Title: Introduction to Pharmacology
1Introduction to Pharmacology
- Presented by
- Cynthia Bartlau, RN, PHN, MSN
2Introduction to Pharmacology
- The science of drugs, their properties, use and
effects - Medicinal drugs do not include
- Non-prescription
- Nicotine
- Alcohol
- Illegal Drugs
3Pharmacology Definition
- Study of the effect of chemical substances on
living tissue - The study of medicinal drugs
- The study of chemicals and toxic properties
- The study of the use of chemicals for
psychotropic or social purposes
4History of Drugs
- Primitive
- Herbal Remedies
- Arrow Poisons
- Mood altering foods
- Opium
- Cocoa
5History of Drugs (cont.)
- Ancient
- Preservation substances (Egyptian Mummification)
- 100 A.D. 600 substances listed in the Roman
Materia Medica
6History of Drugs (cont.)
- Medieval
- Plants and herbs are classified
- Relationship of dose to toxicity is recognized
- Use of poisons for homicide prevalent
7History of Drugs (cont.)
- 17th and 18th Century
- Increased knowledge of drugs and shared with
world as increase in world travel continued - Widely accepted by physicians and lay persons
8History of Drugs (cont.)
- 19th Century
- The beginning of the modern science of
pharmacology - Problems Recognized
- Dose effect relationship
- Processes involved in absorption/excretion
- Localization of the site of action of a drug
- Specific mechanisms of drug action
- Relation between chemical makeup biologic
activity of substances
9History of Drugs (cont.)
- Developed
- Anesthetics
- Injection technique
- Antipyretics (Aspirin)
10History of Drugs (cont.)
- Modern Medicine
- Complex science Big business
- Virtually every body function can be enhanced,
suppressed, or manipulated by chemical means - Problem with drug abuse worldwide
- Chemical technology
- Herbicide
- Insecticide
- Fuel/solvents
- Poison affecting our health and environment
- We need to use this new technology wisely
without poisoning ourselves and environment
11Drug Laws
- Drug Standards
- Drugs of the same name must have the same
strength, quality, and purity - Federally approved requirements for safety of
consumer - Three major acts that provide consumer safety
12Drug Laws (cont.)
- 1906 Pure Food Drug Act
- Empowered federal government to enforce standards
set by US Pharmacopoeia and National Formulary - Drugs must meet standards of strength purity
- Type amount of narcotics must be listed on
label of opiate mixture - 1912 Sherley Amendment to FFDCA prohibits
fraudulent therapeutic claims
13Drug Laws (cont.)
- 1914 Harrison Narcotic Act
- Legally defines the term narcotic
- Regulates manufacture, import, sale, and use of
cocaine and opiates - Revision to Harrison Act regulates the use of
marijuana and synthetic opiates
14Drug Laws (cont.)
- 1938 Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act
- Requires drugs products be tested for harmful
effects - Drug labels and literature must be complete
accurate, setting dose, manufacturers name
address, names amounts of potentially harmful
ingredients, a warning if habit forming,
direction for use, and contraindications - Medical devices must be safe effective and
cosmetics must be safe
15Drug Laws (cont.)
- 1952 Durham-Humphrey Amendment
- Distinguishes between prescription and over the
counter medication - A prescription for narcotics, hypnotic,
habit-forming drugs, and potentially harmful
drugs can be refilled only with a new
prescription, and requires that the label state
this fact
16Drug Laws (cont.)
- 1962 Kefauver-Harris Act
- Allows FDA to evaluate the testing methods of
drug manufacturers - Requires manufacturers to prove that a drug is
effective, not just nontoxic
17Drug Laws (cont.)
- 1970 Controlled Substance Act
- Controls substances (narcotics, tranquilizers,
barbiturates, amphetamines) into 5 categories
(schedules) based on drugs potential for abuse
medical effectiveness - Limits the number of RX refills for controlled
substances each 6 months - Lists drugs that can be called into pharmacy
(prescriber must register with DEA) - Symbol for schedule C
18Drug Laws (cont.)
- 1984 Drug Price Competition and Patent Term
Restoration Act - Makes it possible for generic drugs of
bioequivalent equals to be marketed without
duplicating clinical trials - Gives longer patent protection to companies
introducing new drugs
19Drug Laws (cont.)
- 1992 Prescription Drug User Fee Act
- Allowed FDA to collect user fees from pharm
companies (with new drug apps) to shorten review
time - Specified a review time of 12 months for standard
drugs/6 mos for priority drugs
20Drug Laws (cont.)
- 1997 FDA Modernization Act
- Updated regulation of biologic products
- Increased client access to experimental drugs and
medical devices - Accelerated review of important new drugs
- Allowed drug companies to disseminate info about
off-label (non-FDA approved) uses and costs of
drugs - Extended user fees
21Drug Laws (cont.)
- FDA (Federal Drug Administration)
- General safety standards
- Approval removal of products on market
- DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration)
- Controlled substances
- Only enforces laws against illegal drug use
- Monitors need for changing schedules of abused
drugs
22Controlled Substances
- Groups of medications that have potential for
abuse or physical psychological dependence - Proper handling of controlled substances is
essential - Violations may result in suspension of your
nursing license - 5 Schedules
23Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Schedule I - CI
- Highest risk for abuse
- Not acceptable for prescription use
- May be available for investigational use
- Includes
- Cannabinols (marijuana)
- Hallucinogens (LSD, heroin, mescaline)
24Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Schedule II - CII
- Medically useful, but carry high potential for
abuse and may lead to physical psychological
dependence - Includes certain barbiturates, narcotics
(opiates), and stimulants (MS, codeine,
meperidine) - Prescriptions may not be refilled
- Medically useful drugs with high abuse potential
- Includes pure preparations of narcotics (opiates)
- Includes stimulants (uppers)
- Includes stimulants (uppers) used for treatment
of hyperactive children
25Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Schedule III - CIII
- Lesser abuse potential that schedule I or II
- Includes nonbarbiturate sedatives, narcotics in
combination with other drugs, stimulants,
anabolic steroids paregoric (Tylenol with
codeine)
26Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Schedule IV - CIV
- Low potential for abuse, with psychological
dependence more common that physical dependence - Includes benzodiazepines, propoxyphene (Darvon),
and chlordiazepoxide (Librium)
27Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Schedule V - CV
- Least abuse potential
- Have a small amount of narcotic combined with an
antitussive or antidiarrheal
28Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Scheduled Drugs in Hospital Nrsg. Home
- II, III, and IV
- Nurses
- All are signed for with patients name, date,
time, reason, nurses signature. - While student, controlled substances must have a
second signature of licensed nurse. - All are counted at change of work shift, with two
nurses leaving and arriving - Records and signatures may be written or on
computer. - Locked with two different keys, either actual
or virtual
29Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Scheduled Drugs in Hospital Nrsg Home
- II, III, and IV
- Doctors and nurses
- Schedule II drug prescriptions/orders in effect
only 72 hours - Schedule III drug prescriptions/orders in effect
for up to one month - Nurses must not give drug if order is out of date
- Nurses remind doctors with regular visit
- Rules change
30Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Five pregnancy categories established by FDA
31Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Cat A
- No demonstrated risk to fetus in first trimester
of pregnancy - No evidence of risk in second and third trimester
32Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Cat B
- Animal studies have not demonstrated risk to
fetus or have demonstrated adverse effect, but
adequate studies on pregnant women have not
demonstrated a risk to fetus during 1st, 2nd, or
3rd trimesters
33Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Cat C
- Animal studies have shown adverse effects on
fetus, but there are no adequate studies on humans
34Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Cat D
- Evidence indicates a risk to the human fetus
- Potential benefit from use of drug may outweigh
the risk to the fetus
35Controlled Substances (cont.)
- Cat X
- Studies in animals and humans demonstrated fetal
abnormalities or reports indicate evidence of
fetal risk
36Nursing Process in Medication Administration
- The nurse is the primary member of the health
care team responsible for the timely, safe, and
accurate administration of drugs - Using the nursing process can minimize drug
errors or omissions
37Nursing Process (cont.)
- Assessment (collection of data about patient)
- Allergies?
- Current medications?
- Why is the patient taking RX or OTC drugs?
- Condition of the patient skin?
- Current level of use of tobacco, alcohol, etc.
- Amount of coffee, tea, cola use?
- Known problems with drug metabolization?
- Physical or mental problem affecting ability to
take med? - Learning need, language, literacy level?
- Nursing history?
38Nursing Process (cont.)
- Diagnosis
- Consists of 3 elements
- Problem
- Its etiology
- Signs and symptoms
- Address problems that post immediate threats
- Knowledge deficit
- Risk for injury
- Ineffective management of therapeutic regimen
- Noncompliance
39Nursing Process (cont.)
- Planning
- Establishing short long term goals objectives
for care - Take into consideration patients physical,
psychological, and sociocultural life-style needs - Following three teaching sessions, patient will
identify the reasons for delaying the eating and
drinking of milk products for at least 2 hours
after taking tetracycline.
40Nursing Process (cont.)
- Implementation
- Follow the 5 rights of drug administration
- Administer meds as prescribed
- Monitor for therapeutic effect
- Evaluate for adverse reaction
- Provide patient teaching
- Consider legal aspect associated with drug
therapy - Complete med order, question any handwriting
difficult to read, unclear dosages, or if drug is
incompatible
41Nursing Process (cont.)
- Evaluation
- The nurse to determine whether the goals have
been met
42Nursing Process (cont.)
- Patient Teaching and Medication Therapy
- Name of medication
- Purpose of medication
- How and when to take medication
- How to monitor med effectiveness
- Drugs that may interact with prescribed meds
- Any required dietary changes
- Possible adverse effects
- Signs symptoms to bring to MD attention
- Required follow-up procedures
43Nursing Process (cont.)
- Documentation
- Serves as a way to communicate with other members
of health care team
44Nursing Process (cont.)
- Legal responsibilities regulated by SNPA
- To administer medication safely and accurately
(5Rs) - Must be familiar with the pharmacologic profile
of the drug to eliminate or decrease errors - Common Errors dose amount, dosing interval,
inappropriate route - Accurate recording of all drugs given
- Nurse might be found liable for not
- recognizing and reporting adverse reaction
45Read, Study, Take Notes
- Strategies for studying pharmacology
- CD math practice and NCLEX review questions
- Complete chapter exercises
- Lecture notes
- Math help Tech Center at PCC and Nursing and
Health Technology Learning Center at LAC - Study techniques
46Questions???