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Hi all:) I'm a nursing IV student starting a rotation in LTC this week. I want to make up some cards for the most common meds given so I won't have to make so many when I get my patient assignments. I know there will be lots of cardiac, diuretics, etc..
Just looking for the top 10-12 that you most commonly see in a LTC facility. Thanks!!
A few I didn't see mentioned...
Sinamet, Compton, Ditropan, Remeron, Dilaudid, Prozac, Seroquel, Trazadone, Dilantin, K-Dur, Proscar, Advair, Spiriva, Zantac, HCTZ, Atenolol, Lipitor
Then, there's Nystatin (cream or powder) for those fungal infections that are colorful and have an interesting aroma.
A big one for awhile around here was Procrit, which is wildly expensive. Our docs changed most orders to Aranesp on pharmacy consultant recs to save costs.
Fosamax has also been replaced with the cheaper Actonel.
The trinity seems to be Lasix, Dig and KcL, nearly everyone's on some dose/form or another.
You can't go wrong looking up all the bowel management meds: Colace, Senokot, Senokot-S, Metamucil, Fiber-Con, Dulcolax tabs and suppos, Fleet enema, Citrucel.
Quite a bit of blood thinners, too. Coumadin, ASA, Plavix. Post-ops get Lovenox short-term till they're mobile.
We've been slowly d/c'ing Aricept and Namenda here--by the time the famly seeks admission, they seem to be past the point of beneficial effect. We do 6 months of MMSE's to evaluate, then decide.
Seems lately the trend is going away from Zyprexa and Risperdal and toward Seroquel and Depakote for mood stabilizaton. I'm seeing a few Haldol orders coming back (remember when that was a HUGE no-no?).
Looks like you've got your work cut out for you!
And colchicine and allopurinal too. Oh, and then there's the occasional weekly B12 shot too, don't forget.
Please also try to find out which meds are crushable and which are not, because you'll need to crush a lot of them and administer them with applesauce for different folks.
Remember who gets thickened liquids.
Best of luck to you!
Most common for me (good thing the previous repliers reminded me of some of the hundreds of meds I pass out a shift)?
Colace ( I hate liquid Colace)
Sorbitol ( I hate this liquid med too)
Senna/Sennokot
Tylenol (most common)
Dulcolax suppository
Coreg, Metoprolol, Norvasc, Lisinopril, and lot's of other BP meds
Milk of Magnesium
Vitamins
Ensure/Resource ( I classify this with Vitamins and Iron)
2nd most common meds:
Vicodin
Ativan
Coumadin
Lipitor
Reg Insulin
NPH
Lantus
Glyburide
Glypizide
Tyco # 2 and 3
Trazodone
Seroquel
prevacid
Risperdal
Nortriptyline for "phantom pain"
Celexa
Neurontin
Xalatan
Timoptic
Alphagan
Cosopt/trusopt
artificial tears
Atrovent/MDI
Lasix
Valproic H+
Zoloft
Paxil
Morphine
Fentanyl patches
Iron/Ferrous Sulfate
Tums
Os-Cal/Vit D 500
Thickner
Metamucil
3rd most common:
Dilantin
Depakote
Digoxin
Primadone
Antihistimines
Keppra
Aricept
Reglan
Simethicone
Protonix
Azmacort
Qvar
Albuterol
Keflex
Cipro (UTI's, etc)
Rarely:
NTG
Nitropaste
Megace
Premarin
Luvox
Fosamax (this med will burn a hole in your stomach if you don't use it right)
Fleet Enemas
Lovenox
Jevity, Jevity plus TF (I work in a small convy hospital)
Osmolyte TF
Promote TF
Ensure TF
Chinese medicine and acupuncture (just kidding)
Exorcist/Voodoo spells if Ativan or bribes don't work
Seasonal:
Robittusin
PPD
Treatment:
Silvadene
Safegel
Nystatin (underneath breast and groin areas)
Lotrimin
Biofreeze
Analgesic Balm
Tac cream
triple antibiotics
duoderms
Calmoseptine
A&D
Holly Cow...it's almost 3:00 am!
I haven't done LTC in a LONG time, but I do remember Flomax being a big one, also Fosamax. You'll probably also see betapace, haldol, detrol. Sorry, not much of a list, but I happen to readily remember these. :)
Wow. Fosamax was common for you? I hope your residents stomachs ended up okay.
crjnursewarrior
131 Posts
You forgot Aricept!! :)