Check potential drug-drug interactions using RxNorm and DailyMed sources.
This MCP tool has positive trust signals from the official Registry and an open-source repository, giving it a generally credible origin. However, it executes code and sends query data to its declared remote endpoint, while lacking a README and license declaration, so it should be used with minimal privileges and controlled data exposure.
The materials explicitly state that no keys or environment variables are required. There is no indication that API tokens, account credentials, or local sensitive authentication data must be provided, so credential exposure risk appears low.
The tool accesses the declared remote endpoint drug-interaction-mcp.atlasword.workers.dev. Based on its function, user query content may be sent to that service for drug interaction checks. The lack of a README means the exact transmitted fields, logging retention, and privacy handling are not documented here.
System checks indicate that this tool executes code or starts a process, which is a normal capability for MCP tools. The provided materials do not show requests for unusual system privileges or clearly unrelated high-risk actions, so this remains a caution-level concern.
The materials do not specify which local files, databases, or other resources it can read or write, so the exact data access boundary is unclear. No explicit over-privileged access request is shown, but as an MCP tool it should still be assumed to have some local data exposure surface and be restricted accordingly.
Positive signals include the official Registry listing, an open-source repository, and updates within the last year, which materially reduce supply-chain risk. Caution remains because the README is absent, the license is undeclared, and community adoption is very low (0 stars), leaving limited evidence of maturity and audit depth, though not enough on its own to classify as high risk.
Copy the install command and let the AI configure it · recommended for beginners
Please install the "Drug Interaction Checker" MCP server from askskill: Run: claude mcp add --transport http 'io-github-guptaprakhariitr-drug-interaction-mcp' 'https://drug-interaction-mcp.atlasword.workers.dev/mcp'
Use Drug Interaction Checker to assess whether warfarin and ibuprofen have a drug-drug interaction, and report the risk level, main clinical effects, and sources.
Returns the interaction result, risk explanation, possible adverse effects, and supporting references.
Check potential interactions in this medication list: atorvastatin, clarithromycin, and amlodipine. Rank findings by severity and summarize the key concerns.
Outputs potential interaction pairs, severity ranking, and a summary of the main clinical risks to watch.
When a user asks, "Can sertraline and tramadol be used together?" call Drug Interaction Checker, provide a conclusion, and include an evidence summary based on RxNorm and DailyMed.
Generates a clinical Q&A-ready conclusion, risk warning, and concise evidence summary.
Check drug interactions, dose ranges, and allergy cross-reactivity safely.
Access DrugBank data to search drugs, interactions, and detailed pharmaceutical information.
Enable AI to review medications, schedule visits, and identify care gaps.
Design CDSS rules, scoring alerts, and EMR-integrated clinical workflows.
Query Chinese medical info with structured results for drugs, diseases, and more.
Helps users check symptoms, explain labs, detect emergencies, and get safer health guidance.