Getting the Drug Into the Patient: Exploring Alternate Routes of Medication Administration
This highly practical session considers the question, “What do I do with a patient who can’t swallow a tablet or capsule?” Patients with a serious illness are often in this position, and treating their pain or nonpain symptoms can be challenging. In this fast-paced presentation we will address alternate medication formulations and routes of administration, including evidence supporting compounded medications where appropriate, for pain and commonly experienced symptoms in advanced illness. No, you can’t just insert any old tablet in the rectum! A better strategy is to tune in for this presentation and come up with a plan that WILL work!
Learning Objectives
- Identify alternate routes of medication administration, in addition to the oral route
- Describe the benefits and limitations of transmucosal, transdermal, topical and rectal medication administration
- Describe evidence that supports and refutes the use of compounded topical medications
Additional Information
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
Slides and Disclosures | 2.79 MB |
Alexandra L. McPherson, PharmD, MPH
Palliative Care Clinical Pharmacy Specialist
MedStar Washington Hospital Center
Mary Lynn McPherson, PharmD, MA, MDE, BCPS
Professor and Executive Director, Advanced Post-Graduate Education in Palliative Care
University of Maryland School of Pharmacy
Stevensville, Maryland
Available Credit
- 1.00 AAFP
- 1.00 AANP
- 1.00 ACCME (All Other)
- 1.00 ACCME (MD/DO Only)
- 1.00 ACPE Pharmacy
- 1.00 ANCC
- 1.00 APA
Required Hardware/software
A computer with an internet connection
Internet Browser: Internet Explorer 7.x or higher, Firefox 4.x or higher, Safari 2.x or higher, or any other W3C standards compliant browser
Other additional software may be required such as PowerPoint or Adobe Acrobat Reader.