Intro to pharm
Drug development/research
Life span
Definitions
Other
100

What organ is responsible for primary exertion of a drug

Kidneys 

100

What is a double-blind study

Both researchers and participants do not know which drug is the placebo and which is the real drug

100

is someone allowed to refuse a medication, if not why

People are always allowed to refuse, make sure you document you educated the patient and that they actually understand the purpose of the med 

they must be oriented to refuse

100

what does a class 1 controlled substance mean

drugs with no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse

100

What is onset of action

time required for the drug to elicit therapeutic response 

200

What is the generic name and what is the trade name

Generic - official name, assigned by FDA (name we use) 

Trade - designed by the manufacturer

200

What is a black box warning

strictest warning from the FDA

Indicates serious adverse effects have been reported with the drug

the drug can still be prescribed

200

Why are older adults more likely to have adverse effects of toxicity

decline in organ function

decrease muscle and fat 

decreased metabolism 

decreased Cardiac output

Decreased blood flow (decreased renal excretion)

200

What is physical dependence

physiologic need for a drug to avoid physical withdrawal symptoms (e.g., tachycardia in an opioid-addicted patient)

200

A decrease in drug metabolism causes what to happen to the drug in the body

accumulate/ increased drug toxicity

300

Name the 9 rights

Right drug, right dose, right time, right route, right patient, right documentation, right reason, right to refuse, right response

300

Phase one of research involves

A few doses are given to a small number of healthy volunteers to establish safety

300

a patient says a medication is not on their list, but it is on their MAR in the hospital. What do you do

Check with the MD before giving, understand reason and wanted effect of medicaion, educate patient

300

What is psychological dependence

also known as addiction, the obsessive desire for the euphoric effects of a drug

300

what do you do if you notice an error in an order?

Contact MD and get clarification, make sure the order is changed prior to administering medication, prevent an error for the next person

400

What is half life

time required for one-half of the drug to be removed form the body

400

What happens in phase 3 of research

Large-scale randomized, controlled studies

larger sample size is to provide information about infrequent or rare adverse effects

Further define risk-benefit ratio

400

What do you ask to assess orientation

Person

place

time 

situation

400

Category x in pregnancy drug classification

Fetal abnormalities have been reported, and positive evidence of fetal risk in humans is available from animal and/or human studies

400

What do you assess before educating a patient? How do you educate them?

learning level, ability to learn at that moment, written information, verbal information, show them, teach back

500

what should you assess before giving a medication?

PMH, Hx present illness, VS, region, ability to swallow/route, allergies, ect.

500

What allows a drug to be OTC

Simple rules to follow with dosing 

Accurate self-diagnosing 

easy to understand label and interpret warnings

500

Adverse drug event vs adverse drug reaction

Adverse drug event = external or internal, vary from no effects to mild discomfort to life-threatening complications or death (use your 9 rights) 

Adverse drug reaction = any reaction to a drug that is unexpected and undesirable and occurs at therapeutic drug dosages (allergic reaction)

500

What is acute therapy, maintenance therapy, supplemental therapy

Acute = implemented in the acutely or the critically ill, needed to sustain life or treat disease

Maintenance = Chronic illness 

Supplemental = replace substances to maintain normal funciton