drug/substance to be administered parenterally and the drug/substance is considered. Controlled, a High level of overall Risk may be
5. If the drug/substance administered or to be administered is not a Controlled Substance or was not administered parenterally or was not
A practitioner prescribing a schedule II narcotic controlled substance to be compounded for the direct administration to a patient by parenteral
Controlled substance: A substance listed in Schedules I – V to the are not intended for parenteral use; and. do not contain
Parenteral, administered by means other than the alimentary tract. Controlled Substance a schedule I, II, III, IV, or V drug or other substance. This list is not all-inclusive, but ED-relevant parenteral controlled substances may include:
Parenteral Controlled Substances The level of risk is based on the usual behavior and thought processes of a physician or other qualified health care professional in the same specialty and subspecialty and not simply based on the presence of an order for parenteral controlled substances.
Potential complications of parenteral therapy. Controlled substance storage and record keeping. Patient-Controlled Analgesia. USP
A Section 1302 permit Permit holder shall keep a parenteral sedation record for each parenteral sedation procedure that: For controlled substance Controlled
parenteral administration, an ophthalmic or oral inhalation (ii) a controlled drug substance prescription in the same manner as a controlled
Comments
Borrowed/bought a gun from one of his drug connections would be plausible.
Plausible otherwise. Stars given.