14 Reasons to Talk to Your Pharmacist
- Each year, up to half of the nearly 2 billion prescriptions taken in the US are used improperly.
- Medication-related problems are responsible for an estimated 10% of all hospital admissions.
- 96% of patients don’t ask any questions about their prescriptions.
- Improper use of prescription medicines cost the economy over $15 billion per year.
- American businesses lose about 20 million workdays due to incorrect use of medicines prescribed for heart and circulatory diseases alone.
- The average physician writes 8,000 prescriptions a year, and the average community pharmacy dispenses nearly 30,000 prescriptions annually.
- American dentists write nearly 200 million prescriptions for patients.
- One in five patients cannot read well enough to follow a medication treatment regimen effectively at home.
- More than half the US population receives at least one prescription drug each year. The average per year is prescriptions per medicine user.
- A woman who is pregnant or things she may be should not take any medicines unless prescribed or advised by a physician who knows she is pregnant.
- The most commonly prescribed medicines are: cardiovascular medicines (heart and circulation related); Antibiotics, mental health medications; pain killers and diuretics.
- It is important to ask your pharmacist for information about the medicine you or members of your family are taking.
- There are important questions you should ask whenever you receive a new prescription medicine. Be sure you ask the following: What is the name of the medicine, and what is it intended to do? What foods, drinks and other medicines or activities should I avoid while taking this medicine? Are there any side effects, and what do I do if they should occur? Will this prescription work safely with the other medicines (prescription and non-prescription) I am taking?
- Be sure to tell your health care professionals: The names of all of the prescription and non-prescription medicines you are taking and the conditions for which you take them. If you are allergic to any medicines, if you have problems with any medicines, if you are or could be pregnant.
Information taken from the Board of Pharmacy State of California. www.pharmacy.ca.gov
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