Prescribing Flashcards

1
Q

Why do you prescribe differently for children?

A
Decreased body weight
Different body composition
Decreased surface area
Nutritional status
Organ maturation
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2
Q

What extra steps do you take to ensure safety when giving children fluids?

A

Do U&Es every day

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3
Q

What is an ADR?

A

Adverse drug reaction
An unwanted or harmful reaction which occurs after administration of a drug/drugs and is suspected or known to be due to the drug(s)

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4
Q

Name the 2 types of ADR and their differences

A

Type A: pharmacological mechanism, predictable, readily reversible on stopping drug/lowering dose
Type B: Idiosynchratic/immunological, not predictable, unrelated to dose, prolonged/permanent/fatal

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5
Q

Give 2 examples of a type A ADR

A

Dry cough with ACEi

Bradycardia with B-blockers

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6
Q

Give 2 examples of type B ADRs

A

Penicillin anaphylaxis

Angioedema with ACEi

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7
Q

What % of ADRs are type A?

A

80%

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8
Q

What % of hospital admissions are due to ADRs?

A

6-7%

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9
Q

In a patient information leaflet, what does a very common ADR mean?

A

> 10% patients (1/10)

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10
Q

In a patient information leaflet, what does a common ADR mean?

A

1%-10% patients (1/10-1/100)

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11
Q

In a patient information leaflet, what does a very rare ADR mean?

A

less than 0.01%

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12
Q

What ensures all medicines are regulated?

A

The Medicines Act of 1968

Safety, quality, efficacy

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13
Q

Name 3 UK organisations involved in the regulation of drugs

A

MHRA (Medical & Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency)
CHM (Commission Medicines Agency)
BP (British pharmacopoeia)

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14
Q

How are ADRs identified before drug is licensed??

A

Genetic screening for carcinogens
Acute single dose studies
Rodent & dog short term studies
90 days rodent and dog doses

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15
Q

How many phases are there in clinical trials?

A

4

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16
Q

What is involved in stage 1 of a clinical trial?

A

Route and metabolic fate is defined in normal volunteers (n less than 50)

17
Q

What is involved in stage 2 of a clinical trial?

A
Therapeutic profile and dose regimen is defined
Dose ranging (n less than 500)
18
Q

What is involved in stage 3 of a clinical trial?

A
Clinical efficacy determined, compared to placebo/comparator
Longer duration (n less than 500)
19
Q

What is involved in stage 4 of a clinical trial?

A

Post marketing surveillance (pharmacovigilance)

20
Q

How do you assess an ADR?

A
Nature and severity of reaction
History and timings
Relationship to dose
Complete drug history
Review ADR profile of drug
Complete yellow card
Specific investigatons/further complications/drug monitoring?
21
Q

Do you break the doctor-patient confidentiality if you fill in a yellow card without their consent?

A

No, yellow cards do not violate patient confidentiality

22
Q

What needs to be included in a yellow card?

A

1 piece of patient info (age/sex/weight/initials/ID)
Name of suspected drug/drugs
Brief description of ADR
Contact details of the reporter