Activity No 3,4,10
Activity No 3,4,10
Activity No 3,4,10
3
DRUG PROCUREMENT AND INVENTORY CONTROL
Objectives:
At the end of the activity, the student should be able to:
1. Describe the procurement and inventory control systems utilized by the hospital
pharmacy
2. Conduct actual drug inventory.
Discussion Outline
A. Drug Procurement
Purchasing
Control on Purchase
Procedures on Product Specifications, Contracts and Bidding
Ordering Procedures
Receiving, Checking and Coding
B. Inventory Control
Functions of Inventory Management
Methods of Inventory
Arrangement of Inventory
Routine Stock
Special Storage Areas
C. Merchandise Return Policies and Procedures
D. Product Recall Procedures
Activities
1. Write down the responsibilities of the pharmacist in terms of (a) requisition and
procurement of drugs and medicines (b) detail men / med reps.
(a) A pharmacist coordinates all activities relating to procurement of medicines
in a pharmacy including storage, inventory and quality management of
supplies. A pharmacist spends a lot of time interacting with people such as
hospital staff and suppliers; good communication, interpersonal and
organization skills are essential.
Solutions:
Develop written procedures and assign responsibility for ordering.
Only order items your health facility needs and is authorised to keep.
Carry out a stock take before ordering more supplies.
Ask for quotations before placing orders. Use the same format as an order form,
but state clearly that it is a quotation request. Also ask for a pro-forma invoice,
which provides a complete breakdown of costs and which also makes ordering
easier.
Keep records of past orders that show supplier contact details, code and
catalogue numbers, and unit quantities, to help you make subsequent orders.
Fill in order or requisition forms clearly. Provide as much detail about
requirements and specifications as possible to avoid supply of incorrect items or
quantities or delays in filling your order.
Each supplier will have its own forms. It is particularly important to fill out the
forms from your national supplier. For other suppliers, you may not need to fill
out the form as long as you provide the relevant information.
Make sure that equipment is supplied with the necessary consumables,
accessories and spare parts or, if not, order these at the same time.
For goods with expiry dates, specify in your order the minimum expiry dates
required (i.e. the expiry date from the time of arrival of goods in-country).
ACTIVITY NO. 4
STORAGE AND PRESERVATION OF PHARMACEUTICALS
Objectives:
At the end of the activity, the student should be able to:
1. Describe the proper methods by which drug and medicines are stored and
preserved to maintain potency for expected therapeutic value.
2. Describe how unused pharmaceutical products and pharmaceutical wastes are
disposed.
Discussion Outline
A. Drug Storage and Preservation
Central Storage vs. Pharmacy Storage
Storage Conditions
Monitoring of Storage Conditions
Stock Rotations and Control
Containers and Container Labeling
B. Requirements in Designing a Pharmacy Storage Area
Size
Shelves and Cabinets
Activities
1. What are the general principles of storage of pharmaceutical products?
Storage areas should be of sufficient capacity to allow the orderly storage of the
various categories of materials and products, namely starting and packaging
materials, intermediates, bulk and finished products, products in quarantine, and
released, rejected, returned or recalled products.
Storage areas should be designed or adapted to ensure good storage conditions.
In particular, they should be clean and dry and maintained within acceptable
temperature limits. Where special storage conditions are required on the label
Storage of Suspension
Suspension should be stored in a cool place but not be kept in a
refrigerator. Freezing at a
very low temperature should be avoided which may lead to aggregation
of the suspended
particles.
Storage on label:
Store in cool and dry place, protect from heat and light.
Store in a cool and dark place, protect from direct sun light.
Keep in dry place at a temperature not exceeding 30 C. keep the bottle
tightly closed.
Storage of injection
Storage on label:
Store below 30 C, protected from light.
Store below 25 C, protected from light.
Biological products
The vaccine temperature must be maintained in an
insulated container between +2C to +8C at all times.
The optimum temperature for refrigerated vaccines is between 2C and 8C.
For frozen vaccines the optimum temperature is 15C
protection from light is a necessary condition for some vaccines.
3. How are unused pharmaceutical products and pharmaceutical wastes disposed?
Unused pharmaceutical products
Wherever practical the possibility of returning unusable drugs for safe disposal
by the manufacturer should be explored; particularly drugs which present disposal
problems, such as antineoplastics. For unwanted, unrequested donations, especially
those that arrive past or unreasonably near their expiry date it may be possible to return
them to the donor for disposal.
Pharmaceutical wastes
To landfill means to place waste directly into a land disposal site without prior
treatment or preparation. Landfill is the oldest and the most widely practiced method of
disposing of solid waste. Three types are recognized: Open uncontrolled nonengineered dump, Engineered landfill, Highly engineered sanitary landfill.
ACTIVITY NO. 10
QUALITY ASSURANCE PROGRAM FOR THE PHARMACY SERVICE
Objectives
At the end of the activity, the student should be able to:
1. Describe the quality assurance program implemented by the hospital pharmacy.
2. Describe the pharmacy service effectiveness and efficiency standards.
Discussion Outline
A. Definition
B. Benefits Derived from the Quality Assurance Program
C. Quality Assurance Activities
D. Steps in Developing a Quality Assurance for Pharmacy Service
E. Pharmacy Service Effectiveness Standard
F. Pharmacy Service Efficiency Standard
Activities
1. As a pharmacist, how will you meet the challenge of the growing demand for
assuring the quality of the pharmacy services that you provide?
As a pharmacist, I will meet the challenge of the growing demand for
assuring quality of the pharmacy service that I provide by continually learning
new methods and technology that can meet the quality service that patients
deserve.
2. What are the practice tools that you need to use to collect and analyze
information regarding quality-related events, such as errors and omissions in
prescription dispensing that may occur at the pharmacy?
The tools that I need are books, references, pharmacopeia and
newsletter.
3. What are the pharmacy functions that should be monitored using quality
indicators?
-identify potential adverse events that might need further study
- provide the opportunity to assess the incidence of adverse events and in
hospital complications using administrative data found in the typical discharge
record; include indicators for complications occurring in hospital that may
represent patient safety events
-to track and improve inpatient quality and patient safety.