Dispensing includes preparing and giving medication for a client to take later, taking steps to ensure the pharmaceutical and therapeutic suitability of the medication for its intended use, and taking steps to ensure its proper use. Nurses dispense with or without the involvement of a pharmacist.
Dispensing with a pharmacist’s involvement
When a pharmacist has already reviewed a medication’s suitability and dispensed it for the client, nurses ensure its proper use. Examples of dispensing with a pharmacist’s involvement may include:
- Providing a client leaving on a day pass with medication to take while away
- Giving a client medication supplied by a provincial agency as part of an outpatient treatment program (e.g. BC Renal Agency, BC Centre for Disease Control)
- Providing a health care worker accompanying a client to an appointment outside the organization with medication for the client to take while away
- Giving a client discharged from an inpatient unit medication (e.g. antibiotic, inhaler) to take home with them
Dispensing without a pharmacist’s involvement
When a pharmacist has not reviewed the medication’s suitability (or it’s unclear if this was done), nurses ensure the medication’s pharmaceutical and therapeutic suitability for the client and its proper use. Examples of dispensing without a pharmacist’s involvement may include:
- Providing a client discharged from ER with enough pain medication to manage until the pharmacy opens the next day
- Providing a client at a treatment centre a course of antibiotics to treat an infection
Checking for pharmaceutical and therapeutic suitability
- Check that the medication is appropriate for the client, and the dose and frequency are within usual range.
- Verify the information with client when possible.
- Review the client’s best available medication history and other personal health information
- Assess the client’s known allergies and ensure medication allergy information is documented
- Consider potential medication interactions, contraindications, therapeutic duplications, side effects, adverse effects, and any other potential problems
- Consider the client’s ability to follow the medication regimen
- Explain what the physician has ordered and confirm the client is able to take the medication as prescribed
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