Can You Read These Rxs?

Publication
Article
Pharmacy TimesApril 2014 Allergy & Asthma
Volume 80
Issue 4

Our latest round-up of difficult-to-read scripts.

It’s no wonder that pharmacist Charles Deboyace, RPh, of Price Chopper Pharmacy in Oneonta, New York, could not decipher this messy Rx—the physician’s order is for a medication strength that is not commercially available.

Can you figure out what’s being prescribed?

Rx 2

Pharmacy Manager Khanh Pham and Senior Pharmacy Technicians Katy McGroarty and Joseph Palang of Walgreens Pharmacy #6310 in Las Vegas, Nevada, all tried to interpret this cramped writing. To clarify the drug and directions, they finally had to call the prescriber’s office.

Can you read this Rx?

ANSWERS

Rx 1: Dexedrine 5 mg, #120, 2 tablets twice a day

Rx 2: Ambien 10 mg, #30, 1 tablet by mouth at bedtime as needed for insomnia

Read the answers

function showAnswer() {document.getElementById("answer").style.display = 'block';document.getElementById("link").style.display = 'none';}

Have eye-straining, baffling prescriptions? Send them to us at Pharmacy Times--now via email as well as regular mail!

Along with a clean photocopy or scanne image of the prescription itself, your submission must include: (1) the name of your institution and its location; (2) your name and title (PharmD, RPh, Pharm Tech); (3) the correct name of the drug(s), strength, and dosing requirements; and (4) your telephone number. Please e-mail scanned Rxs to kmckay@pharmacytimes.com or mail your submissions to: Can You Read These Rxs?, Pharmacy Times, 666 Plainsboro Road, Suite 300, Plainsboro, NJ 08536.

Related Videos
Practice Pearl #1 Active Surveillance vs Treatment in Patients with NETs
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.