
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 pharmacists be familiar with the complicated regimens and highly toxic agents used. This column reviews various issues related to preparation, dispensing, and administration of antineoplastic therapy, and the agents, both commercially available and investigational, used to treat malignant diseases.
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Venous thromboembolism (VTE), comprised of both deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE), is a common complication for hospitalized patients. Clear guidance is available to practitioners in regard to risk factors for the development of VTE as well as strategies to decrease its prevalence. Despite knowing who is at risk and how to prevent VTE, practitioners provide adequate measures to only half of the patients who are eligible for VTE prophylaxis. Pharmacy practitioners within the Regina Qu'Appelle Health Region (RQHR) have been actively involved in improving VTE prophylaxis for inpatients over the past 10 years.
To improve the rate of VTE prophylaxis within the RQHR, thereby improving patient safety.
The strategy involved 3 phases: a preparation phase, an active intervention phase, and a maintenance and improvement phase. The preparation phase included education and participation in a national registry along with a residency project. The intervention phase consisted of a number of strategies in conjunction with 1-day VTE prophylaxis audits, and the maintenance phase consisted of ongoing educational initiatives and audits.
From January 2005 to January 2009, the percentage of patients being appropriately managed for VTE prophylaxis within the RQHR improved from 62% to 94% (
The strategy was successful in improving VTE prophylaxis in the inpatient population.
This article presents strategies on how to meet the challenges presented by the use of insulin in the hospital setting and describes trends seen in current hospital practice. Insulin provides the greatest flexibility in the hospital setting to achieve optimal blood glycemic control in patients with known type 2 diabetes, thereby reducing complications and death. Important challenges include implementing protocols for use of subcutaneous insulin injection (including optimal use of insulin pens), conversion from continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion or intravenous infusion to subcutaneous administration by multiple injections, and dosing of insulin in patients receiving corticosteroids. One important trend is a move away from the use of sliding-scale insulin to the use of correction-dose insulin as an adjunct to basal/bolus insulin. In this approach, insulin treatment is closely tailored to changing levels of glycemia, and a protocol is put in place for administration of a correction dose of rapid-acting insulin in response to a glycemic excursion. Insulin analogs can more closely mimic physiological insulin profiles than regular insulin, and rapid-acting analogs are invaluable agents as correction insulin administered by pump or in transition to multiple daily injections and as part of basal/bolus therapy. Good glycemic control can improve outcomes of hospital patients in several ways, including facilitating more rapid recovery from infections, shortening intensive care stays, and minimizing costs. Strategies employed to meet the challenges of insulin use in the hospital setting include the increasing use of continuous glucose monitoring systems and the development of insulin dosing algorithms.
To report a case of angioedema possibly associated with oseltamivir administration in a patient with chronic renal failure.
A 46-year-old female with an extensive allergy history and multiple co-morbidities, including chronic renal failure, was diagnosed with H1N1 influenza and given prescriptions for oseltamivir and methylprednisolone at an outside emergency department. She was sent home and took the first dose of both medications. The following day, the patient developed tongue swelling and left-sided edema. She discontinued methylprednisolone but continued oseltamivir. Her symptoms continued to worsen with the development of hivelike lesions and significant shortness of breath leading to hospitalization. Upon admission, oseltamivir was discontinued and the patient was started on dialysis. The patient's symptoms gradually improved, and she was discharged on hospital day 8.
Oseltamivir was thought to be the causative agent due to the abrupt onset and resolution of symptoms associated with the administration and discontinuation of the medication. Application of the Naranjo probability scale found that oseltamivir was a possible cause of the patient's angioedema.
Health care providers should be aware of the rare but potentially life-threatening angioedema that may be associated with oseltamivir use.
Each month, subscribers to
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 me know at
The evolution of the Internet is a rather fascinating piece of history. Even in the early days of use by the general public, Internet users quickly realized that tools were needed to find the information that they sought. Today, search engines are those tools, and Google is the most popular. The Google.com page is simple and to the point: enter your search terms and press the Enter key. In this installment, we provide tips that go beyond simply entering a search term.
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