A99 Non-medical prescribing essentials for common long term conditions
Course summary
This course will review essential prescribing practice for a range of common long term conditions (LTCs). including COPD, Chronic Heart Failure, Renal Disease and Diabetes.
Who should attend?
Non-medical prescribers
AHPs
Nurses
Community nurses
District nurses
Practice nurses
ANPs
Advanced nurse practitioners
Aims / objectives
- Develop an overview of common pharmacological agents used for managing Diabetes, Renal Disease, CHF and COPD.
- Have a better understanding of best treatment in patients with these diseases and their proper application within the context of national targets and guidelines.
- Improve prescribing practice for these patients, both within a cost effective and patient management context.
- Become aware of some of the latest innovations in pharmacological management of these LTCs
Course programme
- Interactive learning is a key feature of this course. You will look at case studies and real situations that have been encountered.
- The day will start with establishing your familiarity with the following principles which will be used in the case studies.
- An understanding of what medicines optimisation means and how this plays an important role in each of the conditions.
- What is a medication review and the different levels of medicines reviews.
- How often should you review a patient's medication.
- What is medicines reconciliation and why this is particularly important in long term conditions.
- Why is patient experience and involvement essential?
- Consider drug-drug interactions when prescribing new medicines
- Be aware of black triangle medicines.
- Renal Disease
- Renal disease: stages and monitoring of the disease.
- Prescribing and dose alterations for different stages.
- Acute kidney injury (AKI) including prevention and awareness of medications that often place patients at risk.
- The importance of hydration.
- COPD
- Which inhalers and when to prescribe.
- Prescribing other oral medicines in COPD; what is the evidence.
- Prescribing in advance of exacerbatoin including patient education.
- High dose steroid cards.
- Chronic Heart Failure
- A brief overview of the medicines prescribed in CHF
- Maximising doses in chronic heart failure
- How to manage side effects including medication alterations.
- Diabetes
- When to treat type II diabetes
- Current prescribing guideline recommendations
- Insulin and its management
- Blood glucose monitoring- when, why and is it necessary?
- Risk factors and prescribing preventative medicines
- Practical problems such as:
- - Diabetes treatment and the patient fasting for religious reasons
- - Hypoglycaemic attacks: Patient or partner recognition.
- - Long distance flights and time changes: how and when to take diabetes medication.
Led by
TBA