brand/trade name
What is a "nonproprietary name"?
generic name
what is a USAN?
United States Adopted Names
what is INN?
international nonproprietary name
- naming system managed by the World Health Organization
what is BAN?
British Approved Name
what is JAN?
Japanese accepted name
what is DCF?
french approved nonproprietary name
which book provides the official pronunciation of a drug?
• USP Dictionary of USAN and International Drug Names
• not a resource for availability
requirements to be pharmaceutically equivalent:
• same active ingredient
• same dosage form
•same route
• same strength
requirements for generic equivalence
if it has no bioequivalence problems
what determines therapeutic equivalence?
- pharmaceutical equivalents
- they can be expected to have the same clinical effect and safest profile when administered to patients under the conditions specified in the labeling
TE Codes - 1st Letter B:
- the FDA does not consider it therapeutically equivalent to other products
- indicates bioequivalence problems
TE Codes - 1st Letter A:
FDA considers is therapeutically equivalent
AB code meaning:
actual/potential bioequivalence problems
AA, AN, AO, AP, AT code meaning:
no issues with bioequivalence
which book is recommended to be used for TE codes?
orange book
which source provides the most recent version of a package insert?
DailyMed
what are ways a prescription can be transferred?
- fax
- phone
- electronic
what is required information for a transfer?
- date of transfer
- patient info
- name and address of pharmacy
- pharmacy's DEA (if controlled)
- full name of receiving/transferring pharmacist/intern
- Rx info
- when Rx was originally issues
- when Rx was originally dispensed
- the date the last time the Rx was filled
what is the format for refills remaining on transfered prescriptions?
1 + X
what is the purpose for a physical assessment?
to get an overall impression of the patients health status
What are the assessment techniques (observation)?
Inspection
Palpation
Percussion
Auscultation
what is inspection?
visually looking at patient
what is palpation?
touching or feeling
what is percussion?
the striking of a body surface lightly but sharply to determine the position, size, and density of underlying structures
--> using sound (hearing)
what is auscultation?
listening through a stethoscope
--> using sound (hearing)
influenza vaccine:
- routine vaccination
- annually starting at 6 months of age
Pneumococcal vaccine:
routine vaccination ≥ 65 years old
Tetanus, Diphtheria, Pertussis (Tdap) vaccine:
• DTaP- in childhood vaccination schedule
•Tdap- during pregnancy
how often are tetanus boosters requred?
every 10 years (Td formally used, now Tdap)
Zoster (RZV) Shingles vaccination:
routine vaccination ≥ 50 years old
What is core temperature?
temp of the blood supply surrounding the hypothalamus
what is the thermoregulatory "set point"?
the temp the hypothalamus tries to maintain
what is the average oral body temperature range?
97.5°F to 99°F
Diurnal fluctuation:
body temp is lower in the morning and increases later in the day
age fluctuation in temp:
• babies normal temp tends to be higher
• elderly body temp is lower than average adult
what are causes for increases in body temp?
1. hormones (progesterone) temp increases after ovulation
2. exercise
3. hyperthyroidism
4. medications
5. infection
what are causes for decreases in body temp?
1. extreme cold exposure
2. alcohol consumption
3. hypothyroidism
4. antipyretic medications
- acetaminophen
- aspirin
- ibuprofen (NSAID)
- naproxen (NSAID)
what are the 5 routes used to measure body temp?
1. oral
2. rectal
3. axillary
4. tympanic membrane (ear drum)
5. temporal artery (forehead)
what is the most accurate way to measure body temp?
rectal
how much higher is rectal measurement of temp compared to oral?
1°F higher than oral temp
how much lower is axillary measurement of temp compared to oral?
1°F lower than oral temp
how are tympanic membrane and temporal artery temp measured?
infrared measurement
What is the 5th vital sign?
pain
what are the 4 vital signs?
temperature, pulse, respiration, blood pressure
PQRST
provocative/palliative
• what makes it worse/what makes it better?
quality
• describe the pain
radiation
• where is the pain?
severity
• how does it compare to other pain?
timing
• when did it start? does it change w time?
subjective pain behaviors:
- verbal complaints
- stating they are taking pain meds
- ROS
- pain scales
objective pain behaviors:
- facial expressions
- vocalizations
-body movement