why
antimicrobials are not added in single doses container
Answers
Answer:
A single-dose container is a container of a parenteral preparation that is not required to meet the antimicrobial effectiveness testing requirements. A single-dose container is designed for use with a single patient as a single injection/ infusion. Examples of single-dose containers are vials, ampules, and prefilled syringes.
Answer:
Antimicrobials are not added in single doses container.
Explanation:
A single-dose container is a container of a parenteral preparation that is not required to meet the antimicrobial effectiveness testing requirements. A single-dose container is designed for use with a single patient as a single injection/ infusion. Examples of single-dose containers are vials, ampules, and prefilled syringes.
Unsafe injection practices, including the improper use of medication vials for more than one patient, have resulted in severe drug safety issues like, for example, bacterial infections transmitted between patients. To address confusion regarding the current container terminology, the FDA is retiring the term “single-use” and creating a new package type term “single-patient-use” container, to address the need for describing a package that contains multiple doses of an injectable medical product that is intended to be used on a single patient.
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