When I contact the office, it is mostly to clarify an order or if the dose is too high the doctor changes right away. Anybody got a situation where a doctor insisted on their original scripts?
When I contact the office, it is mostly to clarify an order or if the dose is too high the doctor changes right away. Anybody got a situation where a doctor insisted on their original scripts?
Haha.... yes.....
Medicine is an art. Evidence based practice is for losers.I don't get it, why did they say no when you have all the reference to support your point?
Medicine is an art. Evidence based practice is for losers.
There's a middle ground there too, not every patient fits with EBM.Medicine is an art. Evidence based practice is for losers.
There's a middle ground there too, not every patient fits with EBM.
That said, if the doctors aren't listening to you they might not be the problem.
I about lost my cool with a pharmacist a few years back. Sent patient with sinusitis home with an RX for Augmentin XR. Too expensive. Changed to Doxy. Too expensive. Changed to Levaquin. Too expensive. Pharmacist asked me to change to regular Augmentin. Explained that with our local strep pneumonia resistance of 18% that was not indicated. Pharmacist said she was going to tell the patient that she should seek a second opinion.
I wasn't pleased.
Why not give half an augmentin 250 plus amoxicillin 875?There's a middle ground there too, not every patient fits with EBM.
That said, if the doctors aren't listening to you they might not be the problem.
I about lost my cool with a pharmacist a few years back. Sent patient with sinusitis home with an RX for Augmentin XR. Too expensive. Changed to Doxy. Too expensive. Changed to Levaquin. Too expensive. Pharmacist asked me to change to regular Augmentin. Explained that with our local strep pneumonia resistance of 18% that was not indicated. Pharmacist said she was going to tell the patient that she should seek a second opinion.
I wasn't pleased.
Ehhhh... I don't know about this one.There's a middle ground there too, not every patient fits with EBM.
That said, if the doctors aren't listening to you they might not be the problem.
I about lost my cool with a pharmacist a few years back. Sent patient with sinusitis home with an RX for Augmentin XR. Too expensive. Changed to Doxy. Too expensive. Changed to Levaquin. Too expensive. Pharmacist asked me to change to regular Augmentin. Explained that with our local strep pneumonia resistance of 18% that was not indicated. Pharmacist said she was going to tell the patient that she should seek a second opinion.
I wasn't pleased.
There is literally no guideline that says amoxicillin is good for sinus infections.Your adherence to EBM left this patient without antibiotics whereas standard-dose amoxicillin likely would have sufficed
I think an equally valid question is why the pharmacist didn't suggest that.Why not give half an augmentin 250 plus amoxicillin 875?
There's a middle ground there too, not every patient fits with EBM.
That said, if the doctors aren't listening to you they might not be the problem.
I about lost my cool with a pharmacist a few years back. Sent patient with sinusitis home with an RX for Augmentin XR. Too expensive. Changed to Doxy. Too expensive. Changed to Levaquin. Too expensive. Pharmacist asked me to change to regular Augmentin. Explained that with our local strep pneumonia resistance of 18% that was not indicated. Pharmacist said she was going to tell the patient that she should seek a second opinion.
I wasn't pleased.
There is literally no guideline that says amoxicillin is good for sinus infections.
Maybe you meant augmentin?
And I totally get that. It just caught me off guard because I always have great relationships with the local pharmacists. I'll call and ask their advice quite often, and usually am 100% behind any changes they want to make (I dated a pharmacist in med school, might be why I work better with y'all than most). I have just never been spoken to like that in the 5 years I've been out of med school and it really pissed me off.Eh this is a tough situation for everyone involved. Each patient has their own cost sensitivity and those often don’t fit into the EBM mold. The pharmacist on the other end may have frustrated as well if they had to keep asking the patient if each one was low enough. They probably lost it when the next cheapest option they could think of was shot down... in lieu of not thinking of the creative option above... what should the pharmacist ideally do? They can’t force a patient to buy something they can’t afford...
I'm aware (antibiotics, resistance, and whatnot is an interest of mine).Correct. The only difference between Augmentin XR and standard Augmentin is the amount of amoxicillin.
As an aside, since then I've been completely broken and every case of the sniffles gets a z-pack. So much easier on my mental well being.
Honest to God, I've lost 2 different jobs for being strict on antibiotics for URIs so I finally just said "**** it".I laughed at this. I had a pharmacy manager that got a Zpak every time she got a URI. All I could do was shake my head and give her a little side eye/roll of the eyes while I filled it for her.
My last post was incomplete.Correct. The only difference between Augmentin XR and standard Augmentin is the amount of amoxicillin.
Edit: My argument is the patient would have been better off with standard-dose Augmentin vs. no antibiotics. IDSA rec on this is weak.
This is so...disappointing. How frustrating!Honest to God, I've lost 2 different jobs for being strict on antibiotics for URIs so I finally just said "**** it".
In the 2nd of those jobs, my satisfaction scores were awful. My boss said it was just a matter of not explaining well enough to patients why they didn't need antibiotics or not spending enough time with them. After that meeting, everyone got a z-pack. I actually spent less time per patient after that. My satisfaction scores went through the roof.
But yeah, it was totally that I wasn't spending enough time with them.
Honestly? It's made life much better. I have more time for people who want my help and since azithromycin is basically useless anyway I don't feel bad about over using it.This is so...disappointing. How frustrating!
Honestly? It's made life much better. I have more time for people who want my help and since azithromycin is basically useless anyway I don't feel bad about over using it.
Honestly? It's made life much better. I have more time for people who want my help and since azithromycin is basically useless anyway I don't feel bad about over using it.
I tried to get a few doctors put on Target's "do not fill" list.My recommendations get turned down sometimes, but the issue always get resolved so the patient is taken care of and that' what is important.
I did have one time to suggest to a patient to seek a second opinion. Child had aom, np had written illegible rx. When called supervising md, he could not clarify it, offer a substitute or doing anything to resolve it. Without seeing another dr, the disease would never have gotten trated.
They can’t all be me.I think an equally valid question is why the pharmacist didn't suggest that.
Honest to God, I've lost 2 different jobs for being strict on antibiotics for URIs so I finally just said "**** it".
In the 2nd of those jobs, my satisfaction scores were awful. My boss said it was just a matter of not explaining well enough to patients why they didn't need antibiotics or not spending enough time with them. After that meeting, everyone got a z-pack. I actually spent less time per patient after that. My satisfaction scores went through the roof.
But yeah, it was totally that I wasn't spending enough time with them.
HahahahahaThis is sad that you get punished for trying to prevent antibiotic resistance. People do love their z-paks, the only thing they love more is Vicodin. Since the DEA frowns on giving Vicodin to everybody, the best you can do is a Z-pak. The next option after Z-pak's is Hyland's. Next to Vicodin, and Z'pak's, people love their placebo/homeopathies. You could even tell people that Hyland's isn't a prescription, because the FDA is in the pockets of Big Pharma and keeping the the true cures from people. Sell people on homeopathies and make them happy, save the world from antibiotic resistance, it's a win/win situation.
Adoption rate for statin recommendations for diabetic patients is approximately 0.1%