Legislation
PGDs do not give a legal framework for healthcare professionals to adjust a dose of medicine already in a person’s possession and must not be used for this purpose.
Local mechanisms for titration of medication dosages
Some medicines require doses to be titrated or adjusted according to the individual’s response such as insulin or diuretics. The requirement to adjust the dose needs to be implicit in the prescription for the medicine.
Appropriately trained and competent healthcare professionals may use locally produced and approved written protocols to advise individuals to adjust the dose of their medication if required to maintain optimum treatment. Template protocols should be produced by the specialist team, including those who prescribe and those with a specialist clinical knowledge of the medication. It is advised that the protocol should be individualised for each patient by a specialist clinician with knowledge of the individual to include all necessary parameters including maximum dose for the individual and time scale for titration.
Written protocols have no legal standing in respect of medicines legislation and are subject to local agreements between healthcare professionals and their organisations. Consideration must be given to the required training, clinical governance and local authorisation of such protocols to ensure that they comply with the organisation’s governance processes and support the safe and effective management medications.
It is likely that written protocols covering advice on dosage adjustment would reflect many of the principles governing PGDs. Consideration should be given to how medications are labelled when the dose is amended under such a written protocol to ensure individuals/carers are fully aware of dosage changes and how advised dosage adjustments are recorded in all records (including MAR charts and clinical records).
Independent prescribing
Organisations may need to consider the role of independent or supplementary prescribers within pathways where medication dose adjustments are routinely required and if this would allow more individualised care.
Update history
- Page reviewed - no changes required
- Published