New medications
New medications may treat a problem found in the hospital, prevent complications, or replace an older medication. Ask why each one was started.
Stopped medications
A medication may be stopped because of kidney injury, low blood pressure, bleeding risk, falls, confusion, or because it no longer fits the goals of care.
Temporary medications
Some medications are meant for only a short course, such as antibiotics, steroids, blood thinners after a procedure, or symptom medications.
High-risk medications
Sedatives, blood thinners, opioids, insulin, blood pressure medications, and medications affecting kidneys or confusion deserve extra follow-up.
Questions to ask the treating team
- Which medications are new and why?
- Which medications were stopped and should they ever be restarted?
- Which medications are temporary?
- Which medications increase fall, bleeding, kidney, sedation, or confusion risk?
- Who is responsible for refills and follow-up labs?
Safety boundary
For urgent symptoms or deterioration, contact the treating clinician, facility nurse/clinician, emergency services, or go to the emergency department. BridgeCare Medicine provides advisory interpretation and preparation support only. It does not replace the treating clinician or medical team.
Confused by a new medication list?
BridgeCare can help organize medication changes and prepare questions for the treating clinician.
Request consult