Discontinued Narcotics

U.S.A. New York

Published

I work on a very busy sub acute rehab floor with a pretty steady turnover of patients. We keep our narcotics locked in a lock box and count them at the change of q shift. We currently have alot of dc'd narcs, pts that went home, pain med orders that were changed or dc'd, pts who have died. We have 7 packages of different dose fentanyl patches, some roxanol syringes, blister packs, bottles of pills, and 1 huge bottle of 240 pills. We are supposed to count all of this at every shift change. We have requested that they remove these:#1 because it takes a really long time to count all these along with all the narcs being currently used, and#2 this is a potential problem if we have a staff member with a drug problem. I think there are rules about how long we should hold onto them, we have patches from someone who died over a month ago. Does anyone have this problem in their facility? Any ideas about who to contact?

Specializes in Medical and general practice now LTC.

Can you not contact your dispensing pharmacy and ask them to collect and destroy? Although in Canada I know this is what we do at the facility I work at

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

Are the floor nurses at your facility not allowed to destroy narcs with another nurse, or does a supervisor have to be involved? I think most places prefer a manager to be one of the witnesses, so if your facility requires a DNS or RCM to witness narcotic destruction, you may have to be proactive and ask them to assist you. Suggest that a time be set up every couple of weeks for this to be done, and remind them........I know that as a busy DNS, I don't always put this at the top of my priority list, so my resident care coordinators and I have scheduled days twice a month when we get together and destroy narcotics.

Or, if someone dies or the D/C'd narcs start taking over the drawer, the med aides tell us and we'll get rid of the drugs in between our scheduled days. I was a floor nurse myself not too long ago, and counting zillions of unneeded meds twice a shift was a waste of valuable time, so I'm pretty proactive about getting this done to help the staff.

I wish you luck. Destroying narcotics and dealing with the paperwork is a huge PITA, which is why nobody enjoys the process; however, it has to be done, and if you do it regularly it's less of a hassle. Good luck.

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