QUICK GUIDE
TO PRESCRIBING,
MEDICINE SUPPLIES
AND SUPPORT
FROM YOUR PHARMACY
INDEX
PageAdverse Drug Reaction / 6
Antibiotic Policies / 6
CIVAS (Central IV addictives service) / 3
Clinical Pharmacy Service / 1
Controlled Drugs / 5
Cytotoxic Service / 3
Directorate Pharmacists / 8
Discharge Medication / 5
Dispensary Opening Hours / 2
Emergency Cupboards / 2
Emergency Duty Service / 3
Formulary / 6
Free Samples / 7
IV administration by Nurses / 7
Medical Representatives / 7
Medicines Information Centre / 1
New Medicines / 6
Parenteral Nutrition Service / 3
Patients Own Drugs (POD) Service / 7
Prescribing – general guidance / 4
Prescribing for self or other staff / 7
Product Defects and Product Recalls / 6
Self Prescribing / 7
PHARMACY
Welcome to pharmacy. In addition to supplying medicines, we can offer helpful advice and guidance on their use. Access to this information may be gained by three routes:
The Regional Medicines Information Centre
The Clinical Pharmacy Service
The Dispensary
- Regional Medicines Information Centre (ext. 6908/9) or Email:
Provides advice on medicines and drug therapy and has access to considerable
information resources, as well as local and national experts. Please phone or call in
if you need information on any medicine related topic such as:
Choice of therapy
Administration/Dosage
Adverse effects
Availability/supply
Identification
Interactions
Pharmacology/Pharmacokinetics
Drugs in pregnancy
Drugs in breast feeding
Alternative medicine
Substance misuse
Information on new drugs
The centre is located near the lifts to the right of the foyer on C level at SGH, and is
open 8.45a.m. - 5.15p.m. Monday – Friday. It serves all healthcare professionals in
both primary and secondary care.
Also look at our websites:
and
The service does not normally provide POISONING INFORMATION. Urgent
enquiries related to poisoning should be referred to one of the National Poisons
Centres (as listed in the front inside cover of BNF).
- Clinical Pharmacy Service
Most wards have a Pharmacist who visits them each day at an agreed time. The Pharmacist checks that the prescriptions you write are clear, legally correct and safe. They are there to offer you information about any potential problem.
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- Dispensary
The dispensaries are open for information and supply of medicines at the following
times:
Hours of Opening
Southampton General Hospital
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday:9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
Wednesday9.30 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
Saturday9.00 a.m. to 12.30 p.m.
Sunday (for urgent TTO’s only) 11.30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m.
Southampton Eye Unit, S.G.H.
Monday to Friday (mornings): 9.00 a.m. to 1.00 p.m.
Monday to Thursday (afternoons):2.00 p.m. to 5.00 p.m.
Southampton Oncology Centre, SGH
Monday to Friday 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday Closed
(for emergency supplies the main pharmacy may be used)
Royal South Hants Hospital
Monday Tuesday, Thursday, Friday 8.30 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
Wednesday 9.15 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
Saturday:8.30 a.m. to 11.30 a.m.
Lymington Hospital
Monday and Tuesday:8.30 a.m. to 1.00 p.m.
2.00 p.m. to 5.00 p.m.
Wednesday: 8.30 a.m. to 1.00 p.m.
Thursday and Friday:8.30 a.m. to 1.00 p.m.
2.00 p.m. to 5.00 p.m.
- Emergency Cupboards
Apart from Lymington, there is no access to Pharmacies outside the hours given above, but each department has an emergency cupboard nearby, which is available to medical staff. Newly appointed medical staff are invited to seek the assistance of pharmacy staff in order to become familiar with the local arrangements for obtaining keys and the location of the emergency cupboard. It would be helpful if details of all items taken from the cupboard could be entered in the book provided, so that stock can be replaced promptly for the next emergency. The controlled drug cupboards in the Pharmacies are not accessible when the departments are closed, but adequate stock is normally available on the wards.
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- Emergency Duty Service
In an emergency, a Pharmacist can be contacted for information about medicines or
their supply through the hospital switchboard at Southampton General Hospital.
- Parenteral Nutrition Service
Guidelines on the use of PN and other nutrition support are available on all wards
(“The Nutritional Management of your Services”). The Parenteral Nutrition (PN) service is available from the Pharmacy at Southampton General. Requests for PN solutions for adults are made through Clinical Pharmacists or the Nutrition Support Team, who agree with Pharmacy a range of standard formulations - requests must be received by 12.00 noon, at the latest, on the day on which they are required. Requests for paediatric of neonatal PN are made through the clinical pharmacists or the pharmacy PN unit. All orders for these must be received by the Manufacturing Unit not later than 2.00 pm on the day on which they are required. The service operates on five days a week only. Prescriptions for Saturdays and Sundays are prepared on Thursdays and Fridays. For further information on PN, contact the Nutrition Support Team Bleep 2082/1361 or the Technical Services Pharmacist at SGH (ext 8352 or 6090 or bleep 2599). Out of hours contact Emergency Duty Pharmacist for advice.
- Central intravenous Additive Service (CIVAS)
The Pharmacy Technical Services section operates a central intravenous additive
service to the Cancer Care Directorate, Child Health Directorate, NNU, Elderly Care
and Critical Care Directorate and for patients receiving treatment at home. The service
provides a range of antibiotics in a ready to give form, ie. bag, syringe etc. This
service exists to reduce wastage on the wards, release nursing/medical staff time from
the task of reconstituting drugs, as well as ensuring this is done under aseptic
conditions. Contact Senior Technician or pharmacist on ext 6384.
- Cytotoxics
A centralised oncology pharmacy service is available at SGH. This satellite unit
provides a full service to oncology by having its own dispensary and aseptic unit.
Under Trust health and safety policies, all cytotoxics must be prepared in the
specialised facilities available in pharmacy, and handled on the ward by trained and
approved staff. Drugs will be provided in the most ready use form. Prescriptions
should be sent to the pharmacy no later than 3pm on the day the drugs are required.
For dermatology and bladder instillations at the RSH, prescriptions must be faxed to
the oncology pharmacy on Fax 6762 and the original prescription taken to the RSH
pharmacy which will be released on receipt of the drugs from SOCP.
For further information contact the Service Manager on Ext 3125 or Bleep 2480. For
the Directorate Pharmacist Bleep 1128.
Out of hours contact the emergency duty pharmacist as described in Section 5.
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- Prescribing and the Use of Drug Administration Charts
The British National Formulary (BNF) and the BNF for Children are excellent prescribing guides. Approved names from this text should be used wherever possible. All medicines, including additives to intravenous infusions, should be prescribed on the drug chart.
Directions for Use of the Charts
Prescriptions should be written in ink in capital letters.
Abbreviations: the following are permissible:
S.C. -Subcutaneous
I.M. -Intramuscular
I.V. -Intravenous
Sub ling -Sublingual
O -Oral
All other routes of administration should be written in full, eg. intrathecal.
The dates, times and routes of administration must be explicit.
Changes in drug therapy must be ordered by a new prescription, after deleting the
discontinued drug. It is not acceptable to amend items.
Discontinue a drug by clearly crossing out the discontinued drug, and drawing a
line through the unused recording panel. Sign and date all discontinuations.
Dosage should be given in metric figures. Circle the appropriate units on the chart or write them clearly
Full Signature must be used by the doctor prescribing in addition please print your name and bleep number.
Length of Treatment if known to be limited, e.g. antibiotics should be indicated.
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Controlled Drugs, eg. morphine; special regulations apply to medicines of
this type. It is essential that the total number of doses to be administered is
specified. If this is not done, only one dose can be administered by the nursing staff.
For outpatients and those going home, the prescription must be in ink or otherwise
indelible, in the prescriber’s own handwriting, signed with their usual signature and
dated by them. They must also specify:
i)The patients name.
ii)The dose to be taken.
iii)The form of the preparation.
iv)The strength of the preparation (if more than one strength is available).
v)The total number of dosage units to be supplied (in words as well as figures).
If more than one strength is required to make a dose the quantity of each must be
stated.
For example: Morphine Sulphate slow release capsules 50mg BD for 7 days.
Total quantity (14), fourteen capsules of 30mg and (28) twenty eight capsules of
10mg..
Since this is a legal requirement, Pharmacists will return to the prescriber, for
correction, any prescription which does not comply fully with the above
regulations for dispensing.
Timing of Administration: for inpatients this should be chosen (where
possible) to fit in with the nursing practices on the unit concerned. In most
instances, if it is not necessary to give a drug at 6.00 am when it will have to be
given by the night staff who are very busy at that time. For regular medication, the
appropriate time box should be ticked to indicate when the medicine should be
given. Where the dose of medicine is likely to be frequently changed, the drug
should be prescribed in the variable dose section at the bottom right hand corner of
the prescription sheet.
Discharge Medication should be prescribed on the HMR, or other
approved form. In some directorates pharmacist may write TTO’s and dispense in
advance of the doctors signature. In these instances it is the responsibility of the
doctor to check and sign the TTO prescription BEFORE the patient is discharged.
All medicines that the patient is taking must be included on the TTO form,
irrespective of whether patients have their own supplies (see also section 19 PODs)
Short Term Leave
Mental Health and Learning Disabilities services have a separate form for short term
leave.
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- Formulary
The Drugs Committee, at the request of the Clinical Management Group, has
produced a formulary for hospital prescribing in Southampton Hospitals.
The Formulary includes a range of medicines intended to cover the majority of
prescribing requirements. It is designed to make your choice simpler and
easier to remember. All hospital medical staff are expected to prescribe from
the formulary. If it is necessary to prescribe an unlisted drug for an individual patient, this can be arranged with the clincal pharmacist. Non-formulary drugs will not normally be held in stock and there is
often a delay in supplying them.
- Antibiotic Policy
There are antibiotic policies giving details of preferred drugs for various
indications. You are asked to consult these before prescribing antibiotics.
Contact your directorate pharmacist for details.
- New Medicines
Requests for new medicines to be stocked by the Pharmacies may be made by
Consultants. Forms are available from Directorate Pharmacists. Requests will
be considered by the Drugs Committee. In each case, the applicants will be
informed of the Committee’s decision, giving reasons for rejections if the
request if refused. Approved medicines are added to the Formulary. If the
addition is not approved, the product will not be stocked.
- Adverse Drug Reactions
Suspected adverse drug reactions should be reported on yellow forms in the
back of the BNF. All reactions to new drugs (identified by the sign in the BNF), and serious or unusual reactions to all other drugs, should be reported. Completed cards should be handed to the ward pharmacist or sent to the Medicines Information Centre, Southampton General Hospital. The cards will be collated and forwarded to the CSM. Confidentiality will be maintained. Note that hospital pharmacists may also report suspected adverse drug reactions to the CSM.
- Product Defects and Product Recalls
All product defects should be notified to pharmacy who will investigate and take any necessary action.
Pharmacy are notified of product recalls through the national scheme administered by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). Those clinical areas affected will then be notified by pharmacy in accordance with trust policy.
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- Administration of Intravenous Injections by Nursing Staff
Qualified nurses with a certificate are allowed to give an approved range of
drugs by intravenous injection. A policy outlining those which have been agreed within each specialty is available on each ward.
- Medical Representatives
Medical representatives must register at Main Reception and will be expected to
observe the Code of Practice for the Pharmaceutical Industry, drawn up by the ABPI.
See compendium of Data Sheets and Summary of Product Characteristics.
- Samples
It is Trust policy that samples of medical products, including medicated dressings
and aerosols for use in the hospital, must never be left on wards, theatres or
departments, nor given out at promotional meetings. Pharmacies do not accept
samples.
Samples of medicinal products for the private use of doctors should be sent to
their private address or given to the doctor concerned personally on the
specific understanding that they will not be used within the hospital.
- Prescribing Medicines for Members of Staff
The firm advice of the Department of Health is that staff working in the NHS
should make the same arrangements as any other member of public and, if they are
unwell or require medication, should go to their General Practitioner or to Staff
Health Clinic. Under no circumstances should the in-patient prescription chart be
used for staff medication. If self prescriptions are drawn, the normal charges will be
made and the quantity supplied will follow the current Department of Health
guidelines, ie. will be an emergency supply only.
- Patients Own Drugs Scheme (PODS)
This operates in some areas. Patients are encouraged to bring their own medicines
in on admission. These are checked by pharmacy staff, or nurses, stored in either patient specific locked boxes or suitably designed trolleys and used for administration. Supplies are replenished by pharmacy, labelled with directions,
in an attempt to reduce delays in discharge. However, medication must always be checked against the discharge prescription to ensure it is current and correct BEFORE the patient is discharged.
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- Directorate Pharmacists
All Directorates have a Directorate Pharmacist who is responsible for co-ordinating the pharmaceutical service to the Directorate. Their functions include examining drug expenditure, providing information and advice and helping to develop guidelines for the use of medicines. The names and bleep numbers of Directorate Pharmacists are listed below.
USEFUL TELEPHONE NUMBERS
Southampton General Hospital (S.G.H.)
Dispensary / ext 4161 or 6312Medicines Information / ext 6908 or 6909 / Email:
TPN / ext 8352
CIVAS / ext 6384
Cytotoxic / ext 8637
Southampton Eye Unit (S.G.H.)
/Dispensary
/ext 4836
Southampton Oncology Centre Pharmacy
/Dispensary
/ext 6668
Aseptic Unit
/ext 3282
Directorate Pharmacists
Accident & Emergency / Jennifer Thomson / bleep 2088Critical Care / Mark Tomlin / bleep 2221
Surgical Division / Sharron Millen / bleep 2766
Medical Directorate / Caron Weeks / bleep 2407
Neurosciences / Emyr Morgan / bleep 2404
Elderly Care / Kath Hayes / bleep 2408
Obs & Gynae Directorate / Christina Nurmahi / bleep 9038
Child Health & Neonatology / Amanda Bevan / bleep 2805
Cancer Care Directorate / Debbie Wright / bleep 1128
Cardiothoracic / Caroline Taylor / bleep 1235
Microbiology / Kieran Hand / bleep 1070
Theatres / Victoria Hutchinson / bleep 9179
Mental Health / Rebecca Henry / bleep 2842
Royal South Hants Hospital
Dispensary / ext 2348/2625Lymington Hospital
Dispensary Manager / Linda Collins / 01590 663135 bleep 10Community Hospitals
Elderly & Elderly Mental Health / Caroline Bowyer / pager 07659 547369
Jane Dowsett
Emma Smithson / pager 07659 535503
pager 07699 669809
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