Chapter 2 Drug Development & Ethical Considerations Flashcards
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
Designed to promote and protect the public’s health
Responsible for new drug approval and monitoring drug safety after they reach the market
Core Ethical Principles
Respect for persons
Beneficence
Justice
Respect for persons
Treated as individual
Autonomy
Informed consent
Beneficence
Duty to protect subjects from harm
Risk-benefit ratio
IRB
Justice
Selection of research subjects be fair
Distribution of benefits and burdens is equitable
Phases of Pharmaceutical Research
Preclinical trials Human clinical experimentation Phase I Phase II Phase III Phase IV
Clinical research study design Independent variable Dependent variable Extraneous variables Experimental group, control group, placebo
American Nurses Association
Code of Ethics
Guide for carrying out nursing responsibilities
Adopted in 1950; Revised in 2015
9 Provisions included
The Nurse’s role in clinical research
Responsible for patient safety
Responsible for integrity of research protocol
Drug Development and Ethical Considerations
Nurse Practice Acts
Different per state
Canadian Drug Regulation
Health Products and Food Branch (HPFB)
Review drugs for safety, efficacy, and quality prior to drug approval.
1996: Controlled Drugs and Substances Act
2012: Safe Streets and Communities
Nursing Interventions for Controlled Substances
Account for all controlled drugs.
Keep a special controlled-substance record for required information.
Countersign all discarded or wasted medications; wastage must be witnessed.
Ensure that documentation and drugs on hand match.
Keep all controlled drugs in locked storage area.
Medications may also be administered via an automated dispensing cabinet with bioidentical identifiers used for access.
The American Nurses Association (ANA) recognizes nurse drug diversion and recommends that all states have a peer-to-peer assistance program for addicted nurses. Reporting is mandatory if suspected or known diversion occurs.
Drug Names
Chemical names-Drug’s chemical structure Generic names-Official, nonproprietary, not owned by any drug company Brand/trade names -Chosen by drug company -Registered trademark
The nurse identifies the act that provides for the privacy of patient health information as the
A)Drug Regulation Reform Act.
B)Drug Relations Act.
C)Food and Drug Administration Modernization Act.
D)Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
D
The nurse identifies the primary purpose of federal legislation in drug standards as
A)preventing overcharging for drugs.
B)controlling efforts in drug research.
C)ensuring public safety.
D)moderating effective drug usage.
C
Which situation regarding controlled substances requires the supervising RN to intervene?
A)The staff keeps a separate controlled-substances record for all required information.
b)Controlled substances are locked away from patients, and all staff members have keys for necessary access.
c)Opioids are kept under double lock to limit access to them.
D)All discarded or wasted controlled substances are countersigned.
B