Rational Drug Prescribing Training Course
Rational Drug Prescribing Training Course
Rational Drug Prescribing Training Course
T raining Manual
T raining Manual
Produced as part of a joint programme of the Universities of Durban-Westville and Cape Town
H S T
Health Systems Trust 504 General Building Cnr Smith and Field Streets Durban 4001 South Africa
H S T
This document is available in por table document for mat (PDF) on the HealthLink WWW site (http://www .healthlink.or g.za) or via email : hlink healthlink.org.za
This manual is based on the Guide to Good Prescribing, by the WHO Action Programme on Essential Drugs
Designed and printed by Kwik Kopy Printing Durban Tel: 031-307 3240
Contents
One Two Three Introduction Problem-based learning Rational drug prescribing
Choosing your first-choice treatment first-choice The process of rational prescribing Step 1: Step 2: Step 3: Step 4: Step 5: Step 6: patient Define the patient s problem Specify the therapeutic objective Choose a suitable treatment Start the treatment Give information, instructions and warnings Monitor (and stop?) the treatment
1 3 4 6 8 8 10 13 17 20 24 28 29 31 38
Keeping up-to-date
46 52 55 68
Appendix three: How to give medicines Appendix four: The use of injections
ONE Introduction
This manual focuses on the process of prescribing. It gives you the tools to think for yourself and not blindly follow what other people think and do. It will help you to understand why certain national or departmental standard treatment guidelines have been chosen, and teaches you how to make the best use of such guidelines. We aim to encourage all prescribers at primary care level, be they nurses, pharmacists or doctors, to prescribe medicines in a safe, efficient and cost effective manner. Rational prescribing is the process of making sure that the diagnosis, advice and treatment for any given patient are correct, and, if a medicine is used, that it is the correct choice. The medicine must be given in the correct dose over the right period of time. The patient must know enough about their medication to understand why and when they must take it and what side-effects to worry about. Importantly the drug must be available in appropriate quality and quantity at this time. To meet this goal we have developed a short problem-based training course for primary care prescribers that is taught in their own environment. The content of the course comes from needs expressed during focus group discussions by staff at primary health care facilities in KwaZulu-Natal and the Western Cape. To evaluate prescribing practices and to monitor changes resulting from the training we have included a series of drug-use indicators (Appendix one). The project will be supported and sustained by the development of a network of references and resources: from texts supplied at the time of training and telephonic access to a local pharmacist, to e-mail via HealthLink to the Medicines Information Centre in Cape Town or Durban
The Course
Small groups of 8-10 staff are taught at their own health care facility. They are taught by one, or perhaps two, trainers at a 2-day workshop. Using common clinical problems, the participants learn how to prescribe rationally. They are given practical points on using standard therapeutic guidelines. While in their own dispensary they are advised on efficient management of a dispensary. Giving patients information on their illness and medication is emphasised.
Measurement
Drug-use indicators will be collected at every facility, before and after the training. These include factors that would reflect the resources and workload of each facility, as well as the prescribing practices of the staff working there. They would be collected by the trainer to start with, but in time the staff at each clinic will learn to collect this data so they can audit their own practice. (See Appendix one.)
The future
In time a network will be built to support every prescriber: All participants are encouraged to look up or ask for information they need. The trainers will be accessible at all times to the people they train. Detailed drug information is available now by telephone or e-mail (Healthlink) to the Medicines Information Centre in Cape Town. That information is being made more accessible by the creation of local information centres. A small information centre will be running at the University of Durban-Westville from January 1997.
Contact numbers
Aarti Kishuna on 031-820 2358 (pcmic healthlink.or.za) g Catherine Or rell on 021-406 6353 (cor ell uctgsh1.ac.za) r
Most impor tantly you need be able to ASK for help if you are uncertain about your patient problem or the tr s eatment for it. Y can speak to ou someone, r efer to a book, or write to, phone or email your near est information centr e.
Telephone Ask
Read
A worried mother brings her 6 month old child to you. He has had watery diarrhoea for 2 days. He is managing to take fluids by mouth, but he vomited twice yesterday. On examination he is not feverish, is awake and alert, but has signs of dehydration (decreased skin turgor, dry mouth and rapid pulse). You spend some time advising the mother on the management of diarrhoea and prescribe oral rehydration fluid as needed for the next 5 days.
Lets look at this example. When you observe experienced clinicians, the process of choosing a treatment and writing a prescription seems easy. They reflect for a short time and usually decide quickly what to do. But dont try to imitate this! Choosing a treatment is more difficult than it seems, and to gain experience you need to work very systematically. In fact, there are two important stages in choosing a treatment. You start by considering your first-choice treatment which is the one you are familiar with. The second stage is to check that your first-choice treatment is suitable for this particular patient by going through the steps above. So, in order to continue, we should define our first-choice treatment for acute watery diarrhoea. There are a number of clinical examples in Appendix two for you to practice on.
What do you need to know about your treatment? Always ask yourself do I need a drug at all? If you are going to be using a drug you need to know a number of things about it: what is it for? (licensed indications, is it first-or second-line treatment?) how effective is it? (usually trial-based knowledge) how safe is it? (contra-indications, interactions with other prescribed drugs or over-the-counter drugs, allergies) who should NOT receive it? (check for being a high risk patient: children, geriatric, pregnant, breast-feeding, liver or renal disease, DM, porphyria etc.) how is it given and for how long? (convenience to patient, dose) what does it cost? i.e. Choose your drug treatment on the basis of efficacy, safety, suitability and cost Weighing these facts is the most difficult step, and one where you must make your own decisions. Prescribers work in varying socio-cultural contexts with many treatment options available. The aim of this manual is to teach you how, and not what, to choose, within the possibilities of your health care system. In the case of acute watery diarrhoea extra fluids and ORF will be needed to correct the loss of water and electrolytes, as well as for rehydration. This will prevent further dehydration too. Although ORF will not cure the diarrhoea, most childhood watery diarrhoea is caused by a self-limiting viral infection and will get better in 5-7 days on its own. By preventing dehydration we prevent any harm to the child. Anti-diarrhoeal agents, such as loperamide, are not indicated, especially for children, as they do not cure the problem. Body fluids continue to be lost into the intestines, but are not passed as loose stools. This gives the false impression that something is being done' while the child is still becoming dehydrated. In a primary care context in South Africa, anti-diarrhoeals are unlikely to be prescribed as they are not on the EDL. However, they are sold over-the-counter in the private sector, so we need to know a little about them so we can educate our patients about their potentially harmful effects. Antibiotics, such as cotrimoxazole, metronidazole and ampicillin, are not effective in treating watery diarrhoea, as this is usually caused by a virus, not a bacteria or a protozoa. Antibiotics are only indicated for persistent bloody and/or slimy diarrhoea, which is much less common than watery diarrhoea. Metronidazole is mainly used for proven amoebiasis. So having thought about the problem, for most patients with acute watery diarrhoea, advice and non-drug management will be effective if it is practical and acceptable for the patients circumstances. Advice is certainly safer and cheaper than drugs. If we do decide on a drug we would give ORF alone. If the drug treatment is not effective after 3-5 days, the diagnosis should be reconsidered and patient compliance checked. Your first-choice treatment is therefore: advice to continue feeding, to give extra fluids, either homemade (non-drug) or ORF (our first-choice drug treatment) and to observe the child carefully. 7
Woman, 23 years. Complains of a sore throat but is also very tired and has enlarged lymph nodes in her neck. Slight fever. She has come for the results of last weeks laboratory tests. Woman student, 19 years. Complains of a sore throat. Slight redness of the throat; but no fever and no other findings. She is a little shy and has never consulted you before for such a minor complaint. Woman, 32 years. Very sore throat, caused by a severe bacterial infection, despite penicillin prescribed last week Man, 67 years. He comes for his medication for the next two months. He says that he is doing very well and has no complaints. He only wants a prescription for digoxin 0.25 mg (60 tablets), isosorbide dinitrate 5 mg (180 tablets), furosemide 40 mg (60 tablets), salbutamol 4 mg (180 tablets), cimetidine 200 mg (120 tablets), prednisolone 5 mg (120 tablets), and amoxicillin 500 mg (180 tablets).
Patient 2:
Patient 3: Patient 4:
Her blood test confirms your clinical diagnosis of AIDS. Her problem is that the sore throat is a symptom of an underlying disease. You noticed that she was rather shy and remembered that she had never consulted you before for such a minor complaint. You ask her gently what the real trouble is, and after some hesitation she tells you that she has not menstruated for 3 months. Her real concern had nothing to do with her throat.
A careful history of patient 7 whose bacterial infection persists , despite the penicillin, reveals that she stopped taking the drugs after three days because she felt much better. She should, of course, have completed the course. Her problem has come back because of inadequate treatment. He states that he has no complaints. But is there really no problem? He may suffer from a heart condition, from asthma and from his stomach, but he definitely has one other problem: polypharmacy polypharmacy! It is unlikely that he needs all these drugs. Some may even have been prescribed to cure the side effects of another. In fact it is a miracle that he feels well. Think of all the possible side effects and interactions between so many different drugs: hypokalemia by furosemide leading to digoxin intoxication is only one example.
Patient 4
These examples illustrate that one complaint may be related to many different problems: a need for reassurance; a sign of underlying disease; a hidden request for help in solving another problem; a side effect of drug treatment; and non-adherence to treatment. So the lesson is: dont jump to therapeutic conclusions!
Patient demand
A patient may demand a treatment, or even a specific drug, and this can give you a hard time. Some patients are difficult to convince that a disease is self-limiting or may not be willing to put up with even minor physical discomfort. There may be a hidden psycho-social problem e.g. long-term use and dependence on problem, benzodiazepine. In some cases it may be difficult to stop the treatment because psychological or physical dependence on the drugs has been created. Patient demand for specific drugs occurs most frequently with pain killers, sleeping pills and other psychotropic drugs, antibiotics, nasal decongestants, cough and cold preparations, and eye/ear medicines. The personal characteristics and attitudes of your patients play a very important role. Patients expectations are often influenced for example: by the past (the previous clinician always gave a drug), by the family (the drug that helped grandma so much), by advertisements to the public. Although patients do sometimes demand a drug, prescribers often assume such a demand even when it doesnt exist. So a prescription is written because the physician thinks that the patient thinks... This also applies to the use of injections, or strong drugs in general. Patient demand for a drug may have several symbolic functions. A prescription makes a patients complaint into an illness. It may also fills the need for something to be done, and symbolises the care of the clinician. It is important to realize that the demand for a drug is much more than a demand for a chemical substance. There are no rules about how to deal with patient demand, except one: be sure that you talk with the patient and give a careful explanation. You need good communication skills to be a good clinician. Find out why the patient thinks that way. Make sure you have understood the patients arguments, and that the patient has understood you. Never forget that patients are partners in therapy; always take their point of view seriously and discuss the reasons behind your treatment choice. Your arguments are usually convincing, provided they are understandable. Your enemy when dealing with patient demand is time i.e. the lack of it. Talking and time, explanation take time and often you will be rushed. However, in the long run it is worthwhile.
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An elderly gentleman comes to you complaining of constipation. He lives alone and eats poorly as he is afraid of walking too far as his arthritis becomes painful, and so cannot get to the shops. His GP prescribed codeine tablets for the pain. Woman student, 19 years. Complains of a sore throat. Slight redness of the throat, no other findings. After some hesitation she tells you that she is three months overdue. On examination, she is three months pregnant. Woman, 24 years. Consulted you 3 weeks ago, complaining of constant tiredness after delivery of her second child. She is slightly pale, but has a normal Hb. You had already advised her to avoid strenuous exercise. She has now returned because the tiredness persists and a friend told her that a vitamin injection would do her good. This is what she wants.
Patient 6:
Patient 7:
Patient 5 (constipation) In this patient there are a number of factors contributing to the constipation: poor diet, lack of exercise and the opiate pain tablet, codeine. Our treatment objectives are to relieve his constipation, then to prevent it happening again. We must give advice on eating high fibre foods, drinking lots of fluids and trying to exercise more frequently. As he is elderly he may need support of family and friends to achieve this. We should change his analgesic to one less likely to cause constipation, e.g. paracetamol. If the constipation is severe we could prescribe our first-choice drug (a stat saline enema or a few days of liquid paraffin). If it persists, further examination is needed to exclude other diseases, such as colon cancer. Patient 6 (pregnancy) In Patient 6 you will have recognized Patient 2 who complained of a sore throat while her real problem was the suspected pregnancy. You will not solve her problem by prescribing something for her throat. The therapeutic objective depends on her attitude towards the pregnancy and she will probably need counselling more than anything else. The therapeutic objective is then to assist her to plan for the future. This will probably not involve drug treatment for her sore throat. Moreover, the fact that she is in early pregnancy should stop you from prescribing any drug at all, unless it is absolutely essential. In Patient 7 there is no clear cause for the tiredness and it is therefore difficult to make a rational treatment plan. Having excluded anaemia you may guess that as a young mother with small children and perhaps a job outside the home, she is overworked. The therapeutic objective is therefore to help her reduce physical and emotional overload.
Patient 7 (tiredness)
To achieve this it may be necessary to involve other members of the family. This is a good example of the need for non-drug therapy. Vitamins will not help, and would only act as a placebo. In fact, they would probably act as a placebo for yourself as well, creating the false impression that something is being done. As you can see, in some cases the therapeutic objective will be straightforward: the treatment of an infection or a condition. Sometimes the picture will be less clear, as in the patient with unexplained tiredness. It may even be misleading, as in the student with the 11
sore throat. You will have noticed that specifying the therapeutic objective is a good way to structure your thinking. It forces you to concentrate on the real problem, which limits the number of treatment possibilities and so makes your final choice much easier. Specifying your therapeutic objective will prevent a lot of unnecessary drug use. It should stop you from treating two diseases at the same time if you cannot choose between them, like prescribing antimalarial drugs and antibiotics in a case of fever. It will also help you avoid unnecessary prophylactic prescribing, for example, the use of antibiotics to prevent wound infection, which is a very common cause of irrational drug use. It is a good idea to discuss your therapeutic objective with the patient before you start the treatment. This may reveal that (s)he has quite different views about the cause of an illness, diagnosis and treatment. It also makes the patient an informed partner in the therapy and improves compliance.
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Review whether the active substance is likely to achieve the therapeutic objective, and whether the dosage form is suitable for the patient. Convenience contributes to patient adherence to the treatment, and therefore to effectiveness. Complicated dosage forms or packages and special storage requirements can be a problem for some patients.
b. Safety (contraindications, interactions and high risk groups)
Contraindications are determined by the mechanism of action of the drug and the characteristics of the individual patient. Drugs in the same group usually have the same contraindications. Some patients will fall into certain high risk groups. Any other illnesses should also be considered. Some side effects are serious for categories of patients only, such as drowsiness for drivers. Interactions can occur between the drug and nearly every other substance taken by the patient. Best known are interactions with other prescribed drugs, but you must also think of over-the-counter drugs the patient might be taking. Interactions may also occur with food or drinks (especially alcohol). Some drugs interact chemically with other substances and become ineffective (e.g. tetracycline and milk). Fortunately, in practice only a few interactions are clinically important.
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Decide if the active substance and dosage form of your first-choice treatment is suitable (effective, safe) for each patien.
Patient 8:
Man, 45 years, who suffers from asthma. Uses a salbutamol inhaler. A few weeks ago you diagnosed essential hypertension (145/100 on various occasions). You advised a low-salt diet, but his blood pressure remains high. You decide to add a drug to your treatment. Your first-choice drug for hypertension in patients under 50 is atenolol tablets, 50 mg a day. Girl, 3 years. Brought in with a severe acute asthmatic attack, probably precipitated by a viral infection. She has great difficulty in breathing (with an expiratory wheeze, but no green sputum), little coughing and a slight temperature (38.2oC). Further history and physical examination are normal. Apart from minor childhood infections she has never been ill before and she takes no drugs. Your treatment for such a case is a salbutamol inhaler. Woman, 22 years, 2 months pregnant. Large abscess on her right forearm. You decide that she will need surgery soon to drain the abscess, but in the meantime you want to relieve the pain. Your first-choice drug for common pain is acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) tablets.
Patient 9:
Patient 10:
Patient 8 (hypertension) Atenolol is a good drug for the treatment of essential hypertension in patients below 50 years of age, and it is very convenient. However, like all beta-blockers, it is relatively contraindicated in asthma. Despite the fact that it is a selective beta-blocker, it can worsen asthmatic problems, especially in higher doses. If the asthma is not very severe, atenolol can be prescribed in a low dose. In severe asthma you should probably switch to diuretics; almost any thiazide is a good choice.
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Patient 9 (child with acute asthma) In this child a fast effect is needed, and tablets work too slowly for that. Inhalers only work when the patient knows how to use them and can still breathe enough to inhale. In the case of a severe asthma attack this is usually not possible; moreover, some children below the age of five may experience difficulties with an inhaler. Intravenous injection in young children can be very difficult. If an inhaler cannot be used, the best alternative is to give salbutamol by nebuliser. Patient 10 (abscess) This patient is pregnant and will soon be operated on. In this case acetylsalicylic acid is contraindicated as it affects the blood clotting mechanism and also crosses the placenta. You should switch to another drug that does not interfere with clotting. Paracetamol is a good choice and there is no evidence that it has any effect on the foetus when it is given for a short time.
In all these patients your first-choice drug was not suitable, and in each case you had to change either the active substance or the dosage form, or both. Atenolol was contraindicated because of another disease (asthma); an inhaler was not suitable because the child was too young to handle it; acetylsalicylic acid was contraindicated because it affects the blood clotting mechanism and because the patient is pregnant. For each of the following cases decide whether the dosage schedule is suitable (effective, safe) for the patient. Adapt it where necessary.
Patient 11:
Woman, 43 years. History of insulin dependent diabetes for 26 years. Stable on treatment with two daily doses of insulin, 20 IU and 30 IU. Recently mild hypertension was diagnosed, and diet and general advice have not been sufficiently effective. You would like to treat this condition with a beta-blocker. Your first-choice drug is atenolol 50 mg once daily. Woman, 50 years. Chronic rheumatic disease, treated with your first-choice drug, indomethacin, 3 times 50 mg daily plus a 50 mg suppository at night. She complains of pain early in the morning.
Woman, 56 years. Newly diagnosed depression. Treated with amitriptyline 25 mg, one tablet daily at night, given 30 tablets.
Patient 12:
Patient 13:
Patient 11 (diabetes)
-blockers counteract the effect of insulin. This means that higher concentrations of insulin are needed for the same effect. The daily dose of insulin must be raised. -blockers may also mask any signs of hypoglycemia. For these two reasons you may decide to change to another drug group that does not affect glucose tolerance, e.g. calcium channel blockers.
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Patient 12 (pain at night) The plasma concentration of indomethacin probably falls below the effective level early in the morning. Any change in medication should therefore aim at increasing the plasma level in that period. You could advise her to take the evening dose later, or to set the alarm in the night to take an extra tablet. You could also increase the strength of the evening suppository to 100 mg, while decreasing her first morning tablet to 25 mg. Patient 13 (depression) A dose of 25 mg per day is not enough to treat her depression. Although she can start with such a low dose for a few days or a week, mainly to get used to side effects of the drug, she may finally need 100-150 mg per day. With 30 tablets the quantity is sufficient for one month, if the dosage is not changed before that time. But is it safe? At the beginning of the treatment the effect and side effects cannot be foreseen. And if the treatment has to be stopped, the remaining drugs are wasted. The risk of suicide also has to be considered: depressive patients are more likely to commit suicide in the initial stages of treatment when they become more active because of the drug, but still feel depressed. For these reasons 30 tablets are not suitable. It would be better to start with 10 tablets, for the first week or so. If she reacts well you should increase the dose.
Examples of drugs for which you should raise the dose slowly
u u u u u Tricyclic antidepr essants (amitriptyline, imipramine) Some anti-epileptics (carbamazepine, valpr acid) oic ACE-inhibitors in patients using diur etics Some hor monal dr therapies (cor ug ticosteroids, levothyr oxin) Opiates in cancer
In summary, checking whether your first-choice drug is also suitable for the patient in front of you is probably the most important step in the process of rational prescribing. It also applies if you are working in an environment in which essential drugs lists, formularies and treatment guidelines exist. In daily practice, adapting the dosage schedule to the individual patient is probably the most common change that you will make.
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R/
Datum
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write words in full to avoid misunderstanding. For example, write propranolol 20 milligrams, not 0.020 milligrams or 20 mg. Badly handwritten prescriptions can lead to mistakes, and it is the legal duty of the prescriber to write legibly. Instructions for use must be clear and the maximum daily dose mentioned. Use non-erasible ink. Dosage form and total amount Only use standard abbreviations that will be known to the dispenser e.g. PO for by mouth, mg for milligram. Information for the package label Some information should be copied by the pharmacist onto the label of the package. This includes how much of the drug is to be taken, how often, and any specific instructions and warnings. These should be given in lay language. Do not use abbreviations or statements like as before or as directed. When you say as required, or PRN, you must state the maximum dose per day and the minimum time between doses. Prescribers initials or signature.
Write a prescription for each of the following patients. Prescriptions are discussed below.
Patient 14: Patient 15:
Boy, 5 years. Pneumonia with greenish sputum. Your first-choice treatment is amoxicillin syrup. Woman, 70 years. Moderate congestive cardiac failure. For several years on digoxin 0.25 mg 1 tablet daily. During the visit she complains of slight nausea and loss of appetite. No vomiting or diarrhoea. You suspect side effects of digoxin, and call her doctor. As she has an appointment with him next week, and he is very busy, he advises you to halve the dose until then.
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A good clinician-patient relationship is established through the clinician having a respect for and an understanding of the patients feelings and viewpoints. You must be willing to discuss ALL issues with the patient who should be seen as your partner in the treatment of their illness. Patients need information, instructions and warnings to provide them with the knowledge to accept and follow the treatment and to acquire the necessary skills to take the drugs appropriately. In some studies less than 60% of patients had understood how to take the drugs they had received. Information should be given in clear, common language and it is helpful to ask patients to repeat in their own words some of the core information, to be sure that it has been understood.
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Look at the following prescriptions and list the most important instructions and warnings that should be given to the patient. You may consult your pharmacology books.
Patient 16: Patient 17: Patient 18: Patient 19:
Woman, 28 years. Vaginal trichomonas infection. Treatment: metronidazole 500 mg, 1 vaginal tablet daily for 10 days. Man, 45 years. Newly diagnosed essential hypertension. Treatment: atenolol 50 mg, 1 tablet daily. Boy, 5 years. Pneumonia. Treated with amoxicillin syrup, 5 ml (= 250 mg) three times daily. Woman, 22 years. Migraine. Treatment: paracetamol 500 mg, 2 tablets 20 min. after metoclopramide 10 mg 1 suppository, at the onset of an attack.
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Patient 16 (vaginal trichomonas) As in any infection the patient should be told why the course has to be finished completely, even when the symptoms disappear after two days. The patient should also be informed that treatment is useless if the partner is not treated as well. Careful and clear instructions are needed for vaginal tablets. If possible, pictures or leaflets should be used to show the procedure (see Appendix 3). Side effects of metronidazole are a metal taste, diarrhoea or vomiting, especially with alcohol, and dark urine. Give a clear warning against the use of alcohol. Patient 17 (essential hypertension) The problem with the treatment of hypertension is that patients rarely experience any positive effect of the drugs, yet they have to take them for a long time. Compliance may be very poor if they are not told why they should take the drug, and if treatment is not monitored regularly. The patient should be told that the drug prevents complications of high blood pressure (angina, heart attack, cerebral problems). You can also say that you will try to decrease the dose after three months, or even stop the drug entirely. Remember to check whether the patient has a history of asthma. Patient 18 (boy with pneumonia) The patients mother should be told that the penicillin will need some time to kill the bacteria. If the course of treatment is stopped too soon, the stronger ones will survive, and cause a second, possibly more serious infection. In this way she will understand why it is necessary to finish the course. Knowing that any side effects will disappear soon will increase the likelihood of compliance. She should also be told to contact you immediately if a rash, itching or rising fever occur. Patient 19 (migraine) In addition to other information the important instruction here is that the metoclopramide (preferably a suppository) should be taken 20 minutes before the analgesic, to prevent vomiting. Because of possible sedation and loss of coordination she should be warned not to drive a car or handle dangerous machinery.
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This may seem a long list to go through with each patient. You may think that there is not enough time; that the patient can read the package insert with the medicine; that the dispenser should give this information; or that too much information on side effects could even decrease compliance. Yet it is the prime responsibility of the prescriber to make sure that the treatment is understood by the patient, and this responsibility cannot be shifted to the dispenser or a package insert. Maybe not all side effects have to be mentioned, but you should at least warn your patients of the most dangerous or inconvenient side effects. Having too many patients is never accepted by a court of law as a valid excuse for not informing and instructing a patient correctly.
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Step 6:
If our first patient, with diarrhoea, does not return, he is probably better. If there is no improvement and he does come back there are three possible reasons: (1) the treatment was not effective; (2) the treatment was not safe, e.g. because of unacceptable side effects; or (3) the treatment was not convenient, e.g. the dosing was hard to follow or the taste of the medicine was unpleasant. Combinations are also possible. You have learned how to choose a rational drug treatment, how to write the prescription and what to tell your patient. However, even a well chosen treatment may not always help the patient. Monitoring the treatment lets you know whether it has been successful or whether you need to do something more. Have you achieved your therapeutic objectives? You chose the treatment on the basis of efficacy, safety, suitability and cost. You should use the same criteria for monitoring the effect, but in practice you could ask two questions: is the treatment effective? Are there any side effects? To do this you need to keep in touch with your patient. When your patient leaves the clinic, you could either: (1) explain to the patient what to do if the treatment is not effective, is inconvenient or if too many side effects occur (passive monitoring: done by the patient) or (2) you could make an appointment for the patient to see you again, to check if the treatment has been effective yourself (active monitoring). You will need to decide after what interval the patient must return. This will depend on the type of illness, the duration of treatment, and the maximum quantity of drugs to prescribe. At the start of treatment the interval is usually short; it may gradually become longer, if needed. Three months should be the maximum for any patient on long-term drug therapy. Even with active monitoring the patient will still need to be given information, instructions and warnings. If the disease is cured, the treatment can be stopped (unless it needs to be continued for a fixed time e.g. antibiotics, TB therapy). However, if the patients symptoms continue, you will need to consider whether the diagnosis, treatment, compliance and your monitoring were all correct. In fact the whole process starts again. If the disease is not yet cured or is chronic, and the treatment is effective and without side effects, it can be continued. If serious side effects have occurred you should reconsider your selected drug and dose, and check whether the patient was correctly instructed. Many side effects are dose dependent, so you may try to lower the dose before changing to another drug. Sometimes there may be no solution to the problem. For example, in chronic diseases such as hypertension, careful monitoring and improving compliance to the treatment may be all that you can do. In some cases you will change a treatment because the focus switches from curative to palliative care, as in terminal cancer or AIDS. If you decide to stop drug treatment you should remember that not all drugs can be stopped at once. Some drugs have to be tailed off, by decreasing the dose.
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In the following cases, try to decide whether the treatment can be stopped or not.
Patient 20:
Man, 40 years. Review visit after pneumonia, treated with oral ampicillin (2 grams daily) for one week. No symptoms remain, only slight unproductive cough. Examination normal. Woman, 52 years. Mild hypertension for the past two years. Responded well to a thiazide diuretic (25 mg daily). The maintenance dose has already been decreased twice because her blood pressure had dropped to around normal. She regularly forgets to take the drug. Man, 75 years. Had been prescribed diazepam for one week, because of sleeplessness after his wife died six months ago. He asks for more, because he is afraid he will still not be able to sleep.
Patient 21:
Patient 22:
Patient 20 (pneumonia) The course of treatment was defined in advance. It was effective and without side effects. The ampicillin can be stopped. Patient 21 (mild hypertension) This treatment seems effective and without side effects. The patient is no longer hypertensive and may not need continued therapy, especially since she regularly forgets to take the drug. You can stop the treatment for assessment but you must continue to monitor the patient.
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Patient 22 (insomnia) As the patient wants to continue the treatment it was obviously effective. However, benzodiazepines can produce psychological and physical dependence when taken regularly for more than a few weeks. In addition, tolerance develops quickly and this can lead patients to take more than the recommended dose. You should explain this to the patient and also tell him that the nature of the sleep induced by such drugs is not the same as normal sleep, but the result of suppressed brain activity. Encourage him to try to return to natural sleep patterns; possibly a warm bath or a hot milk drink will help to promote relaxation before bedtime. It may also help to encourage him to express his feelings about his loss; acting as a sympathetic listener is probably your major therapeutic role in this case, rather than prescribing more drugs. In this case the drug can be stopped at once because it was only used for one week. This cannot be done when patients have taken benzodiazepines for longer periods of time.
No, disease not cur ed: Check all steps. u u u u u u Diagnosis cor rect? Therapeutic objective cor ect? r First-choice dr suitable for this patient? ug Drug prescribed cor rectly? Patient instr ucted cor rectly? Effect monitor correctly? ed
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Conclusion
So, what at first seems just a simple consultation of only a few minutes, in fact requires a quite complex process of professional analysis. What you should not do is copy the clinician and memorize that treatment. Instead, build your clinical practice on the core principles of choosing and giving a treatment, which have been outlined. The process is summarised below.
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Keeping up-to-date
Knowledge and ideas about drugs are constantly changing. New drugs come on the market and experience with existing drugs expands. Side effects become better known and new indications or ways of using existing drugs are developed. In general a clinician is expected to know about new developments in drug therapy. For example, if a drug-induced illness occurs which the clinician could have known and prevented, courts in many countries would hold them liable. Lack of knowledge is not an excuse. How can you keep up-to-date? Make a list of available types of information. There may be a number of options: journals (nursing, medical, pharmacological), reference books, national or regional drug information centres, and locally produced formularies (SAMF, Primary Health Care Formularies). You must remember that some information sources may be produced with the intention of making the drug look favourable so that you will prescribe it. Be careful to be sure your information is unbiased. In South Africa the Medicines Information Centre in Cape Town will answer most drug queries. They can be contacted by: (1) telephone: (021) 448 3202 (2) e-mail <micguest@uctgsh1.uct.ac.za> (3) letter: c/o Dept of Pharmacoloy, Medical School, University of Cape Town, Private Bag, Rondebosch, 7700. In KwaZulu-Natal there will be a smaller information centre opening from January 1997. At any time you can contact either of the authors of this manual (we work at the above centres too). Aarti Kishuna on 031-820 2358 (pcmic healthlink.or.za) g Catherine Or rell on 021-406 6353 (cor ell uctgsh1.ac.za) r
You will not need information on every patient you see. But for that one you are worried about: call somebody, read a reference or e-mail!!!!
28
A prescriber is more likely to use a guideline: 1. When they actually involved in the creating of the guideline. This may happen in your own clinics. National guidelines quite often need some local adaptations and input. 2. When exposed to an education campaign on a particular problem. 3. When they are unsure about a clinical problem. 4. When a guideline has significantly improved a patients outcome in the past i.e. when the guideline is good. In summary STGs are there to help. As long as you are aware of their shortcomings they can be a very useful and important clinical tool. If you doubt a guideline, cross check it!
30
SELECTION
USE
MANAGEMENT
PROCUREMENT
DISTRIBUTION
Source: MSH, 1981 : 11
31
includes what products should be available and in what quantities. includes purchasing methods, finance, terms of payment, sources of supply, quality assurance, decision to make or buy. includes import management, inventory control, storage, waste management and transport. includes prescribing and dispensing practices, packaging and labelling, training auxiliary personnel and educating consumers.
Decisions regarding Selection and Procurement of drug supplies are generally made at Provincial and National levels. You, in turn, influence such decisions by the manner in which you manage your facilities drug supplies at district level in terms of the Distribution and Use of these drugs. Bearing these issues in mind we realise that efficient management of drug supplies at your facility becomes a crucial concern. Why? It becomes important in order to meet the following goal - the goal governing efficient stock management.
Goal
To ensure the constant and r egular supply of safe and effective drugs at the health facility
To achieve this goal we will now discuss the following issues which impact on how you manage your supply of drugs at your district-based health facilities.
Drug ordering
The quantities of drugs needed by your facility are estimated by considering how much of drugs you presently have on hand in your storeroom and how much of drugs you have already used up. This information will be provided to you if you have maintained stock records for each drug. An example of a stock record card is presented in Figure 2.
32
Figure 2a
Recorder Level: Order Quantity: Maximum Level: Review Period: Safety Stock:
Date
Document Number
33
34
Issued to / Rec'd from Received Issued Balance Initial Date Received Issued Balance Initial Document Number Issued to / Rec'd from
Figure 2b
Date
Document Number
Description describes the item e.g. Aspirin tabs, 325mg. Stock number follows a logical sequence based on therapeutic categories, the order of products on the shelves, or any system you have used to store your drugs.
Refers to the pack size of the drug, e.g. 500 tablet jars of aspirin. You may have set a stock level for each of your drugs. As soon as the total of the drugs you have in stock plus the stock on order falls below the recorder level, you must place another order.
Estimated Monthly Consumption This is an average figure representing your recent consumption/use of the particular drug. This figure may be calculated by adding up the total amount of the drug you have used for the past year and dividing this total by 12. This will tell you how much of the drug you may have used, on average, per month. Order Quantity You may have a set order quantity for each drug, Every time you place an order it is for this quantity of drug. Should the consumption of a drug increase then you will have to increase your order quantity. You may have set a maximum level for each drug in order to help determine the quantity that needs to be ordered each time an order is placed. You may have set a review period during which time you review stock levels and initiate orders. Review periods can be two, three, four, or twelve months. Safety stock is the stock over and above what you actually use. It is the stock you keep for emergencies. Each time stock is received into the inventory or issued, the transaction must be recorded. This information provides a record of stock movement and running stock balance. When drugs are received the reference number of the receiving document should recorded. When drugs are issued there should be a numbered requisition form on which the amount requested is indicated. In your case this should be the prescription. It is a good idea for the person issuing or receiving drugs to sign on their initials on the stock record card. This will help should queries arise.
Maximum Level
Review Period
Document No:
Initials
The information contained on a stock record card helps you to: determine the quantity of each drug that you need to order. determine how much of each drug you have used. What system do you presently use to identify the following: how much stock of a drug you have on hand and how much you have used. the quantity of drugs that are to be ordered. how often should you order your drugs.
35
The supply period is the time between when you receive your drug orders from the feeder hospital/depot. If you order and receive drugs once a week then your supply period is weekly. Factors that effect your consumption/use patterns and thereby influencing your supply period include: seasonal variations disease outbreaks rainy conditions - this is an issue when your facility is situated in an area that becomes inaccessible during rainy weather.
Stock taking
Stock taking should be performed regularly. This will inform you whether your stock record system is effective or not. It will also help identify staff who require further training in using the stock record system appropriately.
Storage
Poor storage conditions result in the deterioration of your drugs. This in turn leads to poor quality of drugs which could be harmful to patients, especially the tetracylines. Factors affecting storage: heat moisture light Therefore you must maintain adequate storage conditions by ensuring: good circulation of air through the use of airconditioners/fans dryness
Arrangement of stock
Drugs should not be stored on floors. Most of your dispensary have shelves upon which to store your drugs. Store similar dosage forms together e.g. Liquids, tablets/capsules. Store either using therapeutic classes or alphabetically. Stick labels on shelves to identify items. Rotate stock by using the FIFO system i.e. First stock in must be first stock out. Bear in mind the expiry dates of stock. Use the FEFO system, i.e. First expired must be first used. 36
Narcotics and Controlled Substances: Store in a secure place which has limited access. Combustibles e.g. alcohol, fuel, ether: Store in special rooms which are separated from normal storage areas. Whilst storerooms need to have ready access, precautions must be taken to ensure adequate security of stock.
37
Goal
At the completion of this training session you would be in a position to fulfil the following goal: Ensure that an effective form of the correct drug is deliver to the right patient, in the pr ed escribed dosage and quantity with clear instr , uctions, and in a package which maintains the potency of the dr ug
Since most of your patients will be swallowing the drugs you dispense to them it is absolutely important to maintain your dispensing environment in a clean and tidy manner at all times.
Figure 1
Source:
38
The principals of good dispensing fall into five categories. These are : Interpretation of the request (written or oral) Retrieval Formulation (counting, pouring, compounding) Processing/Labelling Delivery
Retrieval
Now that you have understood the prescription you need to retrieve the drug/s from the dispensary stock. Read the label on the stock bottle. The stock bottle contains either tablets, capsules or liquids in bulk from which smaller quantities/volumes can be counted/poured. Look at the product name, strength, dosage form and expiry date. Repeat the label reading two more times (before counting the tablets/capsules or pouring out liquids and immediately after). Return the stock drug to the original shelf position immediately after formulation.
Formulation
Pre-manufactured drugs need to be counted, poured or reconstituted. Prevent cross contamination of your drugs by using clean utensils. For instance when counting tablets or capsules wipe the tablet counter after each use. Similarly when measuring liquids rinse out the measuring cylinder between measurements. Follow this technique when measuring liquids, eg. the reconstitution of antibiotics. a. Choose the smallest measuring cylinder that will hold the required volume.
39
b. Hold the measuring cylinder at eye level with a finger positioned to show the true meniscus. The true meniscus is the lowest part of the liquid surface. This must be in line with the top of the graduation mark of the measuring cylinder as indicated in this diagram.
Figure 2 The true meniscus
25 20 15 10 5
c. Carefully pour the liquid into the centre of the measuring cylinder. d. Add this quantity of liquid/water, in small amounts, to the bottle containing the antibiotic powder. Shake the bottle to ensure dissolution of the powder. When counting tablets or capsules count in 5s rather than 10s to avoid making mistakes. REMEMBER !!! Short counts lead to drug therapy failures especially with antibiotics. Why? Over counts have financial implications. Why? As a dispenser you must be aware of the physical signs indicating deterioration of the drug product. These include changes in the colour, smell and consistency of the drug product. 40
Processing/labelling
After having formulated the prescription, i.e. having counted out the required number of tablets or capsules, or having reconstituted an antibiotic you now have to package the drug/s into appropriate containers which are adequately labelled. Packaging affects the quality of medicine. Therefore think of the following when you pack out your drugs. a. The container must be rigid enough to prevent damage to the contents. b. The packaging must not react with the contents, eg. do not wrap tablets in absorbent paper. Why? c. The closure of the packaging must prevent access to moisture loss of moisture from creams and ointments entry of dirt or other contaminants. d. The closure must be easy to remove and replace. e. If your drug product is sensitive to light ensure that this is protected by dispensing these products into amber coloured bottles. f. It must be easy to label the container correctly. Drugs may either be pre-packed from bulk containers or packed into course-of-therapy packages. In course-of-therapy packaging the drugs are prepacked into sealed plastic bags/ containers containing the complete course of treatment, eg. fifteen amoxil capsules for a five day course of treatment. After having packed out the drug into an appropriate container you then need to label your container adequately. The labels on dispensed medicines should a. Give the patient clear and complete instructions on how to take or use the drug. These instructions may be demonstrated through the use of certain symbols as indicated in the diagram.
41
Figure 3
OR
Mother: take one capsule in the morning and two at bedtime
By the Clock
Tablets
Capsules
Teaspoons
Drops
Stamps or drawings the dispenser can use to indicate number of tablets, capsules, teaspoons, or drops to be taken
Nose drops
Suppositories
Source:
42
b. Indicate the storage conditions necessary to ensure full potency throughout the treatment period, eg. store reconstituted antibiotics in the refrigerator to maintain its stability. c. Be neatly written and carefully displayed on the container. Although you may use symbols to demonstrate the dosage instructions, you should also make certain that you have written out these instructions. Why? Never write a label as 2x3x5. A proper label must have the name of the patient, name of the drug, strength of the dosage form, quantity, dosage instructions and the date or prescription book reference number.
Delivery
Once you have labelled the prescribed medicines adequately you then hand over this to the patient. This is when appropriate and relevant counselling of the patient regarding the use of the drug has to be provided to improve compliance. It must be remembered that the prescriber has a responsibility to diagnose and prescribe. S/he will explain the illness and prognosis to the patient. The dispenser is responsible for providing the following information to the patient : Mode of action of the drug. The method and time of administration or application. Potential good and bad effects of the drug. Factors influencing the drugs activity and relate this to the patients lifestyle, eg. food/drink/activities/habits. Provides patient education in order to improve compliance. Both the prescriber and dispenser must be aware of the different factors which influence patient compliance. These are emphasised in the picture over.
43
Figure 4
44
Percentage of patients with adequate knowledge of dosage instructions. no. of patients interviewed with adequate knowledge of dosage instructions total number of patients interviewed Percentage of dispensed drugs adequately labelled. no. of patients interviewed with adequately labelled drugs total no. of patients interviewed X 100 X 100
Reference: Management Sciences for Health. Managing Drug Supply. Boston, Massachussets, U.S.A., 1981.
45
Appendix one
Sampling
Facilities include the outpatient department of a district hospital, community health centres, clinics and mobiles. Sampling of the facilities will be dependent on the number of facilities per district. In each region there should be a maximum of 20 facilities sampled. The number of patient encounters/prescriptions reviewed per facility would be 30, resulting in a total of 600 encounters for each region. The indicators will be analysed to give a score which will reflect the prescribing patterns for each district and region. This data will be given to the facilities staff as a form of audit of their own work. This will enable problem areas to be identified and worked on and areas of excellence to be noted and praised.
Indicators to be collected
Indicators for the whole facility: the format is that of a form which would be completed for each facility.
46
The following forms may be photocopied and used to collect the indicators for each facility, (circle) the appropriate number that corresponds to your answer, or write in your answer where indicated with a line.
Prescription Number
1)
Type of facility (A1): 3 2 1 0 District Hospital OPD Community Health Centre Clinic Mobile clinic
2) 3) 4)
Number of patients seen at the facility per day (A2)? ............................................................................. Number of workdays in a year (A3) ................................................................................................................................ Degree of access to a Section 38a nursing sister (A4): 3 2 1 0 at the clinic daily weekly visits monthly visits visits less than monthly
5)
Degree of access to a pharmacist (A5): 3 2 1 0 at the clinic daily weekly visits monthly visits visits less than monthly/never
6)
Degree of access to a doctor (A6): 3 2 1 0 at the clinic daily weekly visits monthly visits visits less than monthly/never
7)
Predominant source of medicines (A7): 3 2 1 0 Regional Hospital services State supplies From the manufacturers directly Donations
47
8)
Do you have immediate access (i.e. can be obtained from within the facility and can be used within a few minutes) to an unbiased source of drug information (A8)? 1 0 yes no
Unbiased sources of drug information include the South African Medicines Formulary, the Medunsa Primary Health Care Formulary or other reference textbooks. They do NOT include any potentially biased information produced by a pharmaceutical company. 9) Do you have immediate access to Standard Treatment Guidelines (STGs) (A9)? 1 0 yes no
These may be local, district or national guidelines. 10) Is there a copy of the South African National Essential Drugs List immediately available (A10)? 1 0 yes no
11) Annual budget for medicines in Rands (A1 1.1) and US dollars (A1 1.2)? 12) Source of the information provided in questions 7 and 1 1(A12)? 3 2 1 0 available from the facility itself within the same district within the same province outside the province/not available
13) Number of key drugs available for use (see list below) (A13):........................................................................ 14) Number of key drugs used before expiry date (A1 ................................................................................................. 4): 15) Number of key drugs stored correctly (A15): .......................................................................................................................... List of key drugs: oral rehydration fluid procaine penicillin injection chloroquin tablets mebendazole tablets cotrimoxazole tablets paediatric paracetamol syrup ferrous salts and folic acid tetracycline eye ointment
benzoic acid and salicylic acid ointment vitamin A tablets 16) In general, how do the staff at your facility feel about their knowledge of medicines (A15)? 3 2 1 0 knowledge is excellent good, feel safe treating a patient poor, needs to be improved non-existent
48
17) How do the staff feel about the access they have to drug information (references/textbooks/ by phone or e-mail) (A16)? 3 2 1 0 access is excellent good, feel information is available when needed poor, access needs to be improved not accessible at all
18) Do your staff feel supported in the implementation of the EDP (A1 7)? 3 2 1 0 yes, support is excellent good, feel support is available poor, support needs to be improved no support at all
49
Indicators for each prescription: This data will be collected on a separate form for each prescription reviewed
Prescription Number
1)
2)
3) 4) 5) 6)
The number of drugs prescribed (B3): ........................................................................................................................................................... Number of prescribed drugs that are on the EDL (B4): .......................................................................................................... Number of drugs that have been prescribed by their generic name (B5):.................................................. Is the prescription in accordance with the STGs for that diagnosis (B6)? ..................................................... 3 2 1 0 Yes almost all points coincide some points coincide not at all
7) 8) 9)
Total cost of the prescription (B7): ......................................................................................................................................................................... Number of drugs prescribed that were actually dispensed (B8):.............................................................................. Number of dispensed drugs adequately labelled: (To be labelled properly there must be ALL of the following on the label: the name of the patient, the name of the drug, the dosage instructions and the date of drug.) (B9) .........................................................................................................................................................
10) Total cost of dispensed medication (B10):................................................................................................................................................. 11) Did the patient have an adequate knowledge of dosage instructions: (Patient should know ALL of the following: how much, how often and for how long to take their medication, as well as common side-effects. e.g. I must take amoxil, one capsule three times a day for five days and it may make me have loose stools.) (B1 1) 3 2 1 0 knowledge was good (all 4 points known) Knowledge was reasonable (knew 2 or 3 points) Little knowledge (knew one point only) did not have any knowledge of the instructions.
50
Indicators for each drug Please record the names of all the medications prescribed (as written), their strength, dose and the duration of treatment. (From this we can work out the costs required above.)
Name of medication:
Strength of medication:
Dose of medication:
Duration of treatment:
e.g.
Amoxcil
250 mg
PO, 6 hrly
10 days
51
Appendix two
Clinical cases
These cases can be used to practice your skills at prescribing rationally. There are 12 cases. Subsections a. b. and c. are variations on the same case.
Case 1a A 5 year old boy presents to you with a 3 day history of a painful left ear, and tender glands in his neck. A 5 year old boy presents to you with a 3 day history of a painful left ear, and tender glands in his neck. He has an allergy to penicillin. A 5 year old boy presents to you with a 3 day history of a painful left ear, and tender glands in his neck. He has an allergy to penicillin. He has a history of kidney problems. A 24 year old woman presents with her first episode of frequency and burning pain on passing urine. This has been happening for 3 days. She is otherwise well. A 24 year old woman presents with her first episode of frequency and burning pain on passing urine. This has been happening for 3 days. She is otherwise well. She is breastfeeding a 2 month old baby. A 24 year old woman presents with an episode of frequency and burning pain on passing urine. This has been happening for 3 days. She is otherwise well. She is breastfeeding a 2 month old baby. This is her fifth episode of urinary tract infection over the past year. A 6 month old boy from a childrens home is brought to you by his carer. He has been irritable for 2 days and has not wanted to eat. He started vomiting this morning. On examination you find he has a stiff neck and a few red spots on his skin. An 18 month old child arrives at your clinic for his routine check-up and vaccinations. He weighs 9 kg. His mother tells you he has had 4 episodes of diarrhoea this year. An 18 month old child arrives at your clinic for his routine check-up and vaccinations. He weighs 9 kg. His mother tells you he has had 4 episodes of diarrhoea this year. His fingerprick Hb is 9.5g/dl. An 18 month old child arrives at your clinic for his routine check-up and vaccinations. He weighs 9 kg. His mother tells you he has had 4 episodes of diarrhoea this year. His fingerprick Hb is 9.5g/dl.You notice oral candidiasis and some enlarged lymph nodes under his arms. A previously well, but quite overweight woman comes to you complaining of thirst, having to drink a lot of water and pass lots of urine over the past few months. On urine dipstix there is +++ Glucose and her fingerprick glucose is 1 mmol/L. 1.4 A previously well, but quite overweight woman came to you 3 months ago with symptoms of Diabetes Mellitus. She returns, having tried your treatment, with headaches and flashes if front of her eyes, especially on straining. Her Glu is 6.0, but her blood pressure is 150/ 110.
Case 1b
Case 1c
Case 2a
Case 2b
Case 2c
Case 3
Case 4a
Case 4b
Case 4c
Case 5a
Case 5b
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Case 6a
A 23 year old man is brought in from work complaining of a tight, wheezy chest for the past hour. He does not smoke but has recently been apprenticed to a carpenter. A 23 year old man is brought in from work complaining of a tight, wheezy chest for the past hour. It turns out that he has had this problem before and uses his sisters inhaler when he needs to. The wheezing has been getting worse: he needs to use the inhaler twice a week now for wheezing and he has been coughing at night. A 23 year old man is brought in from work with an acute asthma attack and generally worsening symptoms. He had a car accident 5 years ago after which he had fits. He is taking carbamazepine and has not had a fit for a year now. A young woman is helped into the clinic. She has a sprained ankle which is quite swollen and painful. She asks for something for the pain. A young woman is helped into the clinic. She has a sprained ankle which is quite swollen and painful. She asks for something for the pain. She is 28 weeks pregnant. A 15 year old schoolgirl comes to Family Planning asking for an oral contraceptive . She has been sleeping with her boyfriend for a month and is worried about becoming pregnant. A 15 year old schoolgirl comes to Family Planning asking for an oral contraceptive . She has been sleeping with her boyfriend for a month and is worried about becoming pregnant. She has had TB for 4 months and is being treated on Isoniazid and Rifampicin. A 15 year old schoolgirl comes to Family Planning asking for an oral contraceptive. She has had TB for 4 months and is being treated on Isoniazid and Rifampicin. She has noticed that her boyfriend has an ulcer on his penis. It does not hurt him at all. A 54 year old man comes to you with a bite on his arm from his dog. He is worried that it may be infected. A 54 year old man comes to you with a bite on his arm from his dog. He is worried that it may be infected. He has congestive cardiac failure controlled on furosemide and digoxin. A 54 year old man comes to you with a bite on his arm from his dog. He is worried that it may be infected. He has congestive cardiac failure controlled on furosemide and digoxin. His Slow K tablets have run out. He has been feeling nauseous of late and felt his heart beating very fast. An 8 month old boy is carried in by his mother. He has had watery diarrhoea for the past 2 days. His mum has not noticed any blood or mucus in the stool, nor has she seen any worms. He has not vomited either. You find he is slightly dehydrated. The 8 month old boy that you saw 2 days ago with mild watery diarrhoea now returns to you. Mum says he is refusing to drink and is vomiting everything she gives him. This time when you examine him he seems lethargic, has cold hands and feet and is very dehydrated. A 9 year old girl who you have seen in the town comes to you saying she has a cough and is coughing up green phlegm. She had a cold last week. She has a mild fever, with a temperature of 37.5, and is breathing at 24 breaths a minute. Her chest is clear. The 9 year old girl who you saw yesterday with a cough producing green phlegm has come to you again. When she coughs her chest hurts on the left side. She now has a fever, with a temperature of 38.5, and is breathing at 40 breaths a minute. You can hear some crackles over her left lower chest.
Case 6b
Case 6c
Case 7a
Case 7b
Case 8a
Case 8b
Case 8c
Case 9a
Case 9b
Case 9c
Case 10a
Case 10b
Case 1 1a
Case 1 1b
53
Case 12a
A worried 36 year old woman comes to your clinic complaining of lower abdominal pain and a smelly vaginal discharge. A worried 36 year old woman comes to your clinic complaining of lower abdominal pain and a smelly vaginal discharge. For the last few weeks she has thought she was pregnant, but 2 days ago she had bad stomach cramps and passed some clots of blood.
Case 12b
54
Appendix three
Table of Contents
1. Eye drops 2. Eye ointment 3. Ear drops 4. Nasal drops 5. Nasal spray 6. Transdermal patch 7. Inhaler 8. Inhaler with capsule 9. Suppositories 10. Vaginal tablet with applicator 11. Vaginal tablet without applicator 12. Vaginal cream, ointment and gel Page 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67
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1. Eye Drops
1. Wash your hands. 2. Do not touch the dropper opening. 3. Look upward. 4. Pull the lower eyelid down to make a gutter. 5. Bring the dropper as close to the `gutter' as possible without touching it or the eye. 6. Apply the prescribed amount of drops in the gutter. 7. Close the eye for about two minutes. Do not shut the eye too tight. 8. Excess fluid can be removed with a tissue. 9. If more than one kind of eye-drop is used wait at least five minutes before applying the next drops. 10. Eye-drops may cause a burning feeling but this should not last for more than a few minutes. If it does last longer consult a doctor or pharmacist.
Steps 4 and 5
56
2. Eye ointment
1. Wash your hands. 2. Do not touch anything with the tip of the tube. 3. Tilt the head backwards a little. 4. Take the tube in one hand, and pull down the lower eyelid with the other hand, to make a gutter. 5. Bring the tip of the tube as close to the gutter as possible. 6. Apply the amount of ointment prescribed. 7. Close the eye for two minutes. 8. Remove excess ointment with a tissue. 9. Clean the tip of the tube with another tissue.
Steps 4 and 5
57
3. Ear drops
1. Warm the ear-drops by keeping them in the hand or the armpit for several minutes. Do not use hot water tap, no temperature control! 2. Tilt head sideways or lie on one side with the ear upward. 3. Gently pull the lobe to expose the ear canal. 4. Apply the amount of drops prescribed. 5. Wait five minutes before turning to the other ear. 6. Use cotton wool to close the ear canal after applying the drops ONLY if the manufacturer explicitly recommends this. 7. Ear-drops should not burn or sting longer than a few minutes.
Step 1
Steps 2 and 3
Step 6
58
4. Nasal drops
1. Blow the nose. 2. Sit down and tilt head backward strongly or lie down with a pillow under the shoulders; keep head straight. 3. Insert the dropper one centimetre into the nostril. 4. Apply the amount of drops prescribed and remove the dropper. 5. Immediately afterward tilt head forward strongly (head between knees). 6. Sit up after a few seconds, the drops will then drip into the pharynx. 7. Repeat the procedure for the other nostril, if necessary. 8. Rinse the dropper with boiled water.
Steps 2 and 3
Step 5
59
5. Nasal spray
1. Blow the nose. 2. Sit with the head slightly tilted forward. 3. Shake the spray. 4. Insert the tip in one nostril. 5. Close the other nostril and mouth. 6. Spray by squeezing the vial (flask, container) and sniff slowly. 7. Remove the tip from the nose and bend the head forward strongly (head between the knees). 8. Sit up after a few seconds; the spray will drip down the pharynx. 9. Breathe through the mouth. 10. Repeat the procedure for the other nostril, if necessary. 11. Rinse the tip with boiled water.
Steps 4 and 5
Step 7
60
6. Transdermal patch
1. For patch site see instructions included with the drug or check with your pharmacist. 2. Do not apply over bruised or damaged skin. 3. Do not wear over skin folds or under tight clothing and change spots regularly. 4. Apply with clean, dry hands. 6. Clean and dry the area of application completely. 7. Remove patch from package, do not touch drug side. 8. Place on skin and press firmly. Rub the edges to seal. 9. Remove and replace according to instructions.
Step 7
Step 8
61
7. Inhaler
1. Cough up as much sputum as possible. 2. Shake the inhaler before use. 3. Hold the inhaler as indicated in the manufacturer's instructions (this is usually upside down). 4. Place the lips tightly around the mouthpiece (1). 5. Tilt the head backward slightly. 6. Breathe out slowly, emptying the lungs of as much air as possible. 8. Breathe in deeply (2) and squeeze the inhaler (3), keeping the tongue down. 9. Hold the breath for ten to fifteen seconds. 10. Breathe out through the nose. 11. Rinse the mouth with warm water.
2 1 4
Steps 4 and 5
Step 8
62
Steps 4
Steps 5
63
9. Suppository
1. Wash your hands. 2. Remove the covering (unless too soft). 3. If the suppository is too soft let it harden first by cooling it (fridge or hold under cold running water, still packed!) then remove covering. 4. Remove possible sharp rims by warming in the hand. 5. Moisten the suppository with cold water. 6. Lie on your side and pull up your knees. 7. Gently insert the suppository, rounded end first, into the back passage. 8. Remain lying down for several minutes. 9. Wash your hands. 10. Try not to have a bowel movement during the first hour.
Step 6
64
Steps 4 and 5
Step 6
65
Steps 4 and 5
66
Steps 4 and 5
Steps 7 and 8
67
Appendix four
68
Apart from the specific technique of injecting, there are a few general rules that you should keep in mind.
1.
Expiry dates
Check the expiry dates of each item including the drug. If you are in a mobile check the drugs in stock regularly to make sure that they have not passed the expiry date.
2. Drug
Make sure that the vial or ampoule contains the right drug in the right strength.
3. Sterility
While preparing the injection all material should be kept sterile. Wash your hands before starting to prepare the injection. Disinfect the skin over the injection site.
4. No bubbles
Make sure that there are no air bubbles left in the syringe. This is more important in intravenous injections.
5. Prudence
Once the protective cover of the needle is removed extra care is needed. Do not touch anything with the unprotected needle. Once the injection has been given take care not to prick yourself or somebody else.
6. Waste
Make sure that contaminated waste is disposed of safely. (glass, plastic)
69
Technique
1. Wash your hands. 2. Put the needle on the syringe. 3. Remove the liquid from the neck of the ampoule by flicking it or swinging it fast in a downward spiralling movement. 4. File around the neck of the ampoule. 5. Protect your fingers with gauze if ampoule is made of glass. 6. Carefully break off the top of the ampoule (for a plastic ampoule twist the top). 7. Aspirate the fluid from the ampoule. 8. Remove any air from the syringe. 9. Clean up; dispose of working needle safely; wash your hands.
Step 4
Step 5
Step 6 70
Technique
1. Wash your hands. 2. Disinfect the top of the vial. 3. Use a syringe with a volume of twice the required amount of drug or solution and add the needle. 4. Suck up as much air as the amount of solution needed to aspirate. 5. Insert needle into (top of) vial and turn upside-down. 6. Pump air into vial (creating pressure). 7. Aspirate the required amount of solution and 0.1 ml extra. Make sure the tip of the needle is below the fluid surface. 8. Pull the needle out of the vial. 9. Remove possible air from the syringe. 10. Clean up; dispose of waste safely; wash your hands.
Step 4
Step 6
+ 0.1 ml
Step 7 71
Technique
1. Wash hands. 2. Disinfect the rubber cap (top) of the vial containing the dry medicine. 3. Insert the needle into the vial, hold the whole upright. 4. Suck up as much air as the amount of solvent already in the syringe. 5. Inject only the fluid into the vial, not the air! 6. Shake. 7. Turn the vial upside-down. 8. Inject the air into the vial (creating pressure). 9. Aspirate the total amount of solution (no air). 10. Remove any air from the syringe. 11. Clean up; dispose of waste safely; wash hands.
Step 4
Step 5
Step 8 72
Subcutaneous injection
Materials needed
Syringe with the drug to be administered (without air), needle (Gauss 25, short and thin; on syringe), liquid disinfectant, cotton wool, adhesive tape.
Technique
1. Wash hands. 2. Reassure the patient and explain the procedure. 3. Uncover the area to be injected (upper arm, upper leg, abdomen). 4. Disinfect skin. 5. Pinch fold of the skin. 6. Insert needle in the base of the skin-fold at an angle of 20 to 30 degrees. 7. Release skin. 8. Aspirate briefly; if blood appears: withdraw needle, replace it with a new one, if possible, and start again from point 4. 9. Inject slowly (0.5 - 2 minutes!). 10. Withdraw needle quickly. 11. Press sterile cotton wool onto the opening. Fix with adhesive tape. 12. Check the patient's reaction and give additional reassurance, if necessary. 13. Clean up; dispose of waste safely; wash hands.
Step 5
Step 3
20-30o
Step 6 73
Intramuscular injection
Materials needed
Syringe with the drug to be administered (without air), needle (Gauss 22, long and medium thickness; on syringe), liquid disinfectant, cotton wool, adhesive tape.
Technique
1. Wash hands. 2. Reassure the patient and explain the procedure. 3. Uncover the area to be injected (lateral upper quadrant major gluteal muscle, lateral side of upper leg, deltoid muscle). 4. Disinfect the skin. 5. Tell the patient to relax the muscle. 6. Insert the needle swiftly at an angle of 90 degrees (watch depth!). 7. Aspirate briefly; if blood appears, withdraw needle. Replace it with a new one, if possible, and start again from point 4. 8. Inject slowly (less painful). 9. Withdraw needle swiftly. 10. Press sterile cotton wool onto the opening. Fix with adhesive tape. 11. Check the patient's reaction and give additional reassurance, if necessary. 12. Clean up; dispose of waste safely; wash your hands.
90o
Step 4
Step 5
Step 6 74
Intravenous injection
Materials needed
Syringe with the drug to be administered (without air), needle (Gauss 20, long and medium thickness; on syringe), liquid disinfectant, cotton wool, adhesive tape, tourniquet.
Technique
1. Wash your hands. 2. Reassure the patient and explain the procedure. 3. Uncover arm completely. 4. Have the patient relax and support his arm below the vein to be used. 5. Apply tourniquet and look for a suitable vein. 6. Wait for the vein to swell. 7. Disinfect skin. 8. Stabilize the vein by pulling the skin taut in the longitudinal direction of the vein. Do this with the hand you are not going to use for inserting the needle. 9. Insert the needle at an angle of around 35 degrees. 10. Puncture the skin and move the needle slightly into the vein (3-5 mm). 11. Hold the syringe and needle steady. 12. Aspirate. If blood appears hold the syringe steady, you are in the vein. If it does not come, try again. 13. Loosen tourniquet. 14. Inject (very) slowly. Check for pain, swelling, hematoma; if in doubt whether you are still in the vein aspirate again! 15. Withdraw needle swiftly. Press sterile cotton wool onto the opening. Secure with adhesive tape. 16. Check the patient's reactions and give additional reassurance, if necessary. 17. Clean up; dispose of waste safely; wash your hands.
35 o
Step 8
Step 9
Step 11 to 14 75