Documenting the Clinical Pharmacist's Activities: Back to Basics
Open Access
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- editorial
- Published by SAGE Publications in Drug Intelligence & Clinical Pharmacy
- Vol. 22 (1) , 63-67
- https://doi.org/10.1177/106002808802200116
Abstract
The profession of pharmacy has applied the term “documentation” to count activities that more closely approximate descriptive protocols or administrative reports. This extended nonclinical use of the term documentation has resulted in the profession losing sight of a necessary step in the development, justification, and successful implementation of clinical pharmacy services. An instrument that helps to standardize the documentation of a clinical pharmacist's database, patient-care activities, and therapeutic plans is presented. This process, the pharmacist's workup of drug therapy (PWDT), consists of the following six interrelated steps: (1) establish a comprehensive patient-specific database; (2) identify patient-specific, drug-related problems; (3) describe desired therapeutic outcomes; (4) list all therapeutic alternatives that might produce the desired outcomes; (5) select the drug recommendation(s) that most likely will result in the desired outcomes; and (6) establish a plan for therapeutic drug monitoring that documents that desired effects occur and undesired effects are minimized. A formative method of documenting the clinical pharmacist's activities such as the PWDT must be functional on a daily basis in order to generate meaningful summative management reports.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Eleven-Year Review of the Pharmacy Literature: Documentation of the Value and Acceptance of Clinical PharmacyDrug Intelligence & Clinical Pharmacy, 1986
- Establishing a Pharmacy Clinic in a City-County Health DepartmentDrug Intelligence & Clinical Pharmacy, 1984
- The Role of the Clinical Pharmacist in Medical EducationThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1981
- Individualizing Gentamicin Dosage Regimens in Burn Patients with Gram-Negative Septicemia: A Cost–Benefit AnalysisJournal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 1979
- Initial Experience of Clinical Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy Interactions in a Clinical Pharmacokinetics Consultation ServiceThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1979
- Developing a Clinical Role for the Hospital PharmacistDrug Intelligence, 1968
- The Clinical PharmacistDrug Intelligence, 1967
- Drug-Use Control: Keystone to Pharmaceutical ServiceDrug Intelligence, 1967