Save a prescription drug

Simplify your prescription process by saving your most frequently prescribed medications for quick and easy access.

Instead of configuring drugs from scratch each time, you can now add them to your saved drugs list and seamlessly include them in new prescriptions. This feature not only saves you time but also reduces repetitive data entry and ensures accuracy in your practice, making it easier to focus on providing quality care.

Note

Saved drugs are practitioner-specific. Only you can view and access your Saved Drugs list—it is not shared across the practice group.

Add a drug to your Saved Drugs list

  1. Create a prescription with the drug you want to save. Configure the dosage instructions, repeats, and other details.

  2. When you've added the drug to your prescription, click the Icon-Star.svg star icon next to it.

    Drug-Save-01.png

You have saved a drug to your Saved Drugs list, including its details, which you can now instantly add to any prescription.

When selecting a drug for future prescriptions, click Saved and add one or multiple saved drugs.

Drug-Save-02.png

Frequently asked questions

I added a saved drug to my prescription. Can I still edit its details?

Yes, you can still edit the details of the newly added drug after adding it from your saved list. This does not change the details to the drug in your saved drugs list.

How do I edit the details of a saved drug?

Because the saved drug is from a previous prescription, editing the saved drug may alter the old prescription (if the prescription is unpublished) or may not be allowed (if the prescription is published).

To modify details of the saved drug, the best practice is to create a new saved drug, then remove the old one:

  1. Create a new prescription and add the old saved drug.

  2. Edit the details of the drug in the new prescription, then save the edited drug to your saved drugs list.

  3. Open the saved drugs list, then next to the old saved drug, click the Icon-Bin.svg bin icon icon to remove it from the list.

Updated

Was this article helpful?