Pharmacy Needs In a Disaster: Veterinary Patients - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Pharmacy Needs In a Disaster: Veterinary Patients

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Medication issues unique to veterinary patients in a disaster ... Carprofen (Rimadyl , Pfizer) Meloxicam (Metacam , Merial) Flunixin (Banamine , Schering-Plough) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pharmacy Needs In a Disaster: Veterinary Patients


1
Pharmacy Needs In a DisasterVeterinary Patients
  • Margo Karriker, PharmD
  • Pharmacist, VMAT 3
  • University of California, Veterinary Medical
    Center
  • San Diego
  • NDMS Conference
  • Reno, NV
  • April 2006

2
Topics to Cover
  • Medication issues unique to veterinary patients
    in a disaster
  • Introduce items unique to VMAT cache
  • Familiarize non-VMAT responders with pharmacy
    cache
  • Explore ways teams serving each type of patient
    can interact and understand each other

3
Types of Disasters
4
Specifics for Veterinary Patients
  • Patient size can vary dramatically
  • Unique issues to the species
  • Toxicities, medication sensitivities,
    administering doses
  • Similar diagnoses to human patients
  • Shock, acute traumatic injury, exacerbation of
    chronic disease

5
Pharmacy Basics in a Disaster
  • Medications for patient population
  • Supplies to support administration of medications
  • Proper storage/security
  • Logistical support for re-supply

6
How do we anticipate the needs?
  • Supply a drug cache with drugs and supplies for
    administration
  • Try to anticipate our most common patients needs
  • Dogs, cats, horses, livestock (cattle), exotics
    and small mammals

7
Drugs we need unique to VMAT
  • Euthanasia solution
  • Veterinary-labeled anti-inflammatory drugs
  • Antidotes and reversal agents
  • Large volume fluids

8
Euthanasia Solution
  • An unfortunate, but necessary part of the cache
  • Formulations
  • Barbiturates
  • Preferred for most species
  • Pentobarbital or
  • Pentobarbital and Phenytoin
  • Brand Names
  • Beuthanasia-D (Schering-Plough)
  • Euthasol (Virbac)
  • Fatal-Plus (Vortech)
  • Sleepaway (Fort Dodge)

9
Anti-inflammatory Drugs
  • Carprofen (Rimadyl, Pfizer)
  • Meloxicam (Metacam, Merial)
  • Flunixin (Banamine, Schering-Plough)
  • Phenylbutazone (generic, various)

10
Antidotes
  • Yohimbine (Yobine, Lloyd)
  • Reverses sedative/analgesic xylazine (generic,
    various)
  • Fomepizole (Antizol-Vet, Orphan Medical)
  • Ethylene glycol toxicity
  • Atipamezole (Antisedan, Pfizer)
  • Reverses sedative/analgesic medetomidine
    (Domitor, Pfizer)

11
Fluids
  • Lactated Ringers
  • 5000ml bags
  • Sodium Chloride 0.9
  • 3000ml bags
  • Ex. Equine fluid rate 1-2L per hour or more

12
Other Medications
  • Sedatives/Analgesics
  • Tiletamine/zolpazem (Telazol, Fort Dodge)
  • Antihelmintics/Parasiticides
  • Topical and oral
  • Frontline (fipronil, Merial)
  • Capstar (lufeneron, Novartis)
  • Corid (amprolium, Merial)
  • Ivermectin (various)
  • Permethrin (various)

13
Supplies to Support Pharmacy
  • Drug References
  • Veterinary Drug Handbook (D.Plumb, Blackwell
    Publishing)
  • North American Companion Animal Formulary (Kuehn,
    No. Amer. Compendiums)
  • Compendium of Veterinary Products (No. Amer.
    Compendiums)

14
Supplies to Support Pharmacy
  • Documentation
  • A field ready, feasible system of documenting
    drug usage
  • Administration
  • General hospital equipment
  • Supplies included with the cache, not just the
    basic load
  • IV poles, adequate syringes, catheters, needles,
    empty sterile vials
  • Labeling supplies syringes, medication vials

15
Getting what we needImprovising when necessary
  • Some drugs may allow for substitution
  • Some drugs/patients do not
  • Having items available that allow for flexibility

16
Team interactionTreating all the victims of the
disaster
  • When situations/field conditions require it, we
    may have to rely on each other to help patients
  • Knowing more about each other will help us all
    perform better
  • Likelihood of shared personnel/resources could be
    high

17
What we can do now
  • Learn from each other and our deployments
  • Many common issues
  • Expand pharmacist membership on VMAT
  • Continue interactions between all levels of
    responders and teams
  • Make sure we have a pharmacy cache thats optimal
    and ready to go

18
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