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Pharm

Test 1 LP 2

QuestionAnswer
Drugs that are available to consumers without a prescription Over the Counter
The 1906 law that was the first federal law that attempted to protect the public from dangerous, adulterated, and mislabeled products Federal Food and Drug Act
The law that established the legal term “narcotic Harrison Act of 1914
Differentiated between prescription drugs and over-the-counter medications Durham-Humphrey Amendment
The law that requires drugs to be proved both safe and effective before being granted approval for use Kefauver-Harris Amendment of 1962
This law prohibited the labeling of medicines with false therapeutic claims intended to defraud the purchaser. Sherley Amendment of 1912
An inactive or inert substance that may be used in experimental studies Placebo
A special category of drugs that has been identified to help patients with rare diseases Orphan drugs
A drug not approved for marketing by the FDA but available for use in studies to determine its safety and efficacy Investigational New Drug
Another name for prescription drug Legend Drugs
The main piece of drug legislation in Canada Canadian Food and Drugs Act
The doing or active promotion of good Beneficence
The duty to do no harm to a patient Nonmaleficence
Variation in response to a drug because of a patient’s age, gender, size, and body composition drug polymorphism
The nurse owes the same duties to self as to others. What does this include? (4) To preserve integrity and safety, to maintain competence, and to continue personal and professional growth.
What legal entity gives RN or LPN permission to administer medications? The State
A substantial departure from the standard of care ordinarily exercised by a competent licensee Negligence
An act or omission demonstrating a failure to maintain competency in practice Negligence
Any practice or behavior which violates the minimum standards of the profession necessary for the protection of the health, safety, welfare or a patient or the public Malpractice
U.S. Pharmacopoeia and National Formulary (USP and NF) determined to be official legal standards for U.S. drugs according to what act Pure Food and Drug act 1906
Act that prohibits false advertising Sherley amendment 1912
Act Drugs required to be safe before interstate distribution allowed Federal Food, Drug, Cosmetic Act 1938
Legislation - Legend drugs (CAUTION-FEDERAL LAW PROHIBITS DISPENSING WITHOUT A PRESCRIPTION) vs. Over the counter drugs (OTC): sold without prescription Durham Humphrey 1952
Amendment - Drugs must be effective as well as safe Kefauver Harris Amendment 1962
Act - “Scheduled” Drugs, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) is regulatory agency, Prescribers must have DEA numbers Controlled substances 1970
What schedule? Give example. High abuse potential, no accepted medical Schedule I, Heroine, “illicit drugs
What schedule? Give example. High abuse potential with accepted medical use Schedule II, Morphine, Cocaine, Ritalin, Adderall.
What schedule? Give example. Accepted medical use, lower abuse potential Schedule III, Tylenol with codeine, hydrocodone
What schedule? Give example. Abuse potential lower yet; limited potential for dependence Schedule IV, Valium
What schedule? Give example. limited quantity of narcotic; lowest abuse potential Schedule V, Robitussin AC
What are the four nursing responsibilities in administering scheduled drugs? Maintain secure storage, verify order for controlled substances, maintain accurate records, maintain accurate inventory
____ to ____ renewal of medical orders for controlled substances 48-72
What three records about controlled substances does the nurse need to maintain? Agency narcotic sheet, patient record ( MAR), partial/wasted dose
All new drugs must pass rigorous scrutiny of the ____ FDA
Normal human volunteers to determine if toxic is a Phase ___ study I
More normals, and a few subjects with targeted illness is a Phase ___ study II
Broad clinical trials to evaluate usefulness is a Phase ___ study III
Phase in which a drug goes to market III
Phase in which post-marketing surveillance for detection of problems IV
What are the five RN responsibilities with investigational drug protocols with what must be followed precisely? How to give, how to eval, informed consent, know details of what you are doing, know laws/rules of state & employer
What two things does informed consent consist of? Full knowledge of risks and benefits, right to withdraw at any time
An FDA Medical Products Reporting Program MedWatch use 3500 form
Operated by the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP), is a confidential national voluntary reporting program that provides expert analysis of the system causes of medication errors and disseminates recommendations for prevention USP Medication Errors Reporting Program
A national, Internet-accessible database that hospitals and health care systems use to track and trend adverse drug reactions and medication errors. Hospitals and health care systems participate voluntarily and subscribe to it MedMARx
What are the seven components of a med order? Patient name, date/time written, name of med, dose, route, frequency, signature of prescriber
What are five ways to prevent medication errors? Minimize use of abbreviations, refer JCAHO “do not call” list, verify all new medication orders, question/clarify unclear medication orders, read back any verbal orders received
What are the five rights? Patient, Drug, Route, Time, Dose
If scheduled medications are off schedule, what should you do? Check with pharmacist on how to proceed
What three times should you do medication reconciliation? Upon admission, transfer or discharge
A nurse who acts within a code of ethics and standards of practice is demonstrating Integrity
A nurse who values the patients welfare and wellbeing is demonstrating Altruism
The right to self-determination, patient’s right to make decisions and the right to refuse Autonomy
Should you ever force a medication on a client? No, it is unethical and illegal
Does a patient have a right to full information on the drug being given to them? Yes
Upholding moral, legal and humanistic principles Social justice
Giving all clients the same standard of care Nondiscrimination
Does the nurse have the right to refuse to participate in a patient’s treatment? May withdraw if situation violates one’s ethical principles, BUT. . . . .May not desert the patient/client
For what age group do physiologic differences especially alter pharmacokinetics? Neonate
How are doses calculated for children Based on age and weight
For children , what route is best Oral
The site for IM injections is based on __ and ____. Age, size
What age group has an increased risk of adverse effects secondary to physiologic changes? Older adult
For the older adult, an accurate assessment of symptoms is needed to determine _______ vs. ________ Medications, aging process
All drugs should be assessed including what four things? Prescribed, OTC, herbal, supplements
With an older adult, start doses at ___level and _______ if needed. Lowest, titrate up
What are some general things to consider when working with older adults? (5) Safety, compliance, vision, dexterity, finances
What are some general things to consider when considering culture and socioeconomics of patient? (8) Communications, language, ability to read, health beliefs and practice, cause of problem, acceptable methods of treatment, attitude toward drug regime, understanding who makes health care decisions
What can cause different ethics groups to have variation in response to medication? Due to variation in enzymes
Created by: anastasia158
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