Clinical Decision Support
Drug Interaction Checker
Clinical Reading Guide
What Drug Interactions Mean
What is a drug interaction?
A drug interaction happens when one medicine changes how another medicine works. This may increase side effects, reduce benefit, or make treatment less predictable.
Why interactions matter
Some combinations are harmless. Others can lead to bleeding, drowsiness, kidney strain, heart rhythm problems, serotonin toxicity, or reduced control of long-term conditions.
Not only medicine versus medicine
Interactions can also involve alcohol, herbal products, supplements, food, smoking, or existing medical conditions. The full picture matters, not just two drug names.
Main types of interaction
Common high-risk groups
- Blood thinners
- Antidepressants
- Opioids and sedatives
- NSAIDs and steroids
- Heart rhythm medicines
- Epilepsy medicines
- Methotrexate and lithium
When extra care is needed
- Starting a new prescription
- Buying over-the-counter treatment
- Adding vitamins or herbal products
- Changing dose or stopping suddenly
- Older age or multiple medicines
- Kidney or liver disease
- Pregnancy or breastfeeding
How to read checker results
Important reminder
A checker is a guide, not the final decision. The safest judgement depends on dose, timing, age, kidney function, liver function, medical history, and the reason the medicines were prescribed.
If the result shows caution or high severity, or if the patient has symptoms, speak to a pharmacist or prescriber before continuing.