Yeah, just the other day this guy who normally comes in every month for #180 Oxycontin 40mg 1T;PO;Q4-6H brought in a script at 9PM on a Sunday for #18 Oxycontin 40mg 1T;PO;Q6H.
I don't think I would fill a Rx for Oxycontin every 4 hours period. It's indicated for q12. I read articles supporting q8 in chronic pain patients. I cringe when I see q6, but still may fill it. I suspect foul play in this case.
I agree that there is no need to wait to the next day. Also, if you get a fake call in you can call the police and ask them to have someone in the area. If there using drive thru don't forget to record the license plate.
I had a large woman
walk in with a Percocet Rx from the ER. I looked at her profile and asked her about the 90 Vicodin she got from her PCP earlier that day. She explained that the Vicodin were for her back pain and they gave her Percocet for her
ruptured achillies tendon (sprained ankle according to the nurse). The pt seen me on the phone became belligerent and demanded her RX back. Apparently this has happened before. I gave the Rx back to a patient before I could get the Dr on the phone to cancel it. It was graveyard shift, so I called across the street and let them know the Dr wanted it cancelled. I also left it billed to insurance the rest of the night just in case she went elsewhere.
The worst I got was a
pregnant woman that got 30 days worth of Duragesic and oxycodone 15mg a week prior from her pain clinic. She brought in Oxycontin 20 QID, and Pecocet 10mg from her OB/GYN. She explained theat the oxycodone 15 wasn't handling her BTP so they were increasing it to 20mg. I informed her Oxycontin was an extended release formulation and not to be used in this manner. She insisted that the Dr knew it was an ER formulation but was using as immediate release. The Dr didn't know about the other scripts and cancelled them. She wasn't showing and I didn't know she was pregnant until I spoke with the Dr. I seriously doubt she gave birth to a healthy baby, but didn't want to dispense the Rx responsible for killing her child.
I had a woman come in with her IBU 800mg I filled earlier. She was demanding I give her the correct drug. I checked it again, it was correct.
She said it wasn't and pointed out that it said on the label that it causes drowsiness. She took three 800mg, "800 motherf'n mg's," pills and wasn't tired so it couldn't be correct. I informed her that it doesn't cause drowsiness, she could take the rest of the bottle and wouldn't become tired, but she may destroy her kidneys and develop an ulcer. In the end I gave her poison control's number and told her to take it up with them.