POM part 1 Flashcards

1
Q

define a POM

A

A medicine listed in the POM Order or a medicine where the marketing authorisation lists the classification as POM
medicinal product which may only be sold by retail in accordance with a prescription signed by an appropriate practitioner

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2
Q

what can a POM also be called?

A

A prescription can be called a ‘patient specific direction’ (PSD)

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3
Q

what are some exceptions to a POPM which may be legally supplied without a prescription?

A

Patient Group Directions (see later)
* Emergency supplies (see later)
* Patient specific directions in hospitals (see later)

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4
Q

what products are always POMs?

A
  • Parenteral products
  • CDs, unless the marketing authorisation of the
    product lists it as a P or GSL
  • Cyanogenic substances, unless for external use
  • Medicinal substances that on administration emit
    radiation
  • New chemical entities
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5
Q

when may a POM medicine also be a P medicine or GSL?

A

But some products may also be P or GSL depending on indication, pack size, strength, formulation, route of administration
eg paracetamol

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6
Q

what are the legal requirements for POM prescriptions?

A

a) Be signed in ink by the appropriate practitioner giving it
b) Written in ink or so otherwise to be indelible. NHS prescriptions,
not for a CD in schedule 1,2 or 3, can be written by carbon paper
or similar material
c) Shall contain the following particulars:
i. Address of the appropriate practitioner
ii. The appropriate date
iii. An indication of the kind of appropriate practitioner giving it
iv. Name and address of the person for whose treatment it is
given
v. If that person is under 12, that person’s age
d) Is valid for 6 months from the appropriate date
e) The practitioner must be registered in the UK or be approved health professional in an approved country

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7
Q

when must a repeatable prescription be dispensed for the first time?

A

for the first time within 6 months

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8
Q

if a prescription doesnt specify the number of repeats how many times can it be repeated?

A

once unless its an oral contraceptive- then it can have 5 repeats

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9
Q

are repeats allowed for control drugs?

A

Repeats of any kind are not allowed on normal NHS
prescriptions

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10
Q

how long can owings be prescribed for?

A

must be supplied within a certain period from the
appropriate date and this also applies to any ‘owings’ i.e. the full quantity of medicine must be supplied within the legally valid period of the prescription

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11
Q

what is an approved health professional in an approved country?

A

Approved health professionals include doctors and dentists as well as other professions with prescribing rights in their own country (which could be chiropodists or podiatrists, nurses (including community nurses), optometrists, paramedics, pharmacist, physiotherapists and therapeutic
radiographers)
* Approved countries include EEA countries (full list in MEP, page 64) and
Switzerland

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12
Q

in order to dispense a prescription what do you need to know?

A
  • Name of drug
  • Form
  • Strength
  • Dose
  • Frequency
  • Quantity
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13
Q

do private prescriptions have the same legal requirements as NHS ones?

A

yes
but they can be written on anything- no specific template

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14
Q

when is the only time where there can be a repeat on an FP10?

A
  • No repeats allowed on FP10 unless part of the NHS
    Repeat Dispensing scheme
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15
Q

can a dentist prescribe a brand?

A

DPF only includes generic names but dentists may prescribe a branded version of a generic in the DPF

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16
Q

what can a dentist prescribe?

A

A private prescription written by a dentist can legally be for any POM, P or GSL medicine but…..
* Dentists are required by their registration body (GDC) to restrict their prescribing to areas in which they are competent

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17
Q

what can community nurse practitioners prescribe? on what prescription?

A

Community nurse practitioners may prescribe a limited range of medicines on a NHS prescription FP10P (lilac)
* The medicines are listed in the Nurse Prescribers’ Formulary for Community Practitioners (NPF) (found in the BNF)

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18
Q

what does it mean by due diligence?

A

i. Address of the appropriate practitioner
ii. The appropriate date
iii. An indication of the kind of appropriate practitioner giving it
iv. Name and address of the person for whose treatment it is given
v. If that person is under 12, that person’s age

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19
Q

what happens if a medicine is prescribed by brand?

A

only this branded product may be dispensed. A therapeutically equivalent generic product must not be dispensed. An alternative brand must not be dispensed.

20
Q

can you dispence a CD 2/3 by a faxed prescription?

A

Dispensing a CD Rx (schedules 2 and 3) from a fax is a criminal offence because this is dispensing a CD without a Rx being present in the pharmacy

21
Q

are photos or emails of prescriptions legally valid?

A

no

22
Q

when is dispensing a forged prescription not a criminal offence?

A

‘provided the pharmacist has exercised all
due diligence and believes on reasonable grounds that the prescription is genuine’ (‘due diligence clause’)

23
Q

do all the legal requirements still apply for electronic prescriptions?

A

yes and signed with an advanced electronic signature

24
Q

can CD 2/3 be sent via electronic signature?

A

yes

25
Q

what does advanced electronic signature mean?

A
  • Uniquely linked to the person giving the Rx
  • Capable of identifying the signatory
  • Created using means that the signatory can maintain under his/her control
  • Linked to the data to which it relates in such a way that any subsequent
    change of the data is detectable
26
Q

how is electronic signatures sent?

A

NHS spine

27
Q

what are the tokens electronic prescriptions are printed out on?

A

FP10DT

28
Q

what are the legal requirements for non-UK prescriptions?

A

Patients full first name(s), surname and date of birth
* Prescriber’s full first name(s), surname, professional qualifications,
direct contact details, including email address and telephone number
or fax number (with international prefix), work address (including the
country they work in)
* Name of medicine(s) (brand name where appropriate),
pharmaceutical form, quantity, strength and dosage details
* Prescriber’s signature
* Date of issue

29
Q

what can not be prescribed on a non-UK prescription?

A

Controlled drugs in schedules 1, 2 and 3, and products without a UK
marketing authorisation may not be prescribed

30
Q

why is caution needed in non-uk prescriptions?

A
  • Rx likely to be written in a foreign language (legally ok but…….)
  • Need to check the registration status of the prescriber and there is no
    international database of prescribers
31
Q

when does records not need to be kept for every private prescription?

A
  • On a ‘health prescription’ or it is a Rx for an oral contraceptive or
  • A separate record is made in the CD register or
  • Wholesale dealing and the order or invoice (or a copy of it) is retained for two years
32
Q

where do records for prescriptions go?

A
  • In a bound book (called the ‘POM register’ or ‘Prescription book’)
  • Electronically, but with all particulars, adequate backups and a facility for inspectors to examine them without disrupting the dispensing
    process
33
Q

what details are to be recorded ?

A
  • Date of sale or supply
  • Name, quantity and, except where it is apparent from the name, the pharmaceutical form and strength of the POM supplied
  • Date on Rx
  • Name and address of practitioner giving the Rx
  • Name and address of person for whom medicine prescribed
34
Q

what do you do with a reference number?

A

need to give the entry in the POM reg a reference number and this is marked on the Rx and typed onto the dispensing labe

35
Q

what is the fate of a dispensed prescription?

A

NHS prescription
* Send to NHS Business Services Authority (NHSBSA),
Prescription Services Division at the end of the month
* Private prescription (non-repeatable)
* Keep at the pharmacy for 2 years
* Private prescription (repeatable)
* If there are still repeats outstanding, hand Rx back to patient or offer to retain at the pharmacy
* If the final repeat has been dispensed, keep at the
pharmacy for 2 years from the date of the final dispensing

36
Q

what is a hub and spoke model?

A

Rx handed in at spoke, sent to hub, hub sends meds to spoke, spoke supplies pt
– Rx handed in at spoke, sent to hub, hub supplies Rx to patient (sent/delivered)

37
Q

who can make use of the hub and spoke model currently?

A

In a ‘hub and spoke’ model some of these processes are done in the hub pharmacy but the Rx goes to the hub via the spoke pharmacy
Therefore, only ‘chain’ pharmacies can make use of this facility

38
Q

what are the advantages of dispensing from a hub?

A
  • Better efficiency
  • Lower operating costs (although initial set up
    costs may be high)
  • Free up pharmacist time at the spoke
    pharmacy to do other clinical activities
  • Use of automation in the hub (reduced errors,
    safer dispensing, cheaper) – but hubs are not
    under any obligation to use automated
    dispensing systems (e.g. dispensing robots)
39
Q

what are some of the disadvantages of dispensing from a hub?

A
  • There are concerns about accountability and liability (*)
  • Legally, the responsibility for the dispensing of the prescription is thought to rest with the pharmacist who supplies the medicine to the patient –there has been no case law to test this
  • Some suggest that the clinical check is the responsibility of the spoke and the accuracy check is the responsibility of the hub
  • Operational failure in a hub could have serious consequences for patients
  • Confidentiality and security of information is more complicated (*)
  • Could it affect the patient/pharmacy relationship (especially if the hub supplies the medicine to the patient directly)
  • Not suitable if the patient needs the medicine quickly/urgently
40
Q

what is the 5 key principles of the GPHC guidance for pharmacies providing services at a distance?

A
  1. The governance arrangements safeguard the health, safety and wellbeing of patients and the public
  2. Staff are empowered and confident to safeguard the health safety and wellbeing of patients and the public
  3. The environment and condition of the premises….. safeguards the health, safety and wellbeing of patients and the public
  4. The way in which pharmacy services…….are delivered safeguards the health, safety and wellbeing of patients and the public
  5. The equipment and facilities………. safeguard the health, safety and wellbeing of patients and the public
41
Q

what is a serious shortage protocols?

A

allow pharmacists to supply a different
medicine to that which is specified on a Rx

42
Q

what is the legal authority of the 4 possible actions for serious shortages protocols?

A
  • Dispense a smaller quantity
  • Dispense an alternative formulation or strength (of the same drug)
  • Dispense a generic equivalent for a branded Rx
  • Dispense an alternative drug with a similar therapeutic effect
43
Q

when must the GP be informed for a serious shortages protocols?

A

The patient’s GP must be informed if a switch of medicine has occurred but not if a different form or quantity has been dispensed

44
Q

what does the dispensing label need to entail for SSP?

A

The dispensing label needs to indicate that a supply was made under a SSP and state the reference number of the SSP

45
Q

when is there an exception to administer a POM to someone other than yourslef?

A

in a life threatening emergency
eg adrenaline