The Patient Tab > Electronic Prescribing and Medication Management > Managing a Patient’s Medications

Managing a Patient’s Medications

In addition to prescribing medications, there are several ways you can review and/or maintain a patient’s medication history:

View the Medication History & Supplies page. Any time you want to review all medications, vaccinations, or supply usage for a patient, you can do so by viewing the Medications, Vaccinations, Supplies, Claims History, Pharmacy History, and Documented Medication Orders lists. For more information, see Viewing and Editing a Patient’s Medication History & Supplies.

View a flowsheet or graph active medications. You can view a flowsheet or graph of active medications for a patient. This allows you to view a visual representation of a patient’s medication usage over a specified period of time. For more information, see Flowsheets and Graphs.

Administer medications or vaccinations. You can keep an accurate history of a patient’s care and record medications and vaccinations that are administered during an in‑office visit. For more information, see Administering Medications or Vaccinations.

Report medications or vaccinations. You can track patient medications that were not prescribed through Care360 ePrescribing or EHR, or identified from the patient’s claims or retail history (for example, the patient told you about them). In addition, you can track vaccinations that have been administered for a patient at another organization. For more information, see Reporting Medications or Vaccinations.

Add documented medications. You can track medication orders or prescriptions that you wrote for a patient outside of Care360 ePrescribing or EHR. For more information, see Documenting Medication or Prescription Orders Placed Outside of Care360 ePrescribing or EHR.

Reconcile medications. You can review all currently active medications for the patient as well as medications that appear in the patient’s claims history, pharmacy history, inactive medications lists, or in imported CCDA documents. For more information, see Reconciling a Patient’s Medications.

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