Whenever a pharmacist is made aware that a patient has had an adverse drug reaction that will affect their future medical care (including allergies to prescription drugs, non-prescription medications, or natural health products), the pharmacist must update the patient’s medication profile on both the local system and PharmaNet.
The pharmacist must update the patient’s medication profile on both the local system and PharmaNet.
Entering an adverse drug reaction
Field Name | Mandatory? | Information details |
---|---|---|
DIN |
Yes |
Drug DIN, PIN, or NPN (Natural Health Product Number)—see information below to determine the correct information to enter |
Drug name |
Maybe |
Drug's generic name. Some software requires you to enter the drug's generic name, while other software auto-completes the drug name when you enter the DIN |
Reported by |
Yes |
Person who reported the reaction to you: patient (or a family member), pharmacist, physician, Drug and Poison Information Centre |
Date reported |
Yes |
Date on which the adverse reaction was reported to you |
Comments |
No |
Details about the adverse reaction or allergy (maximum length that can be uploaded to PharmaNet is 80 characters) |
Practitioner ID reference code |
Yes, if comments are included |
Your information as the health care provider entering the information |
Practitioner ID |
Yes, if comments are included |
Your information as the health care provider entering the information |
Date entered |
Yes, if comments are included |
Date on which the adverse reaction was entered into PharmaNet. Your software may not display this field if it automatically fills in the date. |
Certain non-prescription or natural health products do not have a DIN; PharmaCare assigns a PIN to such products.
To decide which identifier to use:
If a DIN exists for a product, enter the DIN
If there is no DIN, enter the product's unique PIN
If there no unique PIN for a product, enter the appropriate Miscellaneous PIN and provide product details in the Comments field
When a patient has an adverse reaction to a product compounded with multiple ingredients that have DINs, create an adverse reaction record for each DIN in the product, unless the patient knows the particular ingredient to which they are allergic.
3. After recording the reaction in your local system, follow your software's procedures for uploading the entry to PharmaNet.
Entering general allergy information
When someone reports an allergy that is not specific to a particular product, enter the information in the Clinical Conditions screen of the Patient Profile Information Update—TPI function.
Removing adverse drug reaction information from PharmaNet
If you (or a patient) identify inappropriate or incorrect information in the adverse drug reaction field, submit a Request to Inactivate Adverse Reaction/Clinical Condition on PharmaNet Profile (HLTH 5550) (PDF, 930KB).