Pharmacy Daily

A mishandled hospital discharge

-

A PDL member recently alerted us to a serious error that occurred on a hospital discharge summary.

A hospital inpatient was discharged to a community pharmacy with a medication prescripti­on which included Caltrate tablets with a dose of 2 tablets three times daily as the parathyroi­d had been removed.

The community pharmacist dispensing the discharge prescripti­on did not bother to label the calcium tablets as they are unschedule­d and orally advised the required dose.

As is often the way with oral instructio­ns as opposed to written ones, the patient forgot the instructed dose and took only one tablet daily which resulted in severe hypocalcae­mia and admission to hospital.

The moral of this incident is that it demonstrat­es that a prudent pharmacist would label items that are not on prescripti­on but having a stated dose. Always provide written instructio­ns to consumers when counsellin­g as distractio­ns and informatio­n overload will often result in consumers becoming confused and not absorbing oral instructio­n.

Dispensing the Caltrate through the pharmacy dispense system would not only have provided a label but it would also create a history for subsequent supplies.

 ??  ?? Welcome to Pharmacy Daily’s weekly comment feature. This week’s contributo­r is John Guy, PDL’s Profession­al Officer.
Welcome to Pharmacy Daily’s weekly comment feature. This week’s contributo­r is John Guy, PDL’s Profession­al Officer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia