1) A prescription is written for atenolol 50mg and dated August 15, 2023. The patient brings the prescription in to be filled on March 1, 2024. Can you legally fill this prescripti... 1) A prescription is written for atenolol 50mg and dated August 15, 2023. The patient brings the prescription in to be filled on March 1, 2024. Can you legally fill this prescription? a) Yes b) No 2) Prescription records must be kept for __________ under federal law, and __________ under Ohio law. a) 3 years, 3 years b) 2 years, 2 years c) 2 years, 3 years d) 2 years, 5 years e) none of the above 3) Records for poisons must be kept ______ years. a) 2 b) 3 c) 4 d) 5 4) It is legal for a physician to write prescriptions for rosuvastatin 10mg and alprazolam 0.5mg on the same prescription form. a) True b) False 5) A pharmacy with a category III terminal distributor's license may dispense controlled substances, dangerous drugs, and IV solutions. a) True b) False 6) The labels of both inpatient and outpatient IV (intravenous medications) must have an expiration date on it. a) True b) False 7) A prescription container (like a bottle Timoptic XE®) too small to bear a complete label must have at least the following information on it. Select all that apply. a) Rx number b) patient name c) directions for use d) prescriber name 8) A pharmacist comes to work one day early in the morning and notices that all of the Adderall XR® has been stolen. The pharmacist must notify….. a) Board of Pharmacy b) Local Law Enforcement c) DEA d) a and c only e) a, b, and c.
Understand the Problem
The question appears to be assessing knowledge about pharmacy law and legal guidelines related to prescriptions, record-keeping, and pharmacy operations in the context of the law in Ohio. It requires understanding of various legal aspects to answer multiple-choice questions accurately.
Answer
1) No 2) 2 years, 3 years 3) 5 years 4) False 5) True 6) True 7) a, c 8) a, c only
- No 2) 2 years, 3 years 3) 5 years 4) False 5) True 6) True 7) a, c 8) a, c only
Answer for screen readers
- No 2) 2 years, 3 years 3) 5 years 4) False 5) True 6) True 7) a, c 8) a, c only
More Information
- Prescriptions for non-controlled substances typically expire after one year.
- Federal law requires keeping records for 2 years; Ohio law requires 3 years for prescriptions.
- Poison records typically require keeping for 5 years.
- It's often illegal to mix controlled and non-controlled prescriptions.
- A category III license includes these responsibilities.
- Expiration dates are required to ensure safety.
- Minimum labeling identifies the prescription for safety.
- DEA and Board of Pharmacy must be notified in case of theft.
Tips
A common mistake is not checking local state laws for prescription durations and record-keeping.