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Ensuring the safe use of high-vigilance (high-alert) medications remains one of the most important responsibilities in modern clinical practice. Never rush a high-alert medication. One extra minite save a life. High-vigilance (high-alert) medications, although therapeutically essential, carry a significant risk of patient harm if prescribed, dispensed, or administered without strict verification protocols. A fundamental safety principle is that high-alert medications should never be administered without independent double-checking and appropriate clinical validation. From a patient safety perspective, structured safety checkpoints are essential. These include dose verification, confirmation of clinical indication, assessment of renal and hepatic function for dose adjustments, and careful review of potential drug interactions before administration. While technological safeguards and automated alerts are helpful, they cannot replace sound clinical judgement. Technology should therefore function as a support system rather than a substitute for physician oversight. There is also a strong need for institutional safety protocols such as LASA (Look-Alike Sound-Alike) drug precautions, standardized prescribing practices, and mandatory documentation systems. Regular training of nursing staff and junior doctors is equally important in minimizing medication errors, particularly with high-risk medications such as insulin, anticoagulants, sedatives, chemotherapeutic agents, and vasoactive drugs. Another critical component is the development of a culture of safety in which questioning, clarification, and cross-verification are actively encouraged. Medication safety should always be considered a shared responsibility of the entire healthcare team rather than the duty of a single individual.