This invention relates generally to an apparatus and method for verifying medication to be administered.
Medication errors cause at least one death every day in the United States and injure approximately 1.3 million people annually. A Food and Drug Administration (FDA) study of fatal medication errors found that the most common errors involving medications were related to the administration of an improper dose of medicine (41%) and administration of the wrong medication (14%). Almost half of the fatal medication errors occurred in people over the age of 60, who often take multiple prescription medications.
The task of administering medications continues to be a manual process which is subject to human error. Typically, a caregiver must read dosages and frequency of administration from prescription bottles giving rise to the risk of mistakes in the quantity, frequency and even identity of the medications to be administered. Caregivers and patients in home environments shoulder a substantial amount of responsibility in managing the administration of mediation which can result in medication errors. Common errors include taking the wrong dosage or quantity of pills, forgetting to take certain medications or doses, taking the medication at the wrong time, too many times a day, or not enough times a day, among other problems. For patients taking multiple medications a day or having medication regimes involving complex timing and administration factors, careful day-to-day management of medication administering lends itself to administering errors. These risks of error are compounded because the handoff of administering duties to new caregivers unfamiliar with the patient lack a ready means of acquiring the necessary administering information. Emergency admitting hospital personnel are often left to decipher second and even third hand information, poor instruction sets, and dosing ambiguity leading to delays and increased risks of erroneous medication administering. Also, as patients age, they are more apt to be prescribed more medications, and at the same time they begin losing the ability to manage tasks like taking medications, thus becoming a hazard to themselves or family due to medication prescription errors.
What is needed is a simple device and method that can be used by caregivers and patients for verifying that the proper medication is being administered and to facilitate accurate communication of medication administration directions.
A medication administration guide for use by a patient caregiver in accurately administering pill or capsule medication to a patient includes a card member with a first side, a second side and an elongated opening. A transparent housing is affixed to the card member to span the elongated opening where the transparent housing has a plurality of individual open cells aligned along its length in the elongated opening. Each well is oriented to receive a representative pill or capsule from the set of pills or capsules to be periodically administered to the patient so that each representative pill or capsule is visually in the well to enable easy comparison and selection of the pills and capsules to be administered by the caregiver. The medication administration guide further includes a closure flap attached to the card member adjacent the well opening and positioned to selectively cover and enclose the representative pills or capsules in the individual open cells. The closure flap has a first flap edge permanently affixed to the card member along one side of the elongated opening adjacent the cells and a second flap edge with an adhesive strip and a protective cover on the adhesive strip. In operation, the once the representative pills or capsules have been placed in the well, the protective cover is removed exposing the adhesive which is then pressed against the surface of the card member on a second side of the elongated opening opposite the one side to cover the open cells and thereby contain and retain the representative pills and capsules in the cells during use by the caregiver.
A more complete appreciation of the disclosure and many of the attendant advantages thereof will be readily obtained as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
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The medication administration guide 10 further has a closure member 30 positioned to cover and enclose the openings 26 of the individual cells 24 of the transparent member 22 after the representative pills or capsules 28 have each been individually placed in a different assigned one of the plurality cells 24. The closure member 30 has a first edge 32 which is juxtaposed along a first side 34 of the elongated opening 20. The closure member 30 may be a narrow strip or could be a ply coextensive with area of the card member 12 or integrally made as a transparent area in the card member 12 with the peripheral edges 44 of the transparent member 22 being attached to the top surface 46 or bottom surface 48 by any suitable means such as by adhesive between peripheral edge or flange 44 and one of the top or bottom surfaces 46 or 48. Of course in such an arrangement the pills or capsules would be positioned in their respective assigned cells 24 before the transparent member 22 is attached. Other options for providing or otherwise interconnecting the various elements of the medication administration guide 10 will be apparent to one skilled in the art.
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The second edge 36 can be positioned and affixed to the surface 34 by incorporating an adhesive strip 37 along the length of the second edge 36 where the adhesive strip 37 may be covered by a protective strip 38 until use.
In use, the closure member 30 may be lifted to expose the open cells 24. The representative pill or capsule 28 for each cell 24 is placed in each cell 24 until a representative of each capsule or pill 28 to be taken by a patient at a given time has been placed in one of the cells 24. The protective strip 38 is then removed exposing the adhesive 37 along the second edge 36 with the second edge 36 pressed against the card member surface 46 so that the second edge 36 adheres to the card member surface 46 to enclose and retain the pills or capsules 28 in the cells 24. It will be appreciated that there are many other ways the above described arrangement can be achieved without departing from the invention. For example, any bonding or attachment means may be incorporated in place of the adhesive described in the above example. Likewise, the bonding or attachment means, and any necessary or associated protective strip, can be positioned on either the card member surface 46, on the closure member edge 36 or between the plies 40 and 42 of a multi-ply card member 12.
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It will be appreciated that, although a limited number of embodiments of the invention have been described in detail for purposes of illustration, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the items in the cells need not be limited to prescription medications but can also include vitamins, supplements or any other oral taken pills or capsules periodically taken by the patient and while the item is preferable a sample of the pill or capsule, it is possible to interpose a photo or other identifying representation of the pill or capsule in an individual pill or capsule identifier region in place of a well with a physical sample. Accordingly, the invention should not be limited except as explicitly recited in the appended claims.