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Do you guys start your gastritis patients on H2 blockers or PPIs? The H2s work faster and are cheaper. The PPIs are stronger and have qd dosing.
Med school pharm is emphasizing PPIs over H2 blockers right now.
Both Wal-Mart and Target have Famotidine on their $4 list.
The $4 program is great, because you can give patients a 30-day supply of medications they can actually afford.
If you don't have the list of $4 medications in your ED, make sure you get it!
Hence I give the H2.
I have been told that for the patient to be able to fill the $4 meds the script has to match their formulary exactly. For example the sheets I have of what's available at WallMart on their $4 program has Pepcid as:
famotidine 20mg tabs, QTY 60
So for the patient to fill it you'd have to write for 60.
Anyone else heard this?
Good to know. I'm going to post a new thread with a link to the WallMart site.No, my understanding is that the $4 applies to up to a month supply, however any quantity below that will also cost $4.
There is a maximum number that can be filled at one time. For example, only 20 ciprofloxacin tablets can be obtained at one time. So if you wanted to send someone out on a 14-day course for some reason, you would need to write two scripts.No, my understanding is that the $4 applies to up to a month supply, however any quantity below that will also cost $4.
There is a maximum number that can be filled at one time. For example, only 20 ciprofloxacin tablets can be obtained at one time. So if you wanted to send someone out on a 14-day course for some reason, you would need to write two scripts.
Right, I was using ciprofloxacin as one of only many examples.We have a list (from the Wal-Mart site) of all the medications (approximately 200) under the program, and the number of pills that can be prescribed. It varies with the type of medication.