Dispensing Medications in the Community Pharmacy Flashcards
Primary Role of Pharmacist
to dispense medications safely, accurately, and in accordnce with state and federal laws upon receipt of valid medication orders from licensed providers
Prescribers
- Physicians
- dentists
- veterinarians
- nurse practitioners
- physician’s assistants
Pharmacy Technician Role
- customer service
- updating patient demographics
- updating insurance information
- entering prescriptions into patient profile
- accurately filling prescription orders
- frees the pharmacist to spend more time resolving medication-related problems and counseling patients about their medications
Community Pharmacy Services
- dispensing prescriptions
- compounding noncommercially available medications
- preparing and delivering prescriptions to nontraditional healthcare sites
- nursing homes
- pesonal care homes
- prisons
- vaccine administration
- blood presure checks
- laboratory testing for blood glucose and cholesterol levels
Front Area
- Community or Retail pharmacy is deivided into two parts. Front area houses:
- OTC drugs
- dietary supplements
- medical supplies
- dietary supplements
- other merchandise
- May stay open if no pharmacist is on duty
- general public allowed
Back Area
- restricted to pharmacy personnel only
- separated from front area by the pharmacy counter
- secured by code or key and off limits to the public including family and friends of pharmacy employees
- When no pharmacist is on duty, this area is closed and locked per state law (metal gate, etc.)
Parata Max
an automates system which labels, fills, caps, sorts and stores up to 232 prescriptions
Processes up to 60% of total prescription volume with 100% accuracy for drug and strength
Automation
reduces the number of manual fills by pharmacy staff, helping to lower the cost per prescription.
Convience
is an important factor when fulfilling the healthcare needs of patients. Several community pharmacies:
- have hours of operation that vary froom 40-168 hours per week
- offer home deliveries
- after-hours availability for working families, shift workers and patients recently discharged
- drive-thru for prescription drop-off and pick-up
Customer Service
- becomes extremely important to retaining clientele as patients very often have the option of sending their prescriptions off to large, less expensive, out-of-state, mail-order pharmacy warehouses.
Mail-Order Pharmacy
- can fill prescriptions for less cost bc they are atomated and have around-the-clock filling operations
- Many national chain pharmacies offer a mail-order option
- VA (Veterans Administration) also uses several regional centralized warehouses that focus on mail-order drug distribution system
- differ from traditional community pharmacy primarily by sheer workload volume and lack of direct contact with patients
- Some prescription insurance programs encorage patients to use mail-order pharmacies by offering lower co-payments on a 90-day supply of medication
Mail-Order Pharmacy Problems
- cost savings benefit may be off-set for many patients by:
- delays in receipt of a needed medication (to the detriment of health)
- drug wastage
- minimal counseling offered to the patient by pharmacist contact limited to preprinted sheets of paper or a 1-800 number
Community Pharmacy Personnel
- Pharmacist
- Pharmacy Technician
Pharmacist Responsabilities
- Responsabilities:
- gathering medical, medication, and allergy histories
- checking computer warnings about drug interactions
- verifying, preparing, and dispensing prescriptions
- counseling patients about their prescribedmedications and OTC drugs and healthcare devices
- monitoring controlled substancces
- administering vaccinations
- Pharmacists in independent pharmacies also:
- are involved in managerial tasks of running a business
- hiring and firing employees
- evaluating insurance contracts
- reconciling insurance claims
- ordering and maintaining inventory
Pharmacy Technician Responsabilities
- greeting customers at counter or drive-thru window
- receiving written prescriptions
- ansering the telephone and referring call-in prescriptions or transfers tot he pharmacist
- initiating refills requests initiated by patients in person or by telephone
- clarifying and resolving questions about the prescription (name, directions, etc.) with teh prescriber’s office
- updating patient profiles, including demographics, allergies, and health conditions
- entering or updating billing information for third-party reimbursement
- scanning and entering new prescriptions (or refill requests) into the patient profile
- submitting prescription claims online to insurance providers
- contacting insurance companies to resolve eigibility or prescription processing issues
- counting, reconstituting, packaging, and repackaging products
- preparing and affixing medication container labels for prescriptions
- retrieving and counting drug products from storage in the restricted precription area
- returning stock bottles to their proper storage locations
- distributing labeled medications to the patient aftter final verification by the pharmacist
- storing completed prescriptions fr futre patient pickup
- retrieving medications for patient pickup
- offering medication counseling opportunity for the patient
- accepting payments and co-payments for prescriptions
prescription
- Definition: an order of medication for a patient, issued by a phsyician or qualified licensed practitioner for a valid medical condition and then filled by a pharmacist.
- usuallt recorded on a preprinted form bearing the name, address, and telephone and fax numbers of the prescriber
- submitted by hand, phone, fax or electronic transmission (use of hard copies by hand is diminishing being replaced by electronic transmission = e-prescribing
Basic Components of Prescription
each prescription must be checked for completness and accuracy:
- DEA number
- NPI number
- Patient Information
- Prescriber Information
- Date
- Rx symbol
- Inscription
- Subscription
- Refill
- Dispense as Written/Brand Name/Generic Substitution
- Signa
- Additional Instructions
- Signature
Prescriber Information
Name, address, phone number, NPI and DEA numbers, also state liscence number if required by state of practice
DEA number
- Issued by the DEA to a prescriber authorizing them to prescribe controlled substances
- usually hand-written rather than pre-printed on hard prescriptions to avoid forgeries and other security issues
NPI number
- National Provider Identifier
- required to file a third-party insurance claim on all noncontrolled prescriptions as well as other reimbursable healthcare services
- any healthcare provider, including a pharmacist, may be assigned and NPI number
Patient Information
- Full name (initials are not sufficient), address, phone number, date of birth
- illegible? = re-write the name above the name provided on the prescription, verifying the spelling with the patient at the time the prescription is received.
- ask for secondary phone number if additional information will be needed from the patient making sure it is added to the patient profile
date
- of when the physician wrote the prescription should be provided
- date of when the prescription is receive should be typed into the pharmacy computer system
- if no date is written on the prescription, then the date that the prescription is brought into the pharmacy should be recorded as such
- if antibiotic prescription with no date - the pharmacist may want to verify that the patient is under the current care of a physician