PREPARATION AND DISTRUBITION OF PARENTERAL DRUGS
Preparation & Distribution of Non-Parenteral Drugs
Retail/Community Pharmacy Operations
Pharmacy Laws & Regulations
Medication Safety & Quality Control
100

This term describes the process of removing all microorganisms from a parenteral preparation.

Sterilization

100

The term for a drug form designed to disintegrate in the stomach and release medication gradually.

EC (Enteric Coated)

100

This software function allows pharmacies to track patient prescriptions and refill history.

Pharmacy management software (Kroll, Healthwatch...)

100

In Canada, only a licensed pharmacist can perform this activity.

So many correct answers here lol.. lets see what you said!

100

This type of error occurs when a patient receives the wrong medication.

Medication Error. (There are some other correct answers as well)

200

The type of needle gauge commonly used for intravenous injections ranges between these numbers.

18-25 gauge

200

This excipient is commonly used as a filler in solid oral dosage forms.

Lactose

200

The process of verifying a prescription before dispensing to ensure it is safe and appropriate.

Prescription Verification

200

Controlled drugs and substances are regulated under this federal act.

CDSA

200

The process of checking medications against standards to ensure correct potency and purity.

quality control

300

This is the primary reason for using a laminar airflow hood when preparing parenteral drugs.

aseptic environment

300

When a pharmacist compounds a cream or ointment, this type of balance ensures accurate weighing of ingredients.

Analytical Balance

300

In Canada, community pharmacies must follow this regulatory framework set by provincial bodies.

provincial pharmacy act or regulations

300

This document is required for a pharmacy to operate legally in any Canadian province.

Pharmacy License or Permit

300

This term refers to reducing the risk of infection during drug preparation.

Aseptic technique

400

Name the technique used to ensure parenteral medications are free of pyrogens.

endotoxin testing or pyrogen testing

400

Name the primary technique used to ensure uniform distribution of active ingredients in powdered medications.

Geometric Dilution

400

This type of service involves pharmacists providing immunizations, medication reviews, and chronic disease monitoring.

Clinical Pharmacy/Pharmaceutical Care
400

The federal body that sets the standards for drug approval and safety in Canada.

Health Canada

400

Before dispensing, pharmacists perform this check to ensure dosage and patient safety.

Clinical Check

500

The USP chapter that outlines the standards for sterile compounding in the United States (also widely referenced in Canada).

USP <797>

500

This is the term for non-parenteral medications prepared specifically for a patient based on a prescription.

extemporaneous compounding

500

A mandatory system in pharmacies to report adverse drug reactions or medication errors.

Canadian Vigilance Program

500

Pharmacists must follow these rules when preparing sterile products to prevent contamination.

USP <797> / NAPRA guidelines

500

This type of recall occurs when a drug is likely to cause serious adverse health consequences or death.

Class I recall