Remove Blog Remove Labelling Remove Medical Records
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Episode 918: What Happens If You Give a Cephalosporin to a Patient With Moderate, Severe, or Unknown Beta-Lactam Allergy?

Pharmacy Joe

Subscribe on iTunes , Android , or Stitcher The label of “penicillin allergic” usually sticks to a patient’s medical record forever. The trouble is that many recorded allergies are actually intolerances, such as nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.

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Harnessing AI for Digital Transformation in Pharma Market Research

InCrowd

Traditionally reliant on established methodologies, HEOR is now rapidly incorporating RWD and Real-World Evidence (RWE) to support label expansions and integrate with conventional research activities. AI’s ability to analyze complex datasets can revolutionize HEOR by providing deeper, more nuanced insights.

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Long-Awaited Guidance on FDAMA 115: Confirmatory Evidence Finally Has Its Moment (to be Crossed Off the FDA’s Guidance To-Do List)

FDA Law Blog: Biosimilars

Several of these approvals, including examples in which we were directly involved—Relyvrio for ALS and Skyclarys for Friedreich’s Ataxia—expanded upon the examples FDA previously provided to illustrate their interpretation of the single study plus confirmatory evidence statutory standard (see our earlier blog posts here and here ).

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Sentinel Events Should Result In A Blameless Society — Not Make The Employee The Scapegoat

The Happy PharmD

In this particular case, the physician folded the medication order when he placed it in the nurse’s bin. The nurse transcribed the medication order on the patient’s (nurse’s) record system. The medication record system containing all the medications that the patient was taking was called the “kardex”.

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Episode 641: How Pharmacists Can Improve Their Working Relationships With Physicians (and Nurses)

Pharmacy Joe

Don’t get me wrong – I’m not suggesting that you don’t document necessary pieces of information in the medical record, or that you don’t document your interventions. But for basic interventions like I just described, it makes the physician look good when they “fix up” orders based on your informal recommendations.