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- Oct 29, 2007
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I'm an intern in medicine. We had clinic on Friday, and I had a new patient (switched over from one of the outgoing senior residents) who had been on Ambien for years. Well I wrote out all her scripts for refills, not realizing that Ambien requires a DEA number.
Late tonight I noticed that I have a voice mail message from the pharmacy stating that they need my DEA number.
I have some kind of temporary DEA number that they give to residents, but I think its only good for in-hospital ordering of pain meds, not outpatient stuff.
WTF should I do? Call my attending and ask for their DEA number? In clinic what usually happens is that if they need a narcotic the attending fills teh script out. Should I ask the attending to call it in?
My next clinic slot is not until next month. We do have an acute care clinic thats resident-run though that I can send her to. Should I send her to the acute care clinic on Monday?
Ambien doesnt come in an OTC form does it? Should I just tell her to use OTC benadryl?
Or should I call the pt tomorrow and say "sorry you'll have to use OTC meds for sleep aids until your next clinic appt in 1 month"??
This brings up a larger point. DEA has 5 schedules, and each schedule has about 40 meds on the list. Do you guys have that entire list memorized? I cant remember all the drugs which require DEA numbers
Do any of you have real DEA numbers that can be used in outpatient pharmacies? How can I get a real one so I can avoid this hassle in the future?
OK so what classes of meds require DEA so I can remember them for next time. Narcotics, sedatives, benzos. What else? What about TCAs or some of hte weird depression drugs? What about gabapentin/pregabalin or high dose NSAIDS like ketorolac?
Late tonight I noticed that I have a voice mail message from the pharmacy stating that they need my DEA number.
I have some kind of temporary DEA number that they give to residents, but I think its only good for in-hospital ordering of pain meds, not outpatient stuff.
WTF should I do? Call my attending and ask for their DEA number? In clinic what usually happens is that if they need a narcotic the attending fills teh script out. Should I ask the attending to call it in?
My next clinic slot is not until next month. We do have an acute care clinic thats resident-run though that I can send her to. Should I send her to the acute care clinic on Monday?
Ambien doesnt come in an OTC form does it? Should I just tell her to use OTC benadryl?
Or should I call the pt tomorrow and say "sorry you'll have to use OTC meds for sleep aids until your next clinic appt in 1 month"??
This brings up a larger point. DEA has 5 schedules, and each schedule has about 40 meds on the list. Do you guys have that entire list memorized? I cant remember all the drugs which require DEA numbers
Do any of you have real DEA numbers that can be used in outpatient pharmacies? How can I get a real one so I can avoid this hassle in the future?
OK so what classes of meds require DEA so I can remember them for next time. Narcotics, sedatives, benzos. What else? What about TCAs or some of hte weird depression drugs? What about gabapentin/pregabalin or high dose NSAIDS like ketorolac?