I am on a monthly repeating prescription, for 7 different pills. I picked them up this morning, but did not unpack and put away my pills till just now.
Now I know that sometimes pills can be from an alternative supplier, and so look different. The ones I take are normally pink and oval in shape. These are orange and round.
When I checked them closely, I had been given tablets of 2.5 mg, instead of 5 mg. they were in a box, clearly marked 5 mg. The box had been checked and initialled as checked! and I wasn’t given double the number to compensate.
As we have a long hospital appointment for DH tomorrow, it will be mid afternoon before I can visit the pharmacy, but at the moment I am very cross with the chemist who dispensed my meds.
(No doubt I will have calmed down by tomorrow)
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Wrong dosage medication dispensed
(28 Posts)That's not good Auntieflo but better than the other way round. At least you can take two and not have to cut one in half.
Thanks sodapop, I could take two, but then I would run out in two weeks!
I have emailed B...ts, and wait to hear their comments.
My daughter once returned from the chemist with her prescription to find that she had been given an empty box!
Hope you get your prescription sorted out soon. •Auntieflo• At least you have 2 weeks to get the right prescription. B•••s are usually very good. You could ask if they will deliver. Hope all's well with your DH's appointment.
DH was once given nose cream for excema on his arm. And he used it ?
About two months ago I had the wrong pills put into the correct package. Wrong pills as in wrong medication completely.
It was several days before I discovered this.i
I went back to B..ts and the duty chemist was quite alarmed. He said that a report and relevant paperwork has to be done in such a case.
I also wonder who got my original pills !!
Of course such mistakes should not happen. The double checking was clearly not carried out correctly in this case.
I do worry however that our pharmacists are now being given more and more to do without extra staff being employed. We are being told to visit and speak to pharmacists with problems that previously would have been seen to by a GP. They already have enough to do dispensing increasingly complicated medications.
I agree wildswan16 mistakes do happen. However we stopped using Boots in our town because they happened all the time. We now go to Lloyds and everything is fine, quicker, more efficient and all done with a smile.
That's strange about B***s. When my DS and DIL moved back to our town, my DIL was ill and I had to go to the local health centre to organise her repeat prescriptions. The receptionist advised me to go to Lloyds and avoid B**s.
?
Thank you all for your comments. We went to B....s, immediately after DH appointment. Saw the young girl who said she would prepare my prescription yesterday. No apologies, she just said, “I’ll get that changed for you”.
Anxiousgran, luckily I had enough pills to last until tonight, but if I had used the ‘wrong’ ones, for two weeks, I would have had to request another prescription, and wait for it to be dispensed. I also think my Dr would have wondered why I needed more, when he had prescribed the correct amount, in the correct dosage, in the first place.
All is now resolved, but it will make me more alert, and check what is given to me, and not take for granted that the chemist is right.
Hummmm I would complain formally to Boots - as a pp said this should be automatically investigated as an incident - not sure what the correct terminology is these days.
now check my medication before I leave the pharmacy. I have done this ever since I was prescribed the wrong cream by a doctor whom I had never consulted before, and who had clearly not read my medical notes. He simply wrote a prescription for a cream intended to treat an entirely different condition.
When I returned the cream to the pharmacy the next morning, still in its box with an unbroken seal, they told me it would have to be binned now. Anything that has left the pharmacy cannot be put back into stock because they have no way of knowing what's happened to it in the meantime. Fair comment, but I am dismayed at the level of waste this policy must create.
Of course, AuntifFlo, this would not have helped you as the box stated the correct dosage!
Of course worryingly someone may have the higher dose pills thinking they are lower dose - that’s another reason why it needs properly investigating . Scary
I know it seems wasteful Bath but imagine if a returned medication had been adulterated in some way but was passed onto someone else and caused real harm. It might not even have been deliberately adulterated but for example have been stored at the wrong temperature. What might look like waste is really patient safety. The real problem here was the doctor and in the OPs example was the pharmacist.
Oh I completely agree marye. They have no choice but to dispose of anything that has left their care and control. And as you say, the problems lie with the GP and the pharmacist making mistakes. I wonder if they're brought to book over their errors? I somehow doubt it 
If we don’t complain, then nothing is more likely to be done. What I do in situations like this is to write to whoever is responsible and describe what happened. I then point out why it matters. I then say the important point is that there is learning from this to prevent future risk and will they please explain to me what steps they have taken in identifying how the error occurred and what steps are being put in place to prevent a recurrence eg training, system changes. I really do think we all have a duty to follow up errors although I appreciate some people hate making a fuss. But then my husband nearly died because of an error made by my GP’s surgery - I couldn’t have lived with myself if I hadn’t done something about it and put other people at risk. It’s not about punishment - it’s about learning and improving and reducing( although not always preventing) risk.
I have had serious problems with Boots pharmacy and never use them. That is appalling!
I had the wrong insulin dispensed to me by Loyds. I phoned up after I got home as I felt it was wrong and the pharmacist knew at once what she had given me and what it should have been . I told her she could have killed me and she agreed. I complained to the head office and they said it would be put in the hands of thier insurance company if I wanted compensation. After ages I agreed to only a hundrend pounds compensation as they said I had not really suffered from the mistake . They did not take into account how shaken I was by the whole thing as I really could have been in big trouble.
I use Tescos pharmacy, the staff check your medication with you before they seal the bag - excellent service.
Years ago I was once prescribed Algipan for severe sunburn, by a locum dr, and used it! (If you’ve never heard of it it’s a deep heat cream!) ??
I accept you were shaken Flota as we were with DH but money wasn’t an issue - it was what they were going to do to avoid a repetition and why it had happened in the first place
I did email Boots, and have two replies. They are, supposedly, going to investigate! We shall wait and see.
Good - lets hope they do
My OH was dispensed the completely wrong tablets from Boots which thankfully he noticed before taking them. When he rang, the pharmacist came around with the correct medication and said they would have to complete a serious incident form.
My OH was prescribed made to measure compression stockings, post knee op. R*****ds pharmacy twice gave him the applicator to help put the stockings on... but no stockings. On their 3rd attempt they gave him a pair of stockings that were clearly for someone half his size and weight and so they were utterly useless. A formal written complaint was sent to their Head Office and an investigation was begun. They ultimately came back to us to say that the errors had been caused because their staff are moved from shop to shop very quickly, and the staff following on from them often don't bother to check up what's been ordered on previous days. Just glad they weren't preparing anything more life threatening for him.
Having had 4 incorrect deliveries, that took 3 weeks and still no stockings, we went to a small independent pharmacy and got the right ones in less than 48 hours.
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