Pharmaceutical code

Pharmaceutical codes are used in medical classification to uniquely identify medication. They may uniquely identify an active ingredient, drug system (including inactive ingredients and time-release agents) in general, or a specific pharmaceutical product from a specific manufacturer.

Examples

Drug system identifiers (manufacturer-specific including inactive ingredients):

Hierarchical systems:

Ingredients:

Proprietary database identifiers include those assigned by First Databank, Micromedex, MediSpan, Gold Standard Drug Database (published by Elsevier), and Cerner Multum MediSource Lexicon; these are cross-indexed by RxNorm, which also assigns a unique identifier (RxCUI) to every combination of active ingredient and dose level.[2]

gollark: <@282594912682115074> I can give you an aeon and random hatchlings.
gollark: Oh, animatedrose, your trade asks for a dino now? I shall see about hopefully actually catching one.
gollark: Ah, didn't get the SAltkin. Not surprising, but a bit annoying nevertheless.
gollark: * moar
gollark: I can breed them some if they want most.

See also

References

  1. "National Drug Code Directory". U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 5 May 2017.
  2. RxNorm Overview


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