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HEALTH PROFESSIONALS HAVE TROUBLEIDENTIFYING PILLS
Pharmacists and physicians may need tobrush up on their memory skills when itcomes to identifying pills on sight. A standardizeddrug-coding system, however, couldsolve this dangerous situation.
In a study reported in the May 1, 2006,issue of the American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, 1000 pharmacists andphysicians at 2 urban teaching hospitals wereasked to identify 3 commonly used tabletmedications: Zocor (a brand name statin),lorazepam (a generic sedative), and naproxen(a nonprescription generic pain reliever). Theparticipants were allowed to consult theresources "usually available to them."
Overall, medications were correctly identified63% of the time. Zocor was correctlyidentified 78% of the time, lorazepam 64% ofthe time, and naproxen 48% of the time. Only24 pharmacists (48%) and 18 physicians (36%)correctly identified all 3 drugs, whereas 5pharmacists (10%) and 10 physicians (20%)batted zero.
The study also found that confusion anderror resulting in not being able to correctlyidentify medications is common.
Currently, there is no standardization ofidentification, because manufacturers usetheir own codes and symbols. The researchersalso noted that the pharmaceuticalindustry sees reason to change thispractice.
Articles in this issue
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can you READ these Rxs?about 20 years ago
case STUDIESabout 20 years ago
Compounding HOTLINEabout 20 years ago
RESPy AWARDabout 20 years ago
Compounding for Prenatal Patientsabout 20 years ago
Prescription Monitoring Programsabout 20 years ago
Patients Sue the US Government to Allow Drugs from Canadaabout 20 years ago
FMEA Can Help Prevent Errorsabout 20 years ago
On-line Health Care: Identifying Quality Information





































































































































