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UP FRONT
Is compounding really all that risky? .....................
4
CLINICAL
Taming CINV via texts ..............................
16
CMS is a powerful agent of change for ABx stewardship ............
18
POLICY
Waste management in the COVID-19 era ....
22
OPERATIONS & MGMT
HHS green-lights COVID-19 testing by pharmacists ....................
32
REVIEW ARTICLES
See insert after page 18.
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ritical care teams still grappling with COVID-19 cases in hotspots around the country should remain wary of the sharp increase in ICU delirium that many hospitals reported at the height of the pandemic. The spike in delirium occurred as more mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19 were kept under deep and prolonged sedation, often without the evidence-based interventions that could decrease their confusion and agitation and shorten ventilator time. “We’ve reduced delirium down from 70% in ventilated patients to around 40% in the last 20 years,” said E. Wesley Ely, MD, MPH, a professor of medicine and critical care at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn. “But COVID-19 has got it back up to 80%. So in three months, we’ve erased 20 years of progress.”
Blank NMBA Cap Poses Lethal Med Error Risk
Article starts on page 26.
NEW PRODUCT PeridoxRTU® Sporicidal Disinfectant and Cleaner. See page 30.
Transition-of-Care Pharmacists Fill Gaps During COVID-19 At Dignity Health Northridge Hospital Medical Center, in Calif., transitional care pharmacists help nurse practitioners and medical residents administer COVID-19 tests at the hospital’s drive-thru testing site.
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ials of neuromuscular blocking agents lacking the usual “Warning: Paralyzing Agent” label on their caps have increased the risk for serious and potentially fatal medication errors, the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) cautioned in its latest Medication Safety Alert!. ISMP issued the alert (bit.ly/ 37QabQa) after an FDA decision in early June to temporarily allow manufacturers of rocuronium and vecuronium to distribute vials of the paralyzing agents without the required cautionary cap labels. The
ecently, the pharmacy team led by Michael Korczynski, PharmD, at Allegheny Health Network (AHN) in Pittsburgh, reached out to a healthy 22-year-old patient. The patient had visited an AHN emergency department for shortness of breath and was diagnosed with COVID-19. He was scared. As part of a multidisciplinary partnership with AHN Case Management, a transition-ofcare (TOC) pharmacist at AHN called the patient within 48 hours of discharge and explained how to take his new medications, including an inhaler, and answered questions, such as the purpose of the medications and any potential side effects. Before hanging up, the pharmacist reminded the patient to follow up with his primary care provider in a few weeks. That was when the patient said, “I don’t have a doctor.” Many health systems have TOC pharmacists who can help fill such care gaps in patients with diabetes, heart failure and other chronic diseases. But doing so while tackling a new virus that experts still do not fully understand presents a new challenge—one that pharmacists are rising to meet. “Pharmacists are learning about COVID-19 with the rest of the system,” Toni Fera, PharmD, a senior consultant based in Pittsburgh, said. “They’re right on the front lines and they know what’s going on. They’re filling in the gaps in knowledge for patients and physicians.” Still, there is no typical COVID-19 patient. Many people who end up seeking medical help have preexisting conditions that are managed by an existing network of providers, but others
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Continued on page 31
V HD Surface Contamination Monitoring Guidance
COVID-19 Triggers Spike In ICU Delirium
Continued on page 6
Rapid Diagnostic Testing and Biomarkers Affecting Stewardship
Volume 47 • Number 7 • July 2020
Special Focus:
COVID-19 Pandemic More coverage on pages 8-13, 20, 22, 32, 33