Is the Pharmacist’s scope of practice highly variable ?

Marion Man Sentenced for Illegally Handing Out Prescription Drugs

Here is a interesting issue.. this Pharmacists “dispensed” FOUR TABLETS OF XANAX 2 MG and prescribing is OUTSIDE OF HIS SCOPE OF PRACTICE…but.. Pharmacists demanding that a pt accept lower doses or few doses per month and/or refusing to fill certain combination of medications – regardless of how they are prescribed to be taken.. nor the disease state(s) the pt may have… is within their SCOPE OF PRACTICE. Isn’t changing the medications prescribed for a pt a form of PRESCRIBING ? And seeming no bureaucrats wish to view it this way… apparently their view of a Pharmacist’s scope of practice is very myopic  and/or selective ?

http://www.wsiltv.com/news/local/Marion-Man-Sentenced-for-Illegally-Handing-Out-Prescription-Drugs-298404941.html

WILLIAMSON CO. — A Marion man gets his punishment today for illegally handing out prescription drugs.

In 2012, police accused Larry Steven Patton, 64, of Marion, of giving Xanax to a customer at his pharmacy in Harrisburg, when that person didn’t have a prescription. Patton was an owner and a pharmacist of Medicap Pharmacy in Harrisburg. He admitted to giving the customer four pills, each having two milligrams of Xanax, on July 12, 2012. Patton admitted that this was outside the scope of his professional practice and not for a medical purpose under a valid prescription. 

A judge sentenced Patton to three years probation.

He’ll also pay a $3,000 fine and and will do 25 hours of public service.

I guess that this quote from  David Herlihy, executive director of the Vermont Board of Medical Practice, reminded doctors that they can be conservative about dispensing medicines for chronic pain.

“We’ve never disciplined anybody for under treatment of pain,” he said

The face of a serious med error and the consequences – watch video !

http://www.weaverfuneralhome.net/obituaries-test-1/joshua-dwayne-hartsock

This 35 y/o young man was dispensed/provided not the medication for his existing medication condition as diagnosed and prescribed by this his doctor…but wrongly dispensed a chemo agent… whose normal dose is EVERY SIX WEEKS for FOUR DOSES, but ended up taking this wrong medication daily for 20 days before the error was uncovered.

You need to specifically watch the last couple of minutes of the 18 minute video on the funeral home website.. and see how this “med error” caused his very being to deteriorate over about 6 months and finally taking his live… while none of us know how long we will live.. given a average life expectancy.. Joshua.. should have had ANOTHER FORTY YEARS – or more to live.

Is this just another collateral damage of ever increasing staffing hours cut… while volume increases… every increasing metrics that have to be met … the hostile work environment that exists today in the typical chain store.. or the constant interference and micro managing of upper management.

Maybe this is just an example of how the “business of pharmacy” has become more important than the “practice of pharmacy”.

 

State of Pain special : a epidemic of denial of care ?

painedlife

State of Pain special

Matt Grant  www.wesh.com  Channel 2 Orlando, FL mjgrant@hearst.com

http://www.wesh.com/health/state-of-pain-special-part-1/32152120

http://www.wesh.com/health/state-of-pain-special-part-2/32151834

http://www.wesh.com/health/state-of-pain-special-part-3/32152080

Should everyone seeing this… send these links to their local NBC station- outside of the Orlando FL area –  and ask them why they have not bothered to look into the epidemic of denial of care of abt 1/3 of the population.  If your local NBC station fails to respond .. send it to the other channels in your market.

Alert fatigue can be lethal !

How Medical Tech Gave a Patient a Massive Overdose


https://medium.com/backchannel/how-technology-led-a-hospital-to-give-a-patient-38-times-his-dosage-ded7b3688558

This is very long three part series of how healthcare professionals have become “lazy” with technology and how “alert fatigue” can be LETHAL…

This is mostly hospital based issues, but.. it is common place no matter the healthcare setting … hospital, nursing home or community pharmacy.

“What happened to the doctors’ oath of “First Do No Harm?”

speak4evils

VA pharmacist: Bosses said not to drug-test patients

http://www.militarytimes.com/story/military/benefits/veterans/2015/04/02/veterans-affairs-tomah-drugs/70783144/

A pharmacist at the Tomah Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Wisconsin said she was discouraged by higher-ups from performing drug tests on patients prescribed opiates, as is recommended by VA guidelines.

In a joint U.S. House and Senate committee hearing in Tomah on March 30, Noelle Johnson, a pharmacist who was fired from the facility and now is employed by VA as a pain management specialist in Des Moines, Iowa, said pharmacists were discouraged from testing patients for drug use for fear of what prescribing physicians might learn.

If the tests were negative, it might indicate that the patient was not taking the medication, raising questions as to whether they were “diverting” or selling their meds.

If the tests were strongly positive, it could suggest overuse or abuse and VA could be held liable “when something unfortunate happened,” Johnson said she was told.

“I believe that this is the point of urine drug testing, to substantiate use and misuse of high-risk medications for the safety of veterans and the public,” Johnson said. “What happened to the doctors’ oath of “First Do No Harm?”

During three hours of testimony, House Veterans’ Affairs and Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs committee members heard from families of patients who died at the Tomah VA, former employees who said they warned VA officials about physicians suspected of over medicating patients but were fired or reprimanded for doing so and VA administrators in charge of investigating wrongdoing at the hospital.

The facility came under fire earlier this year after reports surfaced that at least two providers prescribed more opiate pain medications than their peers and patients died from drug toxicity.

The VA Office of Inspector General launched an investigation in 2011 into the number of narcotics prescriptions distributed at the facility as well as drug trafficking, mismanagement and intimidation of pharmacists by hospital administrators and doctors.

But the OIG was not able to “substantiate the majority of the allegations” and closed the case in 2014 without publicly releasing the report, raising questions of a cover up or concerted effort to protect the providers in question, Dr. David Houlihan and nurse practicioner Deborah Frasher.

During the hearing, VA OIG John Daigh defended his decision not to release the report.

“The data we collected did not support the allegations that led us to Tomah, and knowing that our national report would highlight the many deficiencies in VA providers’ compliance with these guidelines, I chose to administratively close this report,” Daigh said.

A Center for Investigative Reporting investigation published in January found a 14-fold increase in the number of oxycodone pills prescribed at the Tomah VA Medical Center, from 50,000 in 2004 to 712,000 in 2012.

Veterans at the hospital told a reporter that distribution was so rampant, they nicknamed the place “Candy Land.” Last Aug. 30, a 35-year-old Marine Corps veteran, Jason Simcakoski, died of an overdose while in the inpatient psychiatric ward and 32 other unanticipated deaths have occurred at the facility in the past few years.

Simcakoski died while under the care of Houlihan and another physician. He had checked himself in for anxiety and was scheduled for release that day, but having been put on a new medication, Suboxone, in addition to the 14 other medications he was taking — tranquilizers, an antipsychotic medication and tramadol — could not move, according to his father Marvin Simcakoski.

“I regret leaving my son in his room alone that morning only to get a call hours later that he had stopped breathing,” Simcakoski said.

VA clinical practice guidelines for treating acute anxiety and post-traumatic stress note that opiates may be helpful in curbing acute pain resulting from a severe injury that may attribute to the development of PTSD.

To treat these ailments, however, other medications such as antidepressants are recommended, according to the VA guidelines.

Marvin and Heather Simcakoski said Jason did not have the condition for which opiates are usually prescribed — chronic pain.

But he was put on a powerful one — tramadol — just days before he died, they said during the hearing.

VA clinical practice guidelines call for performing a urine drug test before prescribing opioids and randomly testing throughout the prescription period.

But according to Daigh, just 10 percent of veterans at Tomah received the recommended drug testing.

An internal investigation is underway of Houlihan and Frasher, who were placed on administrative leave March 10.

Dr. Carolyn Clancy, acting undersecretary for health affairs, said once the investigations are concluded, VA will “act quickly, decisively, and productively,” with veterans’ care, health and safety leading any personnel decisions the department makes.

She added too, that a number of organizations — the OIG, Joint Commission, Drug Enforcement Agency and the Wisconsin Department of Safety and Professional Services — have reviewed or also are investigating the facility.

“The stories [families have] told have been noted by others and are a profound and invaluable gift to us. And we will use that to improve. … Our commitment to you is that we will use this information to improve now and in the future,” Clancy said.

Rumor on the street 04/01/2015

rumoronstreet

This is reportedly a form that CVS is using to help “move” older(Legacy)  Pharmacists “to the curb”… As everyone knows, we have a growing surplus of Pharmacist …  We also know that Legacy Pharmacists typically tend to be more pt orientated and not the pliable robo-dispenser of the new grads with six figure student loan debt. Now they are asking the staff of the store to RATE the floater Pharmacist.

I have done a lot of “floating” as a Pharmacist and while the chains have tried to standardize the layout of their stores. There are a lot of variables that cannot be standardized..  The closest analogy that I can compare it with is if you can imagine this…

You are a good cook.. but you are asked to walk into a unfamiliar kitchen… the kitchen is fully equipped and fully stocks with all the ingredients and you are expected to prepare a full Thanksgiving or Xmas dinner for a dozen people. What do you think that your chances are of getting that dinner on the table and on time… in the same time frame… if you had prepared the same dinner in your own kitchen… where you know exactly where all the your utensils are located… where all the food items you put away are… how all the appliances functions and all the other things that go with the familiarity of operating/functioning in the same kitchen every day.

When you are working in a different environment, a environment where the normal staffing is having trouble keeping up with all the “metrics”.. a lot of it nothing more than “busy work” to give the MBA’s at the corporate office something to justify their existence … or data for them to figure out how they can try and extract a extra penny’s profits out of the system. What is the possibility of the floater falling short of the goals ?  What do you think that the increased chance of a med error happening, while a floater pharmacist tries to meet all the metrics will working in a unfamiliar surroundings ?

Floater Pharmacist – Store Feedback Form CVS Store #:___________
(To be completed by Store Staff)

Floater RPh Name:__________________________________

Date(s) of Floater Coverage:__________________________

1. How many prescriptions were filled on the day of the shift? ¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬_________

2. Were there any call-offs? Y / N If YES, skill Level of call-off (Circle One) PSA Tech Lead Tech

3. What was the condition of the pharmacy after the RPh left as compared to when they arrived?

Circle One: Better Same Worse

If Worse please give specific details:¬¬¬¬___________________________________________________________¬

________________________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

4. Did the RPh provide communication (written/oral) for the
pharmacist on the next shift regarding any outstanding issues? Y / N

5. Did the RPh follow WeCare Workflow (ie: Request Calls, Workstation Board, Pre-Entry)? Y / N

If NO,please provide specific examples:_______________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

6. Were there any customer comments that were specific to the RPh? Y / N

If YES, please provide specific details:__________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

7. Did the RPh actively participate in the execution of Patient Care Programs (PCI, Vaccinations)? Y / N

If NO, please provide specific examples:________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

8. Did the RPh complete a MyCustomer Observation: Y / N

9. Did the RPh check/handle email, WLM tasks and Gaps in Care: Y / N

If NO, please provide specific examples:________________________________________________________

Name:__________________________________ Job Title:________________________________

Signature:________________________________Date:_______________

Fax Back within 2 days of the Float Pharmacist’s Shift

The form they use in Ohio to get rid of older pharmacist they float

Is the health/safety of those who work/shop at pharmacies at risk ?

Give me the pills and nobody gets hurt :  Pharmacy robberies on the rise

http://www.sandiegoreader.com/news/2015/apr/01/citylights2-give-me-pills-and-nobody-gets-hurt/#

Indiana is the 16th most populated state and because of the number of pharmacy robberies in AZ (15th most populated state).. Indiana has dropped to NUMBER TWO and ahead of the state of CALIFORNIA.. that has SIX TIMES the population.  BUT… CALIFORNIA has had a MMJ law for a couple of decades…

At around 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, January 13, a man in a blue hoodie, brown beanie, jeans, and work boots walked into a La Jolla CVS, and handed an employee a note stating that he had a gun and wanted Roxicodone — a generic name for the semi-synthetic morphine-like narcotic, oxycodone. The employee walked the note to the pharmacist, who complied with his demand. A few minutes later, the man walked out with hundreds of pills. None of the afternoon shoppers knew the store had been robbed.

The following Wednesday, January 21, just before noon, a man of similar build did the same at a La Mesa Walgreens, this time asking for oxycodone. Again, the robber made off with hundreds of pills in the middle of the afternoon without a scene.

On January 27, the Crime Stoppers unit announced a $1000 reward for information regarding either robbery, and Lt. Chris McGrath, unit commander of San Diego Police Department’s robbery division, says the department believes the two incidents are related. They do not believe that a third similar incident that took place at a Clairemont Albertsons pharmacy last October is related.

“The description [of the thief] is a little bit different and the M.O. as far as the language [in the note] is a little different,” McGrath says. “We don’t believe it’s going to be the same person.”

According to statistics from the Drug Enforcement Administration, nationwide, pharmacy robberies dropped from 745 in 2012 to 712 in 2013. During that time, however, they nearly doubled in California — from 36 to 60 — which earned it the number-three spot on the top-ten states for pharmacy robberies. Arizona increased to 77 robberies (from 65) and took the top spot from Indiana, which decreased from 104 to 71.

San Diego police media relations officer Mark Herring wrote in an email, “SDPD does not keep stats specific to pharmacy robberies. When they occur, they fall into a commercial robbery category. For example, the pharmacy inside of a Vons gets robbed, the stat would track that robbery with Vons being the victim business, not specifically the pharmacy. Also there are cases where somebody may rob a pharmacy of money or just narcotics. There is no difference in the stat.”

On the street in San Diego, a five-milligram pill of oxycodone can go for as much as $20, according to users of the website streetrx.com. A more typical price for the area would be $5 for five milligrams, and in some parts of California, it can go as low as $1.

Nationally, the drug-overdose death rate doubled between 1999 and 2013, and according to the Centers for Disease Control, is now the leading cause of injury death in the United States. In 2013, 51.8 percent of drug-overdose deaths were related to pharmaceuticals, and of those 22,767 deaths, 71.3 percent involved opioid pain relievers.

In recent years, the Drug Enforcement Administration has set out to decrease prescription-drug abuse by tightening the reins on prescribing doctors and the pharmacies that dispense the drugs. All over the country, “candy doctors” and “pill mill doctors” have been arrested, fined, and sentenced to prison.

In 2012, as part of an investigation, the San Diego DEA sent an undercover agent to the office of Del Mar osteopath William Joseph Watson. Dr. Watson never asked to review the agent’s records or inquired about tests, x-rays or diagnoses before prescribing her (with a wink at the word “treatment”) 120 oxycodone pills. In June 2013, Watson was arrested and charged with selling thousands of prescriptions for highly addictive painkillers without any legitimate medical purpose. In December 2014, he was sentenced to five years in prison.

The Walgreen Company was fined $80 million in 2013 for failing to control the sale of painkillers, and CVS currently faces a potential $29 million fine for 37,000 prescription painkillers missing from four of its California stores. In 2012, Cardinal Health was fined $34 million for failing to report suspicious hydrocodone orders.

Some patients and doctors have complained that the DEA’s “crackdown” has resulted in increased difficulty for even legitimate users to obtain prescription painkillers. And DEA spokeswoman Barbara Carreno told a DC news channel that the circumstances have caused black-market prices to rise.

“The price of these drugs on the street has risen very high, to a dollar a milligram,” Carreno says. “You can pay $40 to $80 for a pill.”

In a 2013 document titled “Pharmacy Robberies, Burglaries and Thefts,” the task force created by the local DEA’s office of diversion control and the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department noted the steady rise in California pharmacy robberies since 2007. The document also points out that the typical pharmacy robber is a white male age 20 to mid 30s. The majority are note passers, and the robbery occurs within 45 to 60 seconds. Pharmacy employees ought to comply with the demands, the document encourages. Most corporate company policies concur. Lt. McGrath says the San Diego Police Department will not interfere with the preventative security choices a company might make, but he does say that hiring a security guard could increase the likelihood of violence.

“If a criminal feels like he’s going to be detained or slowed down in his exit,” McGath says, “there’s always a chance that there could be additional confrontation.”

On January 29, three suspects robbed a Mira Mesa CVS, leaping over the pharmacy counter and stealing prescription pills. According to U-T San Diego, a man robbed an Escondido Rite Aid on February 21, stabbing the pharmacist in the shoulder and escaping with prescription drugs. McGrath says the police department does not believe either incident is related to the earlier robberies.

Why does “VALUE BASED CARE” sound like a euphemism many are not going to like ?

As Value-Based Care Escalates, CVS Eclipses 50 Hospital Deals

http://www.forbes.com/sites/brucejapsen/2015/04/01/as-value-based-care-escalates-cvs-eclipses-50-hospital-deals/

It would appear that your healthcare is being “given” to large organizations – mostly for profit – that is going to be in charge of providing the best care for the lowest possible cost. When these corporation’s bottom line profits are on the line… what do you think that optimizing your quality of life will be on their corp priority list ?

CVS Health (CVS) said it has signed two new clinical affiliations with major regional medical centers in Chicago and Arizona as the giant retail pharmacy chain reaches across the country to health systems in preparation for the move away from fee-for-service medicine.

Clinical affiliations between pharmacies owned by CVS, Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA), other chains and their retail clinics are becoming more common as insurance payments from health plans and the government under the Affordable Care Act move toward value-based care. The traditional fee-for-service approach to medicine can lead to over treatment and unnecessary medical tests and procedures.

The clinical affiliations announced by CVS with Rush University Medical Center in Chicago and Tucson Medical Center and its accountable care organization (ACO) known as Arizona Connected Care bring to “more than 50” health system deals CVS has negotiated across the country. By comparison, Walgreens has about half as many.

CVS Health chief medical officer Dr. Troyen Brennan told Forbes in a statement the company’s “goal is to forge affiliations with health systems and health care providers in most major metropolitan areas across the country.”

Such relationships are particularly important given the Obama administration earlier this year said that 50 percent of payments from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to medical care providers would be value-based by 2018, tying performance, health outcomes and other measures to patients. Private insurers are also moving in this direction by contracting with health systems and provider-led ACOs to provide a full menu of services for populations including pharmacies and their affiliated retail clinics.

“Our quality improvement and pharmacy care programs provide value for our affiliates and their patients,” Brennan said. “This occurs by creating tighter coordination between our pharmacists and hospital providers across sites of care and improving medication adherence for patients.”

A report last week by RAND Corp. funded by the American Medical Association said doctors lack capital for information systems and the ability to evaluate and gather data necessary for adequate population health.

“These clinical collaborations provide two-way connectivity with the affiliates’ electronic health records allowing us to seamlessly share information across sites-of-care, which ultimately improves patient care and health outcomes,” Brennan said.

Wondering how the Affordable Care Act’s push to new payment models will affect your health care? The Forbes eBook Inside Obamacare: The Fix For America’s Ailing Health Care System answers that question and more. Available now at Amazon and Apple.

FBI Agent Pleads Guilty to Falsifying Records, Stealing Drug Evidence

FBI Agent Pleads Guilty to Falsifying Records, Stealing Drug Evidence

http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/FBI-Agent-Charged-With-Falsifying-Records-Selling-Stolen-Drugs-297022681.html

 

 

 

 

Does this put things into perspective ?

Walgreens, grocery chains sue over high drug prices

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/31/walgreen-drugs-idUSL2N0WX0DO20150331

(Reuters) – Drugstore giant Walgreens and three supermarket chains have filed lawsuits alleging that several drug companies made illegal deals, known as “pay for delay” arrangements, to protect the lucrative sales of four drugs, costing the stores money.

The lawsuits are the latest of many brought mainly by unions and individuals, alleging it is illegal for brand-name drug makers to settle litigation with generic-drug makers by paying them to keep their cheaper drugs off the market. The retailers are represented in two cases by Kenny Nachwalter.

To read the full story on WestlawNext Practitioner Insights, click here: bit.ly/1GIkD9U

So Walgreens and some grocery stores are suing drug manufacturers over restricting the availability of generic medications… because it is costing them money… yet.. apparently no one is suing no one over drug wholesalers RESTRICTING/RATIONING the purchases of certain category of Rx medications.. doing that is not costing them MONEY/PROFITS ?

And the PRIMARY GOAL of a publicly traded for-profit companies is their bottom line profits and the price of their stock. AND , per the DEA , they are voluntarily restricting how much profitable  products they are selling to their wholesaler customers and the retail pharmacies are not objecting to the their limited ability to purchase product for which there is a demand and they could sell at a profit ?