Lecture 18: CP and prescribing Flashcards
1
Q
What is rational prescribing?
A
“selection of the most apropriate therapeutic regimen for a specific patient”
2
Q
4 steps before writing a prescription?
A
- make a diagosis - patients come with symptoms and sometimes a wrong diagnosis from the internet
- Make a therapeutic decision - identify what your treatment goals are. What the patient wants (THEIR key issues).
Are the patients symptoms modifiable by symptomatic treatment or disease modifying treatment.
- Choose a medicine Efficacy, Safety, Appropriateness
- Choose a dosing regimen - choose a route of delivery and dose
3
Q
efficacy of a medicine?
A
- how effectve are the treatment alternatives
- are there patient related factors that affect efficacy
- age
- disease state
- pregnancy
- genetics
- other medicines or substnaces
- COMPLIANCE??
4
Q
safety of a medicine?
A
- What are the contraindications for using this drug in general and specifially in this patient -allergies, concomitant disease including major organ failure.
- What are the common and potenially serious adverse effects that can occur with this drug - will this influence the patients choice
- What drug interactions need to be considered? - food, other drugs, drug-disease
- Is the patient pregnant or lactating?
5
Q
Appropriatness of medicine
A
- Can the patient afford it (even if it’s subsidised)
- Are there considerations for compliance? -more than one a day, empty stomach, needs blood checks, no. of meds
6
Q
Different Routes of delivery?
A
- IV injection - high blood conc, instantaneous, potentially dangerous
- Skin patches - lower preak conc and extended duration
- local delivery - Site of action targeted, reduced systemiv effects
- oral tablet
- deposti preparations
7
Q
Therapeutic index?
A
The dose that is least likey to lead to adverse effects but most likely to cause therapeutic benefit.
8
Q
A prescription must have?
A
- Doctor’s name
- Signature
- physical address
- MCNZ regestration number
- contact no.
- Patients name
- Their address
- Age
9
Q
Rx, Sig and M
A
Rx = Name of medicine, formulation, strength
Sig = instructions for the patient
M = instructions for the pharmacist as to quantity dispensed
10
Q
A
11
Q
A
12
Q
After writing a prescription?
A
- Counsel the patient/communicate information
- Monitor response - clinical response, biomakers, drug conc. Indications for TDM:
- Event potentially serious but occurs infrequently
- Narrow therapeutic index
- effects correlate better with conc than dose due to variability
- deciding whether or not a symptom is ADR
- detecting non-compliance
- Review the medicine - efficacy and safety, appropriatness, patient view of drug and adherence.