Everything you take, looked at together for once

Sit down with a pharmacist and go through the whole list — the prescriptions, the vitamins, the thing you started years ago and never stopped

What a medication review looks like

Medications tend to accumulate. A cardiologist adds one, a specialist adds another, your primary care doctor adjusts a third, and nobody has ever seen the whole list on one page. We do. In a medication therapy management session, you bring everything you take — prescriptions, over-the-counter products, supplements — and a pharmacist goes through it with you, one item at a time. We're looking for drugs that work against each other, two medications quietly doing the same job, and anything still on your list that has outlived its reason.

The whole list, in one sitting

Prescriptions, over-the-counter medicines, vitamins, supplements. If you take it, it belongs on the table.

Interactions caught early

Two drugs prescribed by two different doctors can pull against each other. Nobody sees that unless somebody reads the whole list at once.

Duplicate therapy, found

It's more common than you'd think to be on two medications doing the same thing under different names. We flag it and sort it out.

Drugs you no longer need

Something started for a short-term problem can stay on the list for years. Fewer medications, when it's safe, is usually better.

We talk to your prescribers

If a change makes sense, we don't hand you a homework assignment. We call the doctor who wrote it and work it out directly.

Often covered by insurance

Many plans — Medicare Part D especially — pay for these reviews for patients on multiple medications. We'll check your coverage.

Who this helps most

  • Anyone taking several medications a day, especially prescribed by more than one doctor
  • People managing a chronic condition — diabetes, blood pressure, heart disease, COPD
  • Patients recently home from the hospital, whose medication list changed while they were there
  • Caregivers who want a straight answer about what a parent or spouse is actually taking
  • Anyone paying for a medication and quietly wondering whether they still need it

Let's go through your list together

Call the pharmacy to set up a medication review — bring everything you take, and we'll do the rest.

Call the pharmacy