August 9, 2007

It’s All a Matter of Perception

What on earth do I mean by that? What is perception? All I know is that perception is reality. How many times have we heard that? And how often do we think of that when we’re in the medical environment? Probably not as often as we should…..

I was having lunch with a good friend and his wife (whom I’ve gotten to know fairly well in the past 2 years). She told me about her encounter with a new doctor recently for a sinus infection. She was adamant when she simply stated "I know enough about what’s going on in my body that by the time I go to the doctor, I just want them to give me the drugs I need." My internal reaction to that was very disconcerting. I understood what she was saying but my doctor-instinct was horrified - I know I’m telling alot about myself :-)

I wanted to explain to her that sometimes she might not know exactly what was wrong with her because "after all, you’re not medical" but i restrained my tongue for once, knowing that what she believed was, in fact, reality to her - and therefore, she probably did know what she needed.

I recalled a very sad case where a mother did not want to take her twin daughters home from the ER because they did not seem "better" to her after their asthma treatment. The ER doctor (not me, thank goodness) told her that the girls were not wheezing so they "must" be better. So, reluctantly mom took them home. The outcome was not good - one of the girls ended up dying. I tell this not to be morbid but to emphasize to patients that they really do know their bodies better than anyone (and to remind the physicians to listen to the patients and pay attention). I learned such a valuable lesson that night, nearly 28 years ago - and I think that’s what held my tongue in abeyance with my friend’s wife.

The point is that doctors and patients have different perspectives and therefore the perception of each is most likely 180 degrees apart. Each of us has to ask for clarification or offer it if we want to be understood by the other - and if we’re not understood, we’re in deep trouble.

Doctors - throw away your judgments and open up your ears AND your minds.

Patients - stick up for yourself and make sure your doctor hears you and where you’re coming from. And then make sure you understand what he’s saying.

Perception really is reality

Til next time…..

Terrie

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August 12, 2007

It’s Amazing

It never ceases to amaze me how any doctor is able to accurately diagnose patients. With as little information as they are able to get from the patient, it’s kind of a miracle that things turn out right…What am I talking about?

Well, I have a friend who was recently hospitalized (in ICU even) for a urinary tract infection that had spread through his body. Fortunately he got better but in the last month and a half has proceeded to tell me (of course, "as a friend - who just happens to be a doctor" - yeah right) bits and pieces of information about his past and even his current condition (he had to self-catheterize himself - putting a tube in his own bladder four times a day to get the urine out and he got another infection) than i’m sure any of his doctors know. And I’ve listened to him a heck of a lot longer than the 15 minutes your doctor might have with you. The things he tells me he didn’t think were IMPORTANT to tell the doctor - or they were things that he thought of when talking to an old friend. In fact, he must have talked to everyone about it and told everyone his symptoms EXCEPT his doctor. Then he wanted to know how I could have told him some of the stuff I have when I’m a thousand miles away and his local doctors aren’t able to tell him these things….just amazing…

But each time I get off the phone with him I realize that this is what real life is all about and that’s why it’s so important for each of you to keep a diary of your past medical history, your past procedures, your medicines and as importantly, your current symptoms. Then make sure you take that diary with you. You should even transcribe your symptoms onto another piece of paper to give the doctor. Summarize things - "I’ve had abdominal pain above my belly button and under my right rib cage for about 3 weeks now. It seems to come and go and it’s so very sharp that it doubles me over and I have to continually walk around until it goes away. I throw up several times while I have the pain. It even goes to my back and my right shoulder sometimes. Nothing makes it better - it just goes away by itself. It usually comes on about 4 hours after dinner though, especially when we’ve had greasy stuff. etc."

If you take that summary out of your diary, put it on a sheet of paper and give it to the doctor, he can extract so much information from it and can then ask more pertinent questions - rather than having to start from scratch and be like a dentist - pulling teeth!

Be thankful that your diagnoses are correct as many times as they are..and help your doctor along the next time.

Terrie

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December 3, 2006

Where’ve I been, you ask?

Well, even if you don’t ask, I’m gonna tell you!

I’ve been sick - imagine that, a doctor, sick. But it’s been a very positive experience for me and will be the source of serveral blog entries.

I had a respiratory infection with first some days of just feeling cruddy (that’s not the word I actually used but it would have been censored). Then I had to fly to Washington, DC for a business meeting. By the time I got to DC, my throat was totally RAW and worse than I ever remember it being. But, here’s a good plug - the Hall’s MAX sort throat lozenges are phenomenal but I don’t think there are any more since I probably bought them all that week.

The morning after I arrived in DC, my throat was horrible but the bad part was that i couldnt breath while walking. This just got worse and worse so that any type of exertion had me really breathing hard.

By the time I flew home on Thursday I was too scared that this might be my heart to even take my migraine medication - and that’s being pretty darned scared. I arrived back in San Antonio at about noon, called and made an appointment and drove to the hospital and got admitted about 10 hours later. They ruled out a heart attack and a blood clot (pulmonary embolus) but weren’t sure what was really going on.

But that’s not important, I’m much better now. But as I was sick and really unable to do much for the last few weeks, including talk (thus no audio blogs for a while), I had much time to reflect on my life. I came up with the appropriate diagnosis and it began with an "S" - no, not that "S" word.

STRESS

As I looked back over the past year, it’s been a whirlwind and great year but it’s also been crammed full of stress. Stress that I have either created or allowed to build. We don’t have enough electrons to go into that but if you’d like a sleep aid, email me and I’ll tell you all about it - just kidding.

Seriously though, I understood it before but I firmly believe now that we  have to address stress in our life - or better yet, how to eliminate it. And a few good friends have given me advice - don’t let things I have no control over bother me. and even though that’s not easy, it’s certainly something we all should strive for. And the other is to ask ourselves "how can I have the most fun at this precise moment?" I think that’s the best of all and intend to try to work with that as much as possible. I can think of scenes for a sitcom perhaps or stories for a stand up comedian. Anything that will make things fun.

I had to turn my life around and know that there’s a bunch of stuff going on but it’s not stressful UNLESS I MAKE IT STRESSFUL.

Please take heed of this. Stress adversely impacts our immune system and without our immune system, we’re in big trouble.

There are some other "alternative" medicine things I’ve been exposed to also in the past few weeks that I may eventually share depending on my results. But combatting stress in whatever way you can is essential.

So, bottom line is that I’m back now and I’ll be posting away again. It’s good to be back and I appreciate all my readers!

Terrie

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July 14, 2007

Do You Take Your Medicines As Prescribed?

 Another clip from Medical News Today about the number of pills and Daily Adherence to medication. Although it focuses on certain conditions, the issue is applicable to everyone and every condition. Compliance (adherence to instructions) is such a big factor in health success that we all (doctors and patients alike) must pay attention to what will improve a person’s ability to follow the advice/instructions:

New Study Suggests Number Of Pills Not A Factor When It Comes To Daily Adherence To Medication

There is no correlation between the daily number of pills a patient is prescribed to take and how well a patient will adhere to a dosing regimen, suggests a new study presented recently at the 19th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy (AMCP) held in San Diego (April 11-14). The large-scale study looked at patients taking a variety of high blood pressure medicines, specifically calcium channel blockers (CCBs), and provides more supportive evidence that adherence to prescribed medication is influenced by a multitude of factors. The study specifically examined dosing regimen to see if there was a relationship between that factor and adherence in patients with a co-payment of at least $20.

More on Do You Take Your Medicines As Prescribed?

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June 25, 2007

Preventing Medication Errors

The Institute of Medicine (IOM) published findings in 1999 on the quality of healthcare in America. That report, "To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System," concluded that as many as 7000 Americans die from medication errors each year.[1] In July 2006, the IOM released a new report, "Preventing Medication Errors," stating that the frequency of medication errors and related injuries was still a serious concern.[2]

A common question that arises is: "What drugs are most often involved in medication errors?" Matthew Grissinger, RPh, FASCP, is a medication safety analyst with ISMP, the nation’s oldest voluntary drug error reporting program, located in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania. His session on "The Top 10 Adverse Drug Reactions and Medication Errors" drew an audience that filled the meeting hall.[3]

Grissinger first referred to a study that identified the 10 drugs most commonly implicated in adverse events requiring treatment in a hospital emergency department (ED).[4] The study also documented the frequency with which each of the 10 drugs was involved:

  1. Insulin (8%);
  2. Anticoagulants (6.2%);
  3. Amoxicillin (s) (4.3%);
  4. Aspirin (2.5%);
  5. Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (2.2%);
  6. Hydrocodone/acetaminophen (2.2%);
  7. Ibuprofen (2.1%);
  8. Acetaminophen (1.8%);
  9. Cephalexin (1.6%); and
  10. Penicillin (1.3%).

Unintentional overdoses made up 40% of these ED visits, representing the most prevalent mechanism of injury by far. Other mechanisms included side effects and allergic reactions. Some of the drugs on this list are especially common (eg, hydrocodone and amoxicillin), so the sheer volume of prescriptions written is a major factor.

The elderly also play a key role in this issue, as they account for 34% of all written prescriptions. The average number of prescriptions for an elderly person in the United States in 2000 was 28.5 per year. That number is estimated to reach 38.5 by the year 2010. Almost a quarter million seniors are hospitalized every year due to reactions between prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) medications.

Common misuses that lead to adverse drug events are taking incorrect doses, taking doses at the wrong times, forgetting to take doses, or stopping the medication too soon (all nonadherence issues). An example of commonly misused medications can be seen with arthritis therapies. Seventy million Americans suffer from arthritis and joint pain, which translates into 30 million people taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, either prescription or OTC. Misuse of these drugs leads to 103,000 hospitalizations and 16,000 deaths per year. Unnecessary use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs also increases avoidable side effects, such as dyspepsia, peptic ulcer, and gastrointestinal bleeding.

Another high-volume prescription class is the antibiotics. This group represents significant inappropriate prescribing: Twenty-three million antibiotic prescriptions are written for colds, bronchitis, and upper respiratory infections each year, Grissinger said, despite the fact that antibiotics don’t kill viruses.

Top 10 Medications Involved in Drug Errors

A somewhat different top 10 list identifies medications that are most commonly misused or mishandled in some way by healthcare professionals. This list is based on information from the United States Pharmacopoeia (USP), which maintains a database of medication errors that are reported anonymously. The figures represent drug errors associated with acute hospital care[5]:

  1. Insulin (4% of all medication errors in 2005);
  2. Morphine (2.3%);
  3. Potassium chloride (2.2%);
  4. Albuterol (1.8%);
  5. Heparin (1.7%);
  6. Vancomycin (1.6%);
  7. Cefazolin (1.6%);
  8. Acetaminophen (1.6%);
  9. Warfarin (1.4%); and
  10. Furosemide (1.4%).

Hospitals and healthcare systems use the USP database to track medication errors and identify trends. Drug errors are defined as unintentional acts committed by healthcare providers involving medications. Grissinger noted that comparable data are unavailable for outpatient care.

The number 1 error-prone medication is insulin. In fact, a 1998 ISMP study found that 11% of all serious medication errors involve insulin misadministration.[6] Errors include mixing up products with similar packaging (look-alike products); confusing generic listings on computer databases; similarity in names (eg, Humalog and Humulin); and most importantly, confusing the abbreviation "u" for units with the number 0. ISMP reports that these errors have been occurring for over 30 years.

The second drug on this list is morphine, which can be extrapolated to include all opioids, Grissinger said. Similar names for some of these drugs often cause confusion, such as:

  • Avinza and Evista;
  • Morphine and hydromorphone;
  • Oxycontin and MS Contin;
  • Hydrocodone and oxycodone; and
  • Oxycodone and codeine.

In the community pharmacy, these drugs often are stacked close together in a locked area, and many have similar packaging, making it easy to grab the wrong one when dispensing. Another common mistake is mixing up oxycodone with oxycodone ER (extended release), especially in handheld device order entry.

Morphine oral solutions cause many problems because of the multiple concentrations that are available, all stored close to each other. For example, it would be easy to confuse "mL" with "mg"; using 5 mL of morphine 20 mg/mL (100 mg) instead of the prescribed 5 mg (0.25 mL) would lead to overdosing the patient. Alternatively, an intended dose of 1 mL of morphine 20 mg/mL (20 mg) might be given as 1 mL of 10 mg/5 mL (2 mg), thus underdosing the patient. Grissinger also reported a case in which Avinza (morphine ER caps) 30 mg was misinterpreted and dispensed as "qid" (4 times daily) instead of "qd" (once daily), causing a near-fatal overdose.

Acetaminophen is another drug on the error list that causes many problems. It is available in many different strengths, and various measuring devices are available for dispensing it. In addition, it is found in many combination medications, both prescription and OTC. Prescription labels of combination products with acetaminophen can be very confusing for the patient. For example, hydrocodone 10/650 has 650 mg of acetaminophen, but many patients would not know how to interpret that.

Grissinger reminded the audience that acetaminophen can be toxic, even though it is sold OTC. A recent study showed that acetaminophen-induced liver toxicity accounts for more than 40% of US cases of acute liver failure.[7]

Antibiotics are the next big group of drugs associated with medication errors. As with opioids, the liquid dose concentrations increase the risk for mistakes. Confusion over measurements in "mL" vs "tsp" (teaspoons) can cause a 5-fold overdose or underdose if undetected. In one case, for example, azithromycin suspension was dispensed with directions to take 2.5 tsp daily (equivalent to 12.5 mL) instead of the intended 2.5 mL daily, Grissinger reported. The entire contents of the bottle were administered according to the labeled instructions, and the child developed diarrhea.

Reconstituting antibiotics can also be problematic. Pharmacists have mistakenly reconstituted antibiotic suspensions with alcohol instead of distilled water.

System Errors May Interfere With Individual Efforts

Most healthcare professionals have learned the "5 rights" of safe medication use: the right patient, the right drug, the right time, the right dose, and the right route of administration.

However, in his book Medication Errors, Michael Cohen wrote that these "rights" focus on individual performance and can overlook system errors. Examples of system errors are poor lighting, inadequate staffing, handwritten orders, doses with trailing zeros, and ambiguous drug labels. All of these can prevent healthcare professionals from verifying the 5 rights.[8]

Experts at ISMP have identified 10 key "system" elements that most influence medication use, reported Donna Horn, RPh, DPh, ISMP Director, Patient Safety - Community Pharmacy. Systems factors play a major role in increasing the likelihood that an individual will make an error. Deficiencies in any of these system elements can lead to medication errors[9]:

  1. Patient information (age, weight, allergies, diagnoses, and pregnancy status);
  2. Drug information (up-to-date information readily available);
  3. Communication (collaborative teamwork between all healthcare members and the patient);
  4. Drug labeling, packaging, and nomenclature (limit look-alike and sound-alike drug names, confusing packaging);
  5. Drug standardization, storage, and distribution (restricting access to high-alert drugs);
  6. Medication delivery device acquisition, use, and monitoring;
  7. Environmental factors (poor lighting, cluttered work spaces, noise, interruptions, nonstop activity, and deficient staffing);
  8. Staff competency and education;
  9. Patient education; and
  10. Quality processes and risk management (systems are needed for identifying, reporting, analyzing, and reducing the risk for medication errors with a nonpunitive culture of safety).

When an error occurs, it is tempting to blame individuals, Horn said. A "systems approach," however, looks at the whole system rather than individual errors. For instance, failures in the design or implementation of systems can lead to excessive reliance on memory, lack of standardization, inadequate access to information, and poor work schedules. Thus, with a systems approach, accountability is expanded to include anyone who had any influence over the error, setting the stage for broader solutions.

How Can We Prevent Medication Errors?

Nearly half of all adverse drug events have some form of "preventability," and many do not represent errors of commission but, rather, errors of omission. This implies a failure on the part of someone (pharmacist, physician, patient, or the interactions between these groups) to detect certain factors that most likely led to the adverse event. These factors include:

  1. Failure to detect a disease state contraindication to the drug therapy;
  2. Failure to detect a significant drug interaction;
  3. Failure to detect a significant drug allergy;
  4. Failure to prescribe the correct dose for a specific patient;
  5. Failure to monitor drugs with narrow therapeutic indexes; and
  6. Patient knowledge deficits.

Many of these can be avoided by spending a few minutes counseling the prescriber and/or the patient. Communication is key, Horn said. Barriers to effective communication include illegible handwriting, abbreviations, verbal orders, ambiguous orders, and fax or ePrescribing problems.

When communicating with prescribers, pharmacists should identify the issues clearly and concisely, said Marialice Bennett, RPh, FAPhA, Professor and Pharmacy Director of the University Health Connection at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio.[10] She offered these suggestions for such discussions:

  • Outline the specifics of the problem;
  • Keep focused on the patient;
  • Provide possible solutions;
  • Ask for prescriber feedback; and
  • Document the final decision.

Conflict can lead to poor communication, which can hinder the discovery of medication errors, she said. Conflicting opinions about patient care should be handled objectively and professionally. The ISMP recommends that healthcare organizations create a code of conduct that encourages behaviors supportive of team cohesion, staff morale, and sense of self-worth and safety.

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