INTERNSHIP IN INDRAPRASTHA APOLLO
HOSPITAL, NEW DELHI
Mary Raju Mathew,
Sharanya Nair
In our final year of Pharm.D, it
was a valuable experience to have been
able to do our internship in Indraprastha Apollo Hospital, New Delhi and get to
know how clinical pharmacists in India work about. IAH is the first hospital, in India, to be
accredited by the JCI (Joint Commission International). As medicine management
is mandatory for JCI accredited hospitals, they have a clinical pharmacy
practice depatment which carries out activities that includes prescription
audit, where a pharmacist goes daily and checks the patient file in their
assigned floor. A pharmacist gets to audit around 30 patients at the minimum in
a day. The pharmacist verifies whether
the drug, its dosage form, dose, frequency, route of administration,
administration time and counter signs the medication chart. Any errors
identified are informed to the physician and changes are made. They also verify
the medicine indents, before they are dispensed to the patient from the
pharmacy. During our three month
internship time, we were posted in the oncology, paediatrics and orthopaedics
department and were allowed to shadow the clinical pharmacists during their
rounds. The hospital has been enlisted
as an ADR monitoring centre under the PvPI (Pharmacovigilance Programme of
India) by the IPC (Indian Pharmacopeia Commission), hence the reported ADR
reports are send to IPC through software called VigiFlow®. They have a 24/7
Drug Information Centre, where they receive around 500 telephone queries in a
day. Mostly physicians call to query about the drugs before prescribing and
even nurses call to enquire about a medicine during indenting. The Out Patient counselling service they
provide is quite notable. A large number of patients are benefited from the OP
counselling desk, located in a space next to the OP pharmacy. The patients are
also allowed to buy their medicines from outside the hospital, and the
medicines they bring from outside is again approved and managed by the clinical
pharmacist. During our internship in Delhi, we also visited the IPC in
Gaziabad, the centre of ADR monitoring and reporting in India.
It was an incredible experience and we could
really get an insight into how pharmacists of our nation can prove serviceable
in the clinical scenario.
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