Drug Therapy Monitoring
Drug Therapy Monitoring
PHARMACEUTICAL CARE
By
M. Maneesh Kumar Reddy
Assistant professor
Chalapathi Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Drug Therapy Monitoring
Appropriate patient
Appropriate dose
Appropriate route
Appropriate frequency
Appropriate duration
A reliable and responsive drug therapy monitoring
service depends on team work between nurses, doctors,
pharmacist, scientist and technical staff. The clinical
pharmacist should provide advice to medical staff on the
appropriate use of drugs and assist them in obtaining
better therapeutic results.
Goals
Clinical review
Pharmacist intervention
Medication Order Review
Untreated indication.
Drug interactions.
Over dosage.
Medication chart Endorsement
Assess the progress of the disease and the need for any
change in therapy.
Clinical features
Pathological condition
Patient details
Date, ward and pharmacist
Drugs involved
Description about the intervention
Details of response to intervention
Factors determining the success of intervention
Cure of a disease
Elimination or reduction of patients symptomology
Arresting or slowing of a disease process
Preventing a disease or symptoms
Major functions of pharmaceutical care
Collect data
Interpret data
Demographics
Age, sex, race,
Height‐weight
Current problems
Signs and symptoms
Past medical history
Allergies and intolerance
Pregnancy and lactation status
Social habits
Economic conditions
Relevant lab data
Identification of problems
Efficacy and safety must be considered when evaluating the risk benefit
ratio of a particular treatment. The risk –benefit ratio will depend upon
many factors.
Factors Determining Risk Benefit Ratio
Seriousness of disease
Consequences of not treating the disease
The efficacy of the drug.
ADRs associated with the drug therapy
Efficacy of alternative drug or non‐drug therapy
Side effect profile of alternative drugs.
Patient factors
Diagnosis
Treatment goals
Physiological and pathological factors
Past medical history, past medicines received
Contraindication
Allergies and adverse effects
Patient compliance
Patients cooperation and convenience
Special consideration
Drug factors
Efficacy
Adverse effects
Prevalence and ability to minimize ADRs
Ability to monitor for efficacy and avoid ADR
Drug‐drug interactions
Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics
Dosage form
Route and method of administration
Cost to the patient
Government or insurance company payments,
presentation of bills in their formats.
Monitoring outcome:
The pharmacist regularly reviews subjective and objective
monitoring parameters in order to determine if satisfactory
progress is being made toward achieving desired outcomes
as outlined in the drug therapy plan.