In Connecticut, "a pharmacist shall make a reasonable effort to obtain, record, and maintain...:
(1) name, address, telephone number, date of birth or age, and gender;
(2) individual history where significant, including disease states, known allergies, and drug reactions;
(3) a comprehensive list of drugs and relevant devices dispensed by the pharmacy within the last 180 days; and
(4) the pharmacist's comments relevant to the individual's drug therapy."
This information will be helpful to the pharmacist when a patient presents a new prescription to identify any potential problems with the overall drug therapy. Basically, the pharmacist is looking for any:
- duplication of therapy (e.g. is the patient taking multiple medicines that work the same way or multiple products that contain the same active ingredient?);
- contraindication between the medicine and a disease (e.g. does the patient have a condition that precludes him/her from taking the medicine?);
- drug interactions (e.g. will this medicine increase or decrease the effects of the other medicines the patient is currently taking or vice verse?);
- issues with the dose and length of therapy prescribed (e.g. if the patient stated that he has kidney problems, is the dose going to be too high? or does the patient need to be on 3 weeks of high-dose steroids by mouth for an acute asthma attack? or if the patient is pregnant, she should not be taking certain medicines for blood pressure or cholesterol control);
- interaction of a medicine and allergy (e.g. if the patient stated that she is allergic to soy, she should not be given Atrovent as an inhaler); and
- clinical abuse or misuse and any other significant clinical issues relating to the appropriate use of drugs (e.g. is the patient really still in pain 4 weeks after a root canal treatment?). One's weight can be used to determine the appropriateness of the dose.
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