Actionsets help people take an active role in managing a health condition.  Heart failure: Taking medicines properly

How? - Learn the steps involved in taking action. How can you take your medicines properly?

Here's how you can get started on taking your medicines properly.

Make a medicine plan

Talk with your doctor about:

  1. What medicines you take. Find out what each medicine does. If you understand what you are taking, it may be easier to follow your schedule. Write down both the prescription and generic names for your medicines. Have your doctor check the list. You can use this list to make sure that the medicines you get from the drugstore are correct.
  2. Your medicine schedule. Be sure you understand how much of each medicine to take and when to take each one. Ask your doctor if you can make your pill schedule simpler. You may be able to substitute longer-acting medicines for shorter-acting ones. Longer-acting, once-a-day medicines are easier to remember to take.
  3. How to handle missed doses. Talk with your doctor about what you should do if you accidentally miss a dose of a medicine. Discuss what to do for each medicine, because it may be different for each one.
  4. Your medicine costs. Ask your doctor if you can take generic medicines that cost less than brand names. Compare prices between several drugstores, and think about buying your medicines by mail.
  5. Medicines to avoid. You may need to avoid certain medicines. Many nonprescription medicines, prescription medicines, and natural supplements can make symptoms of heart failure worse. Or they may react with your heart failure medicines. Check this list of medicines that may make heart failure symptoms worse, and write down those that you should not take. Check with your doctor before you take any medicines on this list.

Get organized

Taking medicines properly means taking the right dose of the right medicine at the right time.

  1. Make a list of all your medicines. Complete the master list and keep it up to date. At every visit with your doctor, review your master list of medicines Click here to view a form. (What is a PDF document?).
  2. Plan a daily schedule of medicines. Post your schedule near your medicine cabinet. Take it along when you travel. Write your medicine schedule in a daily planner that has spaces for hourly entries Click here to view a form. (What is a PDF document?).
  3. Use a pillbox that holds a week's worth of pills. This may be most helpful if you are taking pills every other day.
  4. Post reminders. Get sticky notes and write reminders to take your medicines. Post them near clocks or on the bathroom mirror to keep you on schedule.
  5. Store medicines properly. Keeping medicines in a place that is too hot or too cold may keep them from working right. Ask your doctor or pharmacist how to store your medicines. Always keep them out of the reach of children.

Watch for side effects

  • Ask your doctor or pharmacist about what side effects to expect.
  • Be sure to tell your doctor right away if you have problems from your medicines.
  • Always check with your doctor before you take any other medicines, whether they are prescription or nonprescription. This includes any herbal or "natural" supplements.
  • Let your doctor know if you have any changes in your health that might affect your heart failure, such as weight gain or another health problem.

Test Your Knowledge

  1. A medicine plan includes a list of all my medicines and their names, dosages, and schedules.

    1. True
    2. False

Continue to Where? - Other resources and organizations that can help you take action. Where to go from here
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Author: Robin Parks, MS Last Updated: August 25, 2008
Medical Review: Caroline S. Rhoads, MD - Internal Medicine
Robert A. Kloner, MD, PhD - Cardiology

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