Medication Safety
Medication safety has been a hot topic in the press recently.
At Danville Regional Medical Center, it has been a hot
topic for over 100 years! DRMC has implemented comprehensive
systems to assure patient medication safety. These systems
use the skills and knowledge of physicians, pharmacists,
nurses, and other healthcare workers. These systems include
complicated computer and robotics systems, health care
provider training, and quality checking.
These systems also include
a very important part of the whole process: YOU!
Yes! YOU are part
of the team that assures your safety when it comes to
receiving medication! Here's what YOU
can do to assure your own safety:
While you are here at DRMC,
you should:
- When you are admitted to the hospital, bring a
list of medications you are taking. If there isn't
time to make a list, bring the medications. Keep them
in their containers. Allow our staff to review all
of your medications. Your medications should then
be sent home - our safety systems revolve around DRMC
dispensing and administering specially packaged (unit-dosed
and robotics-read) medications, and we shouldn't use
your medications from home.
- Ask questions about each dose of medicine that
you receive here in the hospital. Your physician,
nurse, pharmacist, or other caretaker is happy to
keep you up to date on what's happening during your
care. Ask if the dose you are getting looks unfamiliar.
Ask if you expected to get a dose of medicine, but
didn't!
When you are at the doctor's
office or at your pharmacy, you should:
Ask questions about your medicine. At a minimum, your
should ask these questions:
- What are brand and generic names of the product?
- What is this medicine used for?
- What does this medicine look like?
- How should I take this medicine?
- What should I do if I miss a dose of this medicine?
- What are the side effects of this medicine?
- What should I do if I experience a side effect?
- Are there any drug-drug or drug-food interactions
with this medicine?
- How should I store this medicine?
When you ask a question,
listen to the answer. Take notes. If you don't understand
the answer, ask again.
- Always make sure your physician and pharmacist
knows about all of the medication that you are taking,
including prescriptions, nonprescription drugs, vitamins,
and herbal remedies. Pharmacists and physicians want
to make sure than any new medicine you might receive
will not interfere with any medicines you are currently
taking.
- Always alert your pharmacist and physicians about
your allergies, including allergies to food. Tell
your health care provider about when you had an allergic
reaction, what happened when you had this allergy
and how severe the reaction was.
When you are at home,
you should:
- Read your prescription label each time you take
a dose of medicine.
- Make sure you are familiar with the appearance
of your medicine. If the pills look different from
those you normally take, ask your pharmacist about
them. Sometimes, there's an easy explanation (there
may have been a safe generic substitution, or the
manufacturer may have changed the appearance of the
pills). Other times, you could help prevent a medication
error.
- Take your medicine exactly as it was prescribed.
- Discard medicines that are old or are no longer
needed. Don't put them in the trash -- flush them
down the toilet.
- Do not share your medicine with other people. Do
not take medicine prescribed for other people. This
can be dangerous.
Be a part of your
healthcare team!
Medical errors are rare, but if you are involved with
one, talk with the rest of your health care team (doctors,
nurses, pharmacists) about it. Expect honest and complete
answers.
YOU are part
of the team that assures your safety when it comes to
receiving medication! Teamwork pays off!
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