
Editorial
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These medication errors have occurred in health care facilities at least once. They will happen again—perhaps where you work. Through education and alertness of personnel and procedural safeguards, they can be avoided. You should consider publishing accounts of errors in your newsletters and/or presenting them at your inservice training programs.
Your assistance is required to continue this feature. The reports described here were received through the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) Medication Errors Reporting Program. Any reports published by ISMP will be anonymous. Comments are also invited; the writers' names will be published if desired. ISMP may be contacted at the address shown below.
Errors, close calls, or hazardous conditions may be reported directly to ISMP through the ISMP Web site (www.ismp.org), by calling 800-FAIL-SAFE, or via e-mail at
The purpose of this feature is to heighten awareness of specific adverse drug reactions (ADRs), discuss methods of prevention, and promote reporting of ADRs to the US Food and Drug Administration's (FDA's) MedWatch program (800-FDA-1088). If you have reported an interesting, preventable ADR to MedWatch, please consider sharing the account with our readers.
The complexity of cancer chemotherapy requires that pharmacists be familiar with the complicated regimens and highly toxic agents used. This column reviews various issues related to preparing, dispensing, and administering antineoplastic therapy and to the agents, commercially available and investigational, used to treat malignant diseases.
This
Describe the need for a revision to a treatment algorithm for community-associated methicillin-resistant
Medical records for patients seen in the emergency department (ED) for CA-MRSA skin infections from October 2005 through August 2007 were compared with records for patients seen from September 2002 through September 2004.
Most patients with CA-MRSA initially were seen in the ED; however, by mid-2007 an increasing number of patients were coming to primary care clinics, particularly with recurrent episodes, and treatment for CA-MRSA was suboptimal in this setting. In addition, approximately 14% of CA-MRSA cases were not considered high risk based on the algorithm risk assessment. When the algorithm was implemented, the risk assessment classified less than 5% of CA-MRSA cases as low risk. Furthermore, newly published data suggested that incision and drainage (I&D) was sufficient for small abscesses. Therefore, a revised algorithm that provided for treatment in all ambulatory settings, encouraged I&D for small abscesses, and facilitated empiric treatment for CA-MRSA in all cases of suspected staphylococcal infection was developed. Initial feedback from providers has been positive, and a post implementation review has been planned.
A treatment algorithm that initially facilitated the care of patients with CA-MRSA skin infections in the ED only required revision because changes in the epidemiology of this disease had been observed. The new algorithm provides for empiric treatment for CA-MRSA in all cases of suspected staphylococcal skin infection, regardless of perceived risk or setting.
To report a case of probable nortriptyline toxicity associated with a combination of telithromycin and nortriptyline.
A 50-year-old white woman was admitted to the hospital with new-onset palpitations after taking 5 days of telithromycin in combination with nortriptyline. On admission her electrocardiograph showed atrioventricular nodal reentry tachycardia. The patient was also hypotensive, with a blood pressure of 90/45 mm Hg. She had been taking nortriptyline 150 mg daily at bedtime for 10 years without complications. The final day of telithromycin therapy was completed, and nortriptyline was discontinued on admission. The tachycardia subsided with a dose of diltiazem.
It is suspected that the cardiovascular symptoms observed in the patient are the result of nortriptyline toxicity caused by inhibition of CYP2D6 by telithromycin. Limited evidence shows that telithromycin may be an inhibitor of CYP2D6. An assessment of causation of the adverse effects using the Drug Interaction Probability Scale suggests a probable interaction between telithromycin and nortriptyline.
It is recommended that clinicians remain aware of possible interactions between telithromycin and known CYP2D6 substrates such as nortriptyline. Should telithromycin therapy be required, close monitoring of the potential adverse effects and/or plasma drug levels of patients taking interacting drugs is warranted.
Health care-associated infections and antimicrobial resistance are continually increasing, with fewer drugs available for effective treatment. Potential benefits of infection control and antimicrobial stewardship programs include improvements in antibiotic use and conversion from intravenous (IV) to oral antibiotics and reductions in resistance and infection rates and length of hospital stay. NorthShore University HealthSystem in Evanston, Illinois, was the first large hospital system in North America that adopted universal inpatient surveillance for methicillin-resistant
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This monthly feature will help readers keep current on new drugs, new indications, dosage forms, and safety-related changes in labeling or use. Efforts have been made to ensure the accuracy of this information; however, if there are any questions, please let us know at
With this installment we return to a topic that was the focus of this column for several years. The handheld computer market exploded in the late 1990s, with Palm leading the way for many years—especially among health care providers, pharmacists included. Much has changed since then, especially for Palm, which is the focus of this installment. We describe the new Palm
The Director's Forum series is written and edited by Michael Sanborn and Robert Weber and is designed for guiding pharmacy leaders in establishing patient-centered services in hospitals and health systems. Another specific goal of this column is addressing many of the key challenges that pharmacy directors currently face, while also providing information that will foster growth in pharmacy leadership and patient safety. Previous
Hospital Pharmacy presents this feature to keep pharmacists abreast of new publications in the medical/pharmacy literature. Articles of interest regarding a broad scope of topics are abstracted monthly. Suggestions or comments may be addressed to Jacyntha Sterling, Drug Information Specialist at Saint Francis Hospital, 6161 S Yale Ave, Tulsa, OK 74136 or e-mail: