Title: An Introduction to Prescribing
1An Introduction to Prescribing
Originally by Narinder Bhalla Updated by
Alison Eggleton Addenbrookes Hospital November
2007
2Objectives
- By the end of this session, students should
understand - What the term prescribing encompasses
- The responsibilities of the prescriber
- The principles of good prescribing
- How to access and use appropriate reference
sources
3When it goes wrong
4What is prescribing?
- Writing or generation of a prescription for a
drug, whether on paper or electronically - Verbal order for a drug to be administered on
doctors advice
But prescribing involves much more than this
5Responsibilities of the prescriber
- If you prescribe a drug you are clinically and
legally - responsible for your actions
- If you are asked to prescribe the drug, it is the
person who signs the prescription who is
responsible
6Responsibilities of the prescriber
- Right Patient
- Right Drug
- Right Dose
- Right Route
- Right Time
7Responsibilities of the prescriber
- Only prescribe medicines that you are competent
to prescribe - Only prescribe medicines if they are necessary
- Prescribe only if benefits of medication outweigh
the risks - Involve the patient in the discussion about
treatment options and the final decision on the
treatment plan - Indicate likely degree of benefit, time to onset
and duration of action - Discuss side-effects and tolerability
8WHO Guide to Good Prescribing
- WHO
- http//www.med.uva.es/who/ggp/homepage.htm
Recommends P drugs Drugs you are more familiar
with in terms of Mode of action Licensed
indications (adults and children) Dosage Side-effe
cts Drug interactions Cautions and
contra-indications
9Principles of Good Prescribing
- State patient details clearly (name, address,
date of birth, age (children/elderly) - Take account of any allergies (yellow card if
newly reported) - Use generic drug names
- State drug, dose, strength, route and frequency
(possibly formulation) - Avoid abbreviations
- Avoid multiple route prescribing (such as IV / IM
/ PO) - State dose as grams (g), milligrams (mg),
micrograms. - Make administration of once weekly drugs clear
10Once weekly drugs
11Generic Prescribing
- Prescribe by the approved drug name in most cases
- Ensures clarity regarding drug required
- Ensures that the most-cost effective version of
the drug can be supplied - Exceptions see guide on ErWEB
- Examples theophylline (Uniphyllin) buprenorphin
e patches (BuTrans, Transtec) oxycodone
oxycontin
12Information Sources
13Sources of Prescribing Information
- BNF/eBNF
- IV guides/monographs
- Trust Formulary (see web BNF)
- Specialist references (e.g. Paediatric)
- Medicines Information (ext 3478, 3502)
- Electronic access to central library of Trust
approved guidelines (CONNECT)
And dont forget to ask the pharmacist
14- Web BNF
- Also remember to use the Childrens BNF
Accessed via the National Library for Health
website http//www.library.nhs.uk/Default.aspx
Or available from the Addenbrookes intranet
see CONNECT
15- Clinical Knowledge Summaries
- http//cks.library.nhs.uk/
- Electronic medicines compendium
- http//emc.medicines.org.uk/
16Formularies Essential Drugs
- National formularies (e.g. the BNF) provide an
independent source of advice - Hospital formularies reflect hospital and PCT
choices - Decided by Drugs and Therapeutics Committee plus
funding agreement - Evidence based and cost-effective evaluation
- NICE drugs
- WHO provide a model list of essential drugs
(300 items)
17British National Formulary (BNF)www.bnf.org
- Front section
- Prescribing guidance, prescription writing CD
prescribing - Prescribing in children, elderly palliative
care - Emergency treatment of poisoning
- Middle section
- General information about drug classes available
for specific diease states - Approved Drug Names with indications, S/E,
cautions dose - Back section
- Appendices interactions, pregnancy, renal
disease, liver disease - Abbreviations used in the BNF (BNF back page)
18BNF (www.bnf.org)
- Chapter 1 Gastrointestinal system
- Chapter 2 Cardiovascular system
- Chapter 3 Respiratory system
- Chapter 4 Central Nervous System
- Chapter 5 Infections
- Chapter 6 Endocrine system
- Chatper 7 Obs and Gynae and Urinary tract
disorders - Chapter 8 Malignant disease and
immunosuppression - Chapter 9 Nutrition and blood
- Chapter 10 Musculoskeletal and joint disorders
- Chapter 11 Eye
- Chapter 12 ENT
- Chapter 13 Skin
- Chapter 14 immunological products and vaccines
- Chapter 15 Anaesthesia
19Drug Monographs in BNF
- Drug
- Indication(s)
- Cautions
- Contraindications
- Side effects
- Dose (adult, child)
- Brand names, formulations, cost
20BNF Appendices
- Appendix 1- Drug Interactions
- Interactions listed by drug/drug class
- Black dot potentially hazardous interactions
21BNF Appendices
- Appendix 2
- Drugs to be avoided or used with caution in liver
disease - Appendix 3
- Principles of dose adjustment in renal impairment
- GFR values
- Drugs to be avoided or used with caution in renal
impairment - Brief indication of how to adjust dose
If in doubt, check with a pharmacist
22BNF Appendices
- Appendixes 4 and 5
- Prescribing in pregnancy and breast feeding
- Appendix 6
- Intravenous additives
- Table of common drugs given IV and how to
- prepare, dilute and administer them
- BUT use the available IV monographs
- Connect, pharmacy, pharmacy documents, IV
monographs - (adult, paeds, neonatal, critical care)
23Commonly Used Latin abbreviations
- od. - omne die (once daily)
- bd. - bis die (twice daily)
- tds - ter die sumendus (to be taken three times
daily - tid - ter in die (three times daily)
- qds - quarter die sumendus (to be taken four
- times daily
- om. -omni mane (every morning)
- on. - omni nocte (every night)
- ac. - ante cibum (before food)
- pc. - post cibum (after food)
- prn - pro re nata (when required)
No longer recommended should be in English
24Types of prescription
- FP10 (white)
- Standard NHS prescription issued by GPs that can
- be dispensed by a pharmacy registered to
- dispense NHS prescriptions
- FP10(HP) Yellow
- NHS prescription issued by hospitals, that can be
dispensed by a registered pharmacy - FP10P
- Nurse prescribers NHS prescriptions that can be
- dispensed by a registered pharmacy
25Types of prescription
- Hospital prescriptions
- Outpatient clinic prescriptions
- Main inpatient drug chart(s)
- Pink ICU, yellow normal, pale blue paeds
- Anticoagulant chart
- Diabetic chart
- IV chart
- Syringe driver chart
- Private prescriptions
- Medical student prescriptions - purple
26Factors affecting prescribing
- Patients clinical state
- Concomitant disease(s)
- Possible cautions, contraindications
- Severity of current disease
- Available treatments
- Likely efficacy of treatments
- Side-effects/tolerability
- Allergy status
- Interactions (drugs and food)
- Compliance/health benefits
- Health beliefs
- Past experience of medicines
27Yellow Card Reporting
- Doctors, nurses, pharmacists and patients may
- complete a yellow card report
- Report
- 1. All suspected reactions to new medicines
(black triangle) - 2. All serious suspected reactions to established
medicines - 3. Report all serious and minor reactions in
children (lt18yrs) - 4. All reactions to herbal / alternative
medicines
28Prescribing for children
- Many drugs not licensed for use in children
- Off-licence prescribing
- Use a specialist children's formulary BNF for
Children. - Calculate dose according to age / weight / BSA
- Remember to recheck patient parameters frequently
-
29Prescribing for Children
- Possibility of altered pharmacokinetics
- Examples
- Altered ratio of body water to total body mass
- Immature and developing renal or liver function
- Consider availability of suitable product for
administration to a child (taste? liquids?) - Consider lifestyle factors e.g. school day
30Prescribing for the Elderly
- Elderly patients make up 18 of population and
account for 1/3rd of total NHS prescriptions - Altered pharmacokinetics e.g. mild renal
impairment by age 60 - Possibility of cognitive dysfunction
- Polypharmacy due to multiple disease states,
multiple drug therapy fro some diseases - Risk of falls with antihypertensives, sedative
drugs etc
31Prescribing for the Elderly
- Principles of prescribing
- Avoid unnecessary drug therapy
- Consider effect on quality of life
- Watch out for polypharmacy
- Consider choice of drug risk versus benefit
- Dose titration start with low dose, review
regularly - Dosage form swallowing difficulties
- Packaging and labelling
- NSF medication review every 6 months if gt70
years on gt4 drugs
32Common Prescribing Errors
- Wrong drug (e.g. drugs that sound alike)
- Wrong dose
- Inappropriate dosage units
- Poor/illegible prescriptions
- Failure to take account of drug interactions,
allergies - Primary / secondary care interface
- Duplication of drug therapy (drugs on admission
newly prescribed) - Wrong route/multiple routes (IV/SC/PO)
- Calculation errors
- Poor cross referencing of secondary charts
- Infusions with not enough details of diluent,
rate etc - Once weekly drugs
- Multiple dose changes not signed, not dated,
not recorded in notes
33(No Transcript)
34Please use your additional resources on ErWeb to
help you become an excellent prescriber
35Any questions?