Showing posts with label Management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Management. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Children"s asthma care: percent of pediatric asthma inpatients with documentation that they or their caregivers were given a written Home Management Plan of Care (HMPC) document.


TITLE
Children’s asthma care: percent of pediatric asthma inpatients with documentation that they or their caregivers were given a written Home Management Plan of Care (HMPC) document.

SOURCE(S)
Specifications manual for national hospital inpatient quality measures, version 3.0b. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), The Joint Commission; 2009 Oct. various p.




abrir aquí para acceder al documento NQMC AHRQ completo:
Children’s asthma care: percent of pediatric asthma inpatients with documentation that they or their caregivers were given a written Home Management Plan of Care (HMPC) document.


Saturday, September 21, 2013

TLC-Asthma :An Integrated Information System for Patient-centered Monitoring,Case Management, and Point-of-Care Decision Support

 




 




TLC-Asthma: An Integrated Information System for Patient-centered Monitoring, Case Management, and Point-of-Care Decision Support




 




Abstract




A great deal of successful work has been done in the area of EMR development, implementation, and evaluation. Less work has been done in the area of automated systems for patients. Efforts to link data at multiple levels – the patient, the case manager, and the clinician have been rudimentary to-date.




In this paper we present a model information system that integrates patient health information across multiple domains to support the monitoring and care of children with persistent asthma. The system has been developed for use in a multi-specialty group practice and includes three primary components: 1) a patient-centered telephone-linked communication system; 2) a web-based alert reporting and nurse case-management system; and 3) EMR-based provider communication to support clinical decision making at the point-of-care.




The system offers a model for a new level of connectivity for health information that supports customized monitoring, IT-enabled nurse case-managers, and the delivery of longitudinal data to clinicians to support the care of children with persistent asthma.




Systems like the one described are well -suited, perhaps essential, technologies for the care of children and adults with chronic conditions such as asthma.




INTRODUCTION




The application of information technology to medical care involving patients as users has traditionally relied on stand-alone desktop computers in patient homes.1,2 More recently, advances in telecommunications technology have made it possible to link patients in their homes to computer networks via computer, telephone, and other devices3 – creating new opportunities for the application of information science to support the ambulatory care of patients and consumers. These new technologies are especially well-suited for the monitoring and care of chronic conditions such as asthma.




Asthma is the most common chronic disease of childhood and its prevalence has been increasing in the U.S.4 Despite the success of modern pharmacotherapy, asthma care in the U.S. is often sub-optimal. Anti-inflammatory drugs have been under-prescribed by clinicians and under-used by patients.5 Patient self-monitoring of peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) using a peak flow meter (PFM) as recommended by the NAEP and others is frequently not done. In addition, asthma severity is often under-diagnosed due to a lack of information regarding symptoms of persistent disease outside the clinical encounter.




Efforts to improve the quality of asthma care have focused primarily on the areas of patient education and case management. However, these approaches are labor intensive and costly, and thus are practical only for the most severe patients with asthma. Furthermore, both approaches are often limited by the lack of information regarding asthma symptoms at home.




Computer-based telecommunication technology offers great potential as a cost-effective tool for 1) monitoring asthma symptoms and patient knowledge outside the clinical encounter; 2) providing enhanced education and case management when problems are identified; and 3) EMR-based provider communication to support clinical decision making at the point-of-care.




In this paper, we describe an integrated information system developed to link patients, case managers, and their primary clinician in an effort to improve the quality of asthma outcomes and care using: 1) a telephone linked patient communications system; 2) a Web-based alert reporting and nurse case management system; 3) transfer of patient reported information to primary care clinicians; and 4) use of EMR-based reporting for clinical decision making at the point-of-care. The system has been developed for use within a multi-specialty group practice in eastern-Massachusetts.




Our goals are to describe the design of the system, highlight some of the unique features and considerations of a computer-based telecommunication system for children, and offer a model for an integrated information system that combines patient-centered monitoring and education, Web-bas ed case management, and EMR-based reporting and decision support (Figure 1).







Figure 1




TLC Asthma System Architecture




 




PATIENT-CENTERED MONITORING AND EDUCATION




The TLC (Telephone-Linked Communications) system is a computer-based telecommunications system developed to be an at-home monitor, educator and counselor for patients with chronic health conditions.6,7 TLC carries out totally automated telephone conversations with patients. During TLC telephone conversations, the system speaks to patients using computer-controlled digitized human speech. The patients, in turn, communicate with TLC by pressing the keys on their telephone keypad or by speaking into the telephone receiver. During TLC conversations, TLC asks the patients questions to monitor their health conditions; it also provides education and behavioral counseling for targeted health-related behaviors such as medication taking, diet and exercise. After each conversation, TLC stores the information the user has communicated in a database.




Either the patient or TLC may initiate a conversation. Should the patient fail to call when expected, TLC will call the patient. In addition to questioning the patient, TLC provides education and behavioral reinforcement, such as counseling on how to take medications at prescribed times. TLC conversations were designed to emulate telephone conversations between patients and health professionals. A typical conversation lasts between three and five minutes, depending on the number and complexity of the topics addressed and the user’s responses.




The telephony system runs on a Windows NT computer using a D120x Intel/Dialogic board to interpret DTMF tones and play compressed voice files. The system was programmed in Visual Basic and Visual Voice platform. Automated faxing and reporting features are developed in Visual Basic and faxing is provided by FacSys Fax Server. Data is stored in an Oracle 9i database.




TLC-Asthma is designed for use by children between the ages of five and sixteen with mild -moderate persistent asthma and their parents. Educational materials and scripts have been prepared for four groups based on current grade in school (K-1, 2–3, 4–6, 7+) to provide material appropriate to the cognitive/developmental stages of children and the differing roles that parents play in disease management at these different ages. TLC-Asthma converses with both the patient (the child) and a responsible parent or guardian, in separate conversations. Both child and parent receive customized asthma education during TLC conversations. For example, in a particular TLC-Asthma conversation, education regarding environmental control is limited to a discussion of dust avoidance when addressed to the young child, but is deeper and broader when directed to the parent, including information on the life cycle requirements of dust mites (e.g., high humidity, skin scales, etc.) and information on how to obtain and use covering materials.




The content of TLC-Asthma conversations is based on the NAEP Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma,8 and educational material written for the NHLBI’s Childhood Asthma Management Project (CAMP), an on -going multi-center clinical trial of anti- inflammatory therapy. Content areas for monitoring and education have been developed and are addressed on multiple occasions during sequential cycles. The monitoring components include: severity-treatment mismatch, assessment of the use of a home peak- flow meter (PFM), symptom level, functional status, and knowledge and adherence to the prescribed medication regimen. The educational components include: 1) recognition of asthma symptoms, particularly those that might indicate an exacerbation; 2) potential triggers of asthma and steps that should be taken to mitigate them; 3) exacerbations and how to deal with them; 4) medication use; 5) pretreatment; and 6) appropriate use of the health care system including regular office visits and urgent care. TLC -Asthma educates by first assessing knowledge and then providing targeted education as r equired.




For all calls, the system inquires whether the child has had any changes in his asthma symptoms and if so, which symptoms changed and their frequency. If the child has had a change in symptoms, the conversation moves to a targeted inquiry of potential triggers of the worsening symptoms. For all calls, TLC-Asthma also inquires about functioning.




Finally, in each weekly conversation, TLC -Asthma asks several questions related to asthma knowledge. Each important piece of information is put in a form of a yes-no question. In response to the user’s answer, the system provides constructive educational feedback to help the user learn. The educational material is presented in order of its relative importance (e.g., medication use and actions to take for exacerbations are covered first).




At the end of each TLC-Asthma conversation, the system summarizes the most important points (take home messages) for the child, gives positive reinforcement for the child’s efforts in self -care, reassures the child about his/her health status, and reminds the child to call the next week.




Several age-appropriate sports and entertainment celebrities have volunteered to provide voice recordings to better engage children during the computer-based interviews.




A WEB -BASED NURSE ALERT REPORTI NG AND ASTHMA CASE MANAGEMENT TOOL




During TLC-Asthma interviews, the system monitors each conversation for potential clinical problems or issues and, when identified, generates a system alert. Alerts are grouped into one of two levels . The system is capable of generating alerts for a broad range of clinical problems. Level 1 alerts are generated for responses that require immediate attention. For example, when a child or parent reports significantly reduced peak flow monitor readings (less then 50% of predicted) and lack of response to reliever meds, a Level 1 alert is generated. The patient is told to seek medical care immediately. For all Level 1 alerts, a fax is immediately sent to a dedicated fax line and the TLC system then calls a 24-hour phone number to notify responsible clinical personnel. Level 2 alerts cover a wide range of items ranging from medication supply and compliance to knowledge of key asthma content. Level 2 alerts are sent to the TLC Alert Reporting and Documentation System to be reviewed by the TLC-Asthma nurse. Alerts are viewed in the TLC-Asthma Alert Log (Figure 2).







Figure 2




The TLC Alert Log




The TLC Alert Reporting system has been programmed in Java, and uses a replicated Web -accessible database. Nurses using the system are able to see all alerts from a given TLC-Asthma interview, group them, provide documentation of response, create and customize a summary note and flag the note for transfer to the patient’s EMR. The nurse can also use the software to view the patient’s “TLC-Record” which includes all responses to TLC-interviews, summaries of previous alerts and responses, and a view of the Summary Report described below.




TLC-ASTHMA NURSE ROLE




The TLC-Asthma nurse is in essence, an IT enabled nurse case manager. The role of this nurse has been adapted from asthma case management systems already in existence.9,10 There are, however, important differences in the role of TLC nurses. Nurse case managers traditionally educate the child and the parent about asthma and the role of both the child and the parent in the management of the child’s asthma at home. They monitor the child’s asthma by periodic telephone calls as well as through office visits.




The TLC-Asthma nurse provides basic asthma education at the beginning of the child and parent’s participation in the study. Subsequent asthma education will take place during TLC conversations. The TLC-Asthma nurse does not have the responsibility for making regular telephone and office contacts with the child and/or parent in order to monitor the status of the child’s asthma. This function is taken over by the TLC system. The presence of IT support, however, allows much closer monitoring of a child’s asthma and the early detection of items in need of attention. For example, the TLC-Asthma nurse will know that a patient has no controller medicine at home well before the next scheduled visit to a primary care clinician or periodic phone call. The TLC nurse is responsible for two responsibilities that are specific to the TLC system. First, the nurse will contact the child and/or parent if either does not use TLC on a regular basis. Second, the TLC-Asthma nurse will monitor the TLC-Asthma Alert Log and document alert responses.




INTEGRATING PATIENT-CENTERED INFORMATION, CASE MANAGEMENT, AND THE EMR




Primary care providers for each TLC-Asthma patient receive documentation of all alert responses by the TLC-Asthma nurse. These reports include detailed descriptions of each alert, followed by nursing documentation of case-management interventions performed. Reports are sent to each provider via the internal EMR (EpiCare,EPIC Software Systems, Inc.) messaging system. In addition, key data gathered during TLC-Asthma telephone i nterviews is transferred to the EMR nightly via secure file transfer. These data are used to build a “TLC Summary Report” (Figure 3). The purpose of this report is to support clinical decision making by the TLC-Asthma patient’s primary clinician. The report contains an updated asthma medication list and longitudinal data related to acute symptom frequency, reliever medication use, long-term symptoms and functioning, and objective asthma assessment measures. This report is updated nightly and available via the EMR at the time care is delivered by the primary care clinician. Clinicians are encouraged to review Summary Reports via in-service training, and prompts embedded in the text of every alert response note.







Figure 3




Sample TLC-Asthma Summary Report




 




CONCLUSIONS




A great deal of successful work has been done in the area of EMR development, implementation, and evaluation. Less work has been done in the area of automated systems for monitoring patients with chronic conditions and alert responsible clinicians when problems are detected. Efforts to link data at multiple levels – the patient, the case manager, and the clinician have been rudimentary to-date.




There is a tremendous need to provide effective, low-cost education and monitoring for the large numbers of children with persistent asthma who do not have severe disease, but who are persistently symptomatic. Equally important is the need for tools to more effectively support nurse case managers in their efforts to identify patients in need of their services.




The TLC-Asthma system offers a model for a new level of connectivity for health information and a new level of interactivity for patients. The system supports highly customized delivery of health information to monitor and support the needs of children at different developmental stages. The system is also closely linked to the case managers who, with computer-assistance, can better prioritize and customize care for the needs of individual children. Finally, the system is capable of monitoring multiple factors at a frequency that could not be performed in most settings.




The TLC-Asthma system is currently being evaluated in a randomized clinical trial of 300 children with persistent asthma. A cost-effectiveness analysis will be conducted at the completion of the study. If found to be effective, and affordable, systems like the one described in this paper will be well-suited, perhaps essential, technologies for the care of children and adults with chronic conditions such as asthma.





Credit:ivythesis.typepad.com




Monday, September 16, 2013

How do I know if my asthma is under control? Lifestyle Management


General Tools – Asthma Action Plan
An Action Plan is a written, customized plan to help you take action to manage your asthma. If you know what to watch for and what steps to take, you will be able to make timely and appropriate decisions about managing your condition help prevent your asthma from getting worse. The Action Plan is based on changes in respiratory symptoms and peak flow numbers, and it specifically will:
Give you and your family information about when and how to use daily medications, emergency medications and your peak flow meter.
Help you decide when to call your healthcare provider and when to seek emergency medical care.
Serve as an easy place to keep your crisis intervention plan, self-management instructions or written guidelines.


Components of an Asthma Action Plan
Action Plans should be individualized. Your healthcare provider will develop an Action Plan specifically for you, and your action plan should include the following information:
1. Peak Flow Numbers and Peak Flow Zones
Peak flow numbers measure how well you are breathing. If your peak flow number drops, it means you are having trouble breathing. Peak flow zones can be used to signal you when your peak flow drops a certain percentage. Your healthcare provider will consider certain characteristics of your asthma and help you determine your zones.
2. Asthma Symptoms
Your action plan should tell you what to do when you experience asthma symptoms and when you need to increase treatments to manage asthma symptoms. Your plan will be based on the severity or seriousness of these symptoms.
3. Asthma Medications
Together with your healthcare provider, you will develop instructions about when to take asthma medications.
4. Emergency Telephone Numbers and Locations of Emergency Care
Your written action plan should include information about who to call and where to get emergency care. Your healthcare provider will be able to give you telephone numbers and locations for emergency care during the day or night. You should also include numbers of relatives, friends and other people who can help you in an emergency.
Specific Points to Clarify with Your Healthcare Provider
These are five points that your healthcare provider should specifically clarify for you for inclusion in your Action Plan.
• When should you call your healthcare provider?
• When should you seek emergency care?
• When is quick relief medicine not enough?
• When or if you should increase inhaled steroids?
• When or if you should start taking oral steroids?


Making Your Asthma Action Plan Work for You
Your Action Plan can help you manage your asthma symptoms. Here are tips to make sure it’s available and update for you to use:
Photocopy your written plan and give it to those who can assist you in using the plan, including your spouse or significant other, relatives and work personnel.
Keep a current action plan with you at all times for use in an emergency.
Review your action plan with your healthcare provider at least once a year. Changes in your personal best or baseline peak flow number or medications may mean your action plan also needs to be changed.
If you ever have questions or concerns about your Action Plan, please discuss them with your healthcare provider.


General Tools – Peak Flow Meter
A peak flow meter is a small, easy-to-use instrument that reveals how well your lungs are working. It does this by measuring your peak expiratory flow, which tells you how fast you can blow out air after a maximum inhalation. You use the peak flow meter to help you identify lung performance patterns, which give you information to prevent asthma episodes and develop your asthma management plan.
How it Works
First, you establish your “personal best,” or the highest number you regularly blow. This helps you see when you have changes with your asthma, because it gives you something to measure against. Once you know you personal best, you and your doctor establish treatment rules or “zones.”. You establish your personal best by recording the peak flow values for two weeks first thing in the morning before taking any medications and late afternoon when your asthma is under control..
If your peak flow is less than 80% of your personal best, you take your rescue medication, then wait 20 to 30 minutes and check your peak flow again.
If your peak flow is not back above 80%, report this to your doctor.
If your peak flow is back above 80%, recheck your peak flow about every 4 hours for a day or so. Call your doctor if you continue to need rescue medicine
If your peak flow is less than 60% consider this an emergency: Take your rescue medicine, and call your doctor or go to the emergency room right away.


How to Measure Your Expiratory Flow
Whenever you measure your flow, it is a good idea to write your peak flow numbers in a place where you can track them. Establish one central place to do this so you can more easily keep track of your numbers, such as in a peak flow sheet or Asthma Health Diary. Here’s how to regularly measure your expiratory flow:
Grab your peak flow recording sheet or health diary and a pen and record the date and time, along with any changes in how you feel, changes in your medicines, and/or anything you think may be making your asthma worse.
• Stand up or sit up straight.
• Slide the indicator to the base of the meter.
• Take in a deep breath.
• Place the mouthpiece in your mouth and seal your lips around it.
• Blow out as hard and fast as you can (one quick blow).
• Repeat that process 2 more times.
• Select the highest number of the 3 efforts.
• Record this number on your peak flow diary or on a graph.


When to Check Your Expiratory Flow
When the numbers do not change much from time to time: The peak flow number should be checked once a day (ideally in the morning when you wake up).
When you are doing well: Use the peak flow meter two times during the week and once on the weekend.
When you:
Begin to wake at night with asthma symptoms
Experience more daytime asthma symptoms
Have a respiratory infection (a cold)
You are sick or have asthma symptoms
Check your peak flow number at least twice a day (once in the morning and once in the evening)
When you need to use “rescue medicine”: This is medicine prescribed by your doctor to be used for quick relief of asthma symptoms. Check your peak flow before taking the rescue medicine, then check it again 20-30 minutes later.


Reporting Peak Flow Numbers to Your Doctor
Take your peak flow meter and your asthma health diary with you each time you visit with your doctor or nurse. If you have an Asthma Action Plan from your doctor, follow the plan for each peak flow zone, and compare your peak flow numbers to your personal best.


Signs Your Asthma is Getting Worse
Your peak flow meter is only an aide to you, so do not rely on your peak flow numbers alone when deciding whether to take your rescue medicine or call your doctor. In addition to measuring your peak flow on a daily basis, you should always look out for early warning signs of an asthma attack, which are:
• Runny, stuffy nose
• Fatigue
• Chin or throat itches
• Headache
• Moodiness
• Cough with activity or laughing
• Wheezing with activity
• Waking up at night or early morning with a cough or wheeze
• Faster breathing rate
• Irritability


General Tools – Peak Flow Zone Chart
The following shows an example of how these zones work. Your doctor can help you create a similar table for your own asthma.


Green: 80-100% of your personal best
• Your breathing is good.
• You do not have any early warning signs or asthma symptoms.
• Take all your medicines every day, as your doctor tells you.
• Take your inhaler before exercise, as your doctor tells you.


Yellow: Caution 60-80% of your personal best
• Runny, stuffy nose.
• Feel more tired.
• Chin or throat itches.
• Sneezing.
• Restless
• Red or pale face
• Coughing
• Dark circles under your eyes
• Use “rescue” medicine
• Recheck peak flows after 20-30 minutes
• Call your doctor, healthcare professional, or nurse care manager:
• if your peak flow is not back to the Green Zone
• if your peak flow drops into the Yellow Zone again in less that 4 hours.


Red: Danger Below 60% of your personal best
• Cough, more at night
• Wheezing
• Chest feels tight or hurts
• Breathing faster than normal
• Get out of breath easily
• Use your quick-relief medicine by inhaler or nebulizer right away!
• Call your doctor or 911 NOW


Article source: http://www.nationaljewish.org/healthinfo/conditions/asthma/lifestyle-management/tools/action-plan


Picture source: http://srxa.wordpress.com/2011/05/03/you-can-control-your-asthma-2


OTC Pain Management for Remote Areas

   Casualties found in wilderness and remote locations have two main complaints: Thirst and Pain.
How would you as a Remote Medic deal with both of these issues? How can you provide pain management if you are not a doctor and only have access to Over The Counter medications?


***********this post is for information only. Always consult your physician**********


Introduction
   Thirst and pain are two issues that every casualty with a major injury has. Additional problems are cold, prolonged evacuation time, limited supplies and a myriad of other issues that the Remote Medic has to deal with when assessing and treating illnesses and injuries.
   Pain has been a predominant problem for military medics. Currently in the wars in the Middle East the Combat Medical Technicians are not addressing the thirst and pain issues effectively. One problem is that they rely heavily on the helicopter based evacuation system called the Medical Emergency Response Team (MERT). Currently they have been filmed on the BBC production call “Frontline Medicine.” There is a link here to watch it online. It is definitely worth a look.
   Historically, military medics and Remote Medics have been taught that a casualty cannot be given anything orally. Pain management has been limited as well due to the hesitation by commanders to allow medics to have controlled substances out in the field.
   The myth of keeping your casualty from taking any fluids or food goes back to the civilian protocol for casualties who will likely be sent into the operating theatre once they get to the hospital. The surgeons have made this rule for not eating or drinking because they don’t want to have to deal with the contents of a casualties stomach during an operation.
   The problem with this rule is that these doctors are quite happy to let their casualty starve and be hypovolemic only because they refuse to be bothered about providing patient care. The surgeons and anesthetists don’t want to clean up a mess and to be fair they do have a job to do sorting out all of the traumatic injuries.


   In a remote environment evacuation is always prolonged. If the Remote Medic follows the city based requirement of NPO (nothing by mouth) the casualty will be VERY hungary and VERY thirsty by the time of evacuation. This is not an option for good medical care.


   For wilderness medical protocols it is important to continue to feed and hydrate the casualty. It is important to provide agressive pain management.


Hydration and sustenance
   There are two options in life: hydrate or die. This is the tag line for the CamelBak company and this slogan is applicable to medicine. The casualty must be allowed to continue to eat and drink during the prolonged evacuation.
   The casualty is already injured. They will need nutrients to heal. Feed them oatmeal, soup or something healthy that is warm. Remember that they are also fighting hypothermia.


Pain Management with OTC meds
   There are a few options out there for pain meds for the non doctor. Obviously the best option out there is to have a doctor prescribe some heavy hitters. This post is for those who do not have that option.


1. Ibuprofen
    400mg will have an analgesic effect
    600-800mg will have an anti-inflammation effect
   Ibuprofen is an analgesic and an anti inflammatory. This will benefit any outdoor professional who is in pain from blisters, sprained ankles, or sore muscles. Taking the 800mg dose will address the pain and the inflammation of these injuries.


2. Paracetamol or Tylenol
    1gm up to 4gm per day. Even the military include this for battlefield casualties. It is also has the highest ratio of success of any analgesic. This means that more people can successfully take Paracetamol without dangerous side effects. Definitely a safe option for the Wilderness Settings.


3. Mixing Ibuprofen & Paracetamol
   Recent studies have shown that taking 400mg of Ibuprofen and 1gm of Paracetamol/Tylenol together will be have a higher analgesic effect than some higher levels of narcotics.
   Clin Ther. 2010 Jun;32(6):1033-49


4. Codeine addition to number 1 & 2
   As a Remote Medic, one has to be careful when adding codeine to any mix. Here in Ireland and the UK, it is quite easy to purchase both Paracetamol (Tylenol) and Ibuprofen with codeine.
   Codeine will cause constipation. This means that if you use Paracetamol and/or Ibuprofen with codeine your casualty will need to be given some type of laxative. These are easily found in chemists without a prescription.
   Codeine will suppress a cough which can be helpful in a tactical situation.


5. Piriton
    Clorpheniramine (CTM)
   CTM is used as an anti-histamine. It is great for a runny nose. It can be used for a general analgesic. For Remote Medics who need to debride a nasty wound it would help with calming and partially sedating the casualty.
   Anti-histamines are also quite effective for motion sickness and the prevention of the same.
   Anaphylaxis
   For the casualty who is suffering from anaphylaxis (or asthma) having CTM is the second best tool to have in your medical kit. (2nd to epinephrine) more information here
   Treatment for anaphylaxis is: EpiPen, CTM, CorticoSteroid, and an asthma inhaler (Albuterol/Salbutomol)
   CTM also has an anti nausea effect and can be useful for someone who is suffering from motion sickness or other forms of nausea.
 
6. Diphenhydromine (DPH)
   DPH is used primarily in North America and has the same uses and effect as CTM.


7. Antibacterial
   Neosporin, bacitracin, etc
   Have a few small tubes of a single antibiotic ointment. Skip the triple antibiotics.
   Uses include:
      Ointment for infected eyes
      Ointment for external ear infections
      Ointment for skin infections


8. Antidiarrheal
    Immodium AD
    good for any travel medicine kit


9. Laxative
    Any expedition has a change in dietary habits which means there is risk for constipation as well as diarrhea. Having options for both eventualities should be in every Remote Medic’s medical kit. Have this to counteract for any codeine use.


Additional information can be found at RemoteMedicine.ie.


***********this post is for information only. Always consult your physician**********