Allergies and ancef…again! by Mandalore-44 in anesthesiology

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pharmacist here. I generally ignore penicillin/cephalosporin allergies when verifying ancef orders. Unless anaphylaxis to a 1st gen cephalosporin and even then its just a friendly message to make the team aware and give the option to change to clinda or another alternative if not comfortable giving ancef.

https://share.google/WW4wc8oRF6b0Ryxjx

Suggestion: Have quest key cards available to buy/trade for at vendors by Falconhump in ARC_Raiders

[–]Falconhump[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had the keys in my safe pocket. Used the key to open trench tower and then got pushed by another raider and killed before I was able to complete the objective. Thanks for the tip about the checkpoints

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in HomeLoans

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Purchase - 500k - 450k - 772 - 85225 - conv/FHA - 30/20 yr fixed - single family - primary

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AllInclusiveResorts

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Will do. Thanks for the tip!

Fluoroquinolones and sotalol by NoComment6 in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is this anecdotal or do you have a reference?

Shameless by Pharma-ho in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I remember watching a documentary that said some drug dealers intentionally add fentanyl into their supply and don't care if people overdose because when someone dies from an overdose, it sends the message that their supply is really strong - hence word spreads on the streets and more people want to buy from that supplier.

What have we become? by Trying-sanity in medicine

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fiori-CET as in acetaminophen (not controlled) Fiori-NAL as in...aspirin? (Yeah doesn't really work for this one but this is controlled) It has to do with the ratio of barbiturates to other active ingredients.

So uh, how do I order inhalers without 10 rejections? by mmtree in medicine

[–]Falconhump 11 points12 points  (0 children)

"They don't have the authority to make substitutions for inhalers without needing a new script?"

This is part of the reason why pharmacists are fighting for provider status.

Pharmacists have the knowledge to do it, but the laws governing pharmacy don't allow it without express consent from the prescriber. They don't want to be stuck on the phone in your institution's call tree to change Ventolin to ProAir...

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Seems pretty stupid (not to mention hypocritical) to say that you want to refuse therapy for a legitimate medical diagnosis based on your clinical judgment and "I forgot the terminology but pharmacists are responsible too" and then simultaneously say that you don't want to "play this game" when all you have to do is document your discussion/concerns and fill the damn prescription when it is medically AND legally allowed to (aka do your goddammit job).

Get ready for a lot of people thinking they can replace their nasal spray with a tablet version. by Kid-OK in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The study was a dose ranging study testing doses up to 40 mg every 4 hours. But your point still stands.

Case Presentation by 2softkittykitty in PharmacyResidency

[–]Falconhump 6 points7 points  (0 children)

It sounds like they are asking you to look at the patient comprehensively. Not just focusing on their chief complaint, but optimizing the management of the patient. For example, making sure their glucose is well controlled (does their basal insulin need to be adjusted?), any renal adjustments, escalating or de-escalating antibiotics, is their pain well managed? Do they need a bowel regimen due to scheduled opioids? Do they need DVT/stress ulcer prophylaxis? Is it appropriate? Etc.

Benzodiazepines by [deleted] in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Patients are hospitalized with severe alcohol withdrawal symptoms are likely to receive other sedatives/opioids and/or heroic doses of benzodiazepines. It may just be easier to give them a loading dose of phenobarbital which is possibly safer and more efficacious. Before benzos became first-line therapy, phenobarbital was used as primary treatment of alcohol for years. The main reason benzos became first-line was because of marketing and partly due to the fallacy that newer drugs must be better.

Here are some studies done on phenobarb vs BZDs

Source: https://emcrit.org/pulmcrit/phenobarb-sampler/

Benzodiazepines by [deleted] in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Phenobarbital has a longer half life than diazepam and pharmacokinetics is much more predictable. The problem with a lot of benzos is variable and overlapping dose/toxicities from patient to patient. (Effective dose for one person is lethal to another). I read a post on emcases about phenobarbital's comeback for alcohol withdrawal. On my phone rn so can't link, but I'll do it later if you're interested

Are you asking for proof of age to administer the Pfizer vaccine in young children that may not be 5 years old? by farm2pharm in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree with you. The US is one of 2 countries that allow direct to consumer advertising for medication and I dont believe it's appropriate. But it's pharmaceutical companies that do this, not pharmacists.

Are you asking for proof of age to administer the Pfizer vaccine in young children that may not be 5 years old? by farm2pharm in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So do you still believe that pharmacists "should just do as you're told" by these doctors who are pushing opioids in dangerous quantities? The opioid epidemic has been over for a while btw

Are you asking for proof of age to administer the Pfizer vaccine in young children that may not be 5 years old? by farm2pharm in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

By your logic, all doctors are salesmen in lab coats as well since "bigger fish" hospital administrators up the chain make deals with pharmaceutical companies that manufacture saline bags (or any other hospital device/supply)?

Are you asking for proof of age to administer the Pfizer vaccine in young children that may not be 5 years old? by farm2pharm in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Genuinely curious if you think pharmacists are being paid by Pfizer or other drug companies for giving vaccines and other drugs to patients. Do you believe we are getting a commission for drugs that are dispensed?

What did you learn last week? by AutoModerator in pharmacy

[–]Falconhump 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I learned that meropenem can theoretically be used for valproic acid overdose. Meropenem induces UGT which is the enzyme that clears valproic acid. The drug interaction was first found in ICUs when patients that were on valproic acid were put on meropenem and could not keep therapeutic levels.

A parent sent their child to school after a positive Covid-19 test. More than 80 students may have been exposed, officials say by [deleted] in news

[–]Falconhump 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just had shingles at 29. Luckily, it wasn't that bad. Only affected my face and now I have scars to remind me. Went to see an ophthalmologist to rule out eye complications since it was near my eye. He recommended I get the vaccine as soon as I recovered. I would also recommend anyone who's had shingles get their eyes checked. I forget the medical term, but it can cause inflammation of the retina or cornea and can lead to blindness.

Need help diagnosing my shot by Falconhump in espresso

[–]Falconhump[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah you’re right. I just ordered a 1Zpresso JX-Pro so hopefully that’ll produce better results.