“Boy Scout” mentality… get your MJ “merit badge” ?

Facing budget pressures, the DEA is pulling up less weed

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2015/03/24/facing-budget-pressures-the-dea-is-pulling-up-less-weed/?tid=sm_tw

By Christopher Ingraham March 24

The number of marijuana plants seized and destroyed by the Drug Enforcement Administration fell slightly last year and remained sharply lower than the record numbers seen at the dawn of the Obama administration. According to the DEA’s records, 4.3 million marijuana plants were destroyed last year, down from 4.4 million the year before and 10.4 million in 2009.

The plants were destroyed by law enforcement officers under the auspices of the DEA’s cannabis eradication program. This program allocates money from the Department of Justice’s Asset Forfeiture Fund to 128 state and local law enforcement agencies. The agencies use this money to locate and destroy indoor and outdoor marijuana grow sites.

Marijuana eradication teams, who criss-cross the countryside in helicopters looking for grow sites, occasionally become overzealous in carrying out their missions. The Georgia Governor’s Task Force for Drug Suppression earned notoriety last year when they raided a retiree’s garden after misidentifying okra as marijuana. Last month, a member of DEA’s marijuana eradication team in Utah warned lawmakers there that a medical marijuana bill would lead inevitably to stoned rabbits in the state’s forests.

For fiscal year 2014, the DEA estimated that the asset forfeiture program provided $18 million dollars to fund the cannabis eradication program. At 4.3 million marijuana plants destroyed, that works out to a cost of about $4.19 per plant. For simplicity’s sake, let’s round that number to the nearest dime and call it $4.20.

But in recent years funds available for cannabis eradication have been drying up. The great recession forced some states to curtail various drug enforcement efforts — and flying those helicopters gets expensive. Public opinion toward marijuana has shifted rapidly over the same period. Together, these factors have caused state and local governments to prioritize more serious and deadly drug threats, like meth and heroin.

With 2.7 million plants destroyed, California alone contributed 63 percent of the total haul last year. But California’s numbers have fallen sharply during the Obama administration, taking the national numbers down with them. “Coinciding largely with the downsizing of, and then ultimately the disbanding of, the state’s nearly 30-year-old Campaign Against Marijuana Planting (CAMP) program, DEA-assisted annual marijuana seizures in California have fallen over 60 percent percent since 2010,” said Paul Armentano, deputy director of NORML, in an email.

Four lawsuits filed against CVS by former RPH’s… 8 more to be filed …

CVS Pharmacists File Age Bias Suits Over Metrics System

Four former and current CVS Health Corp. pharmacists have filed age discrimination lawsuits in South Carolina federal court, accusing the company of implementing a metric-based system that weeded out older workers and allegedly caused pharmacists to make errors in filling patient prescriptions.

http://www.law360.com/cases/551182d8b220e04edb000002?article_sidebar=1

When you look at the larger picture…the options are ….

congressstupid

connectthedots

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.facebook.com/KennedyFBN?fref=ts

 

If you are a regular reader, you are well aware that I always try to look at the larger picture… and not all the pieces of the puzzle of the larger picture are not always readily “see-able”.

mrmcgoo  Congress seems to be full of a bunch of “Mr. Magoo’s”

Kennedy last night did a piece on the DOJ/FDIC’s operation “Choke Point” where they are playing their “social conscience card”… denying certain business segments the ability to get bank accounts and/or credit card vendor accounts.  Forcing some businesses to run on a “cash only basis”.

Then there is the drug wholesalers that are rationing sales of control meds to community pharmacies. Much the same “social conscience engineering” in fighting the war on drugs..  you know those mental health people with addictive personalities that our court system has determined to be criminals.

The DEA has made public statements that they are aware of the wholesalers’ rationing. Which would appear to be a violation of The Sherman Antitrust Act.. Which would suggest those in the DEA have little/no interest in the oath they took  to uphold the US Constitution.

Congress has stood by and watch law enforcement and our judicial system to abuse the “asset forfeiture” law that Congress put into place.  Where 85% of the people having their assets seized are never charged with any crime.. and they never get all of their assets back…. sometimes..  they never get any of their assets back.  Often law enforcement is violating a person’s 4th Amendment rights in order to seize their property.

Our current Attorney General (Holder) is in contempt of Congress and has resigned and it will be interesting if the Senate confirms his replacement nominee … whose district had the largest value of seized assets via asset forfeitures.

It was announced today that Federal Employees Owe IRS More Than $3.5 Billion In Back Taxes 

These are the same people that we provide a “paycheck” to every couple of weeks and we can’t easily collect -or garnish – past due taxes from these same employees.

I recently posted about the various states declaring a Pharmacist’s duty to warn about medication’s side effects they dispense does not even exists in some state and only barely exists in others… which seems to be in conflict with the DEA’s interpretation of “corresponding responsibility”

So those with chronic pain needs to understand .. that the State Board of Pharmacy are going to do nothing

The corporate pharmacies are going to do nothing

The DOJ/DEA is not going to do nothing

The Americans with Disability Act is enforced by the DOJ.. so they are not going to do anything.

The wholesalers, pharmacies and prescribers have a DEA license… BUT.. Pharmacists don’t have a DEA license..

Congress seems to have little interest in all the various laws that are being violated by the various agencies and/or people within the agencies.

All the “players” have deep pockets… EXCEPT THE PHARMACISTS…

We have seen that even after a number of investigative reporters in various markets across the country.. it has not embarrassed the chain pharmacies, it has not gotten Congress to act on the various issues with the DEA and violating the laws they are bound to uphold.

IMO.. the only paths available to those who want to keeping getting their meds or hopefully not losing getting their meds.. is get the members of Congress attention at the next election or before.. promising to remove from office those that continue to function like Mr. MaGoo  or sue the individual Pharmacists… for various issues… including denial of care, failure to meet best practices or standard of care, pt abuse, irresponsible professional negligence for starters.

Which I believe will lead to class actions against the major wholesalers and chain pharmacies and open the door for the ACLU to go after the DEA.

Sit on your hands and do nothing.. you will get nothing…

 

 

More changes at Walgreens to benefit the community ?

Founder of local charity says Walgreens pulling soldier fundraiser

http://www.jrn.com/fox4now/news/Founder-of-local-charity-says-Walgreens-pulling-soldier-fundraiser-297573841.html

CAPE CORAL, Fla. – The founder of a local charity has been getting big thank yous from our troops overseas for sending more than four thousand care packages, but a major donation source that makes that possible is pulling the plug.

If you’re a Walgreens shopper, you’ve probably been asked the question at check out, “Would you like to spend one dollar to donate candy or chips to our troops?” 

That question has helped Adopt a Troop send more than half of their care packages to soldiers. 

But the founder of Adopt a Troop said Walgreens is no longer participating in her charity because of complaints that people feel pressured to donate.

“These men and women over there in Afghanistan and Iraq, they’re fighting for our freedom. And we need to stand up and support them,” Founder of Adopt a Troop Kaye Caple said.

That’s what she has been doing for the last seven years, sending care packages to soldiers overseas, and dedicating an entire room in her home to the charity.

“I’m twice Vietnam widow, so this means a lot to me,” Kaye said.

She said each box costs around $70, including shipping fees.

Selling bears and other merchandise helps offset that cost.  

And since 2008, Kaye has been working with Walgreens to collect candy, chips, and other goods.

She started with two stores in Fort Myers, and when she moved to the Cape, she struck up a relationship with the Walgreens on Burnt Store Road.

“I’d pick up up bags and bags,” Kaye said.

But now, that’s changing.

Kaye said the manager at the Burnt Store location called to tell her corporate is no longer allowing them to participate, saying other stores would be pulling the plug, too.

“I said, ‘Why would they do this?’ He said, ‘Apparently there’s been a lot of complaints from people that they don’t want to be asked to donate money,'” Kaye said.

Four in Your Corner’s Lisa Greenberg stopped into the Walgreens on Burnt Store.  

An assistant manager told her off camera they’re no longer able to help Adopt a Troop, but directed her to corporate.  

We reached out to Walgreens’ corporate office.

The woman on the phone said they’d get back to me, but we haven’t heard back yet.

In the meantime, Kaye is left heartbroken, hoping the company has a change of heart.

“I just don’t understand people that complain. Especially when those people are fighting for the people who are complaining, their freedom,” Kaye said.

Four in Your Corner will keep working to confirm whether or not all Walgreens will be putting the breaks on offering donations to the troops.

For more information on Adopt a Troop, click here.

If this is what a compromise is.. what did each side want ?

After 3 years of trying, Ky. passes bill fighting heroin

http://www.whas11.com/story/news/2015/03/24/after-3-years-of-trying-ky-passes-bill-fighting-heroin/70411274/

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) – Taxpayers will spend money to keep heroin dealers in prison longer and to give addicts a steady supply of clean needles under a bill that has passed the state legislature designed to curb Kentucky’s alarming increase of overdose deaths.

The bill passed late Tuesday and is the result of more three years of negotiations between Democrats and Republicans who had deep philosophical differences about how to treat addicts and the criminal penalties that should be imposed on them and their dealers.

Lawmakers agreed to let local governments set up needle-exchange programs where addicts can swap dirty needles for clean ones in an effort to prevent disease and death. And it toughens penalties for some heroin dealers, requiring them to serve at least 50 percent of their sentence.

Gov. Steve Beshear is expected to sign the bill.

congressstupid

 

 

Indiana Gov Pense states that he is AGAINST clean needle exchange program

Ind. Gov. to sign executive order for public health emergency for Scott Co.

In January there were seven cases of HIV connected with IV drug use. Now there are 72 cases of HIV connected with IV drug use and there are seven other preliminary cases. The governor said he doesn’t take his action lightly.

SCOTT CO., Ind. (WHAS11) — Indiana Governor Mike Pence will sign an executive order for a public health emergency for Scott County.

This order will send additional resources to Scott County to combat the HIV outbreak for the next 30 days.

Gov. Pence to declare emergency in Scott Co.

In January there were seven cases of HIV connected with IV drug use. Now there are 72 cases of HIV connected with IV drug use and there are seven other preliminary cases. The governor said he doesn’t take his action lightly.

HIV cases on the rise in Scott Co.

Pence said this is not a Scott County problem this is an Indiana problem.

Pence said the details of the executive order are still being hashed out and will be finalized before Thursday morning.

 

CDC moves in as S. Indiana HIV cases skyrocket

Walgreen nixes ‘Be well’ at checkout line

Walgreesn Be well

Walgreen nixes ‘Be well’ at checkout line

http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/breaking/ct-walgreens-be-well-0326-biz-20150325-story.html

Walgreens will no longer require its cashiers to send each customer off with the words, “Be well.”A spokesman said the campaign had run its course, though the company didn’t elaborate on why the effort, launched several years ago, was dropped.

“It’s accomplished its goal of reinforcing our branding,” spokesman Michael Polzin said. “We’ll continue to build our relationships with customers in other ways.”
A memo sent to employees this week outlined other changes in dealing with customers. Among them: Employees should learn customers’ names, they should thank customers for their purchase and they no longer have to say “Welcome to Walgreens” when a customer enters the store. Instead, they could offer a cheery “Good morning” or “Welcome back, Mr. Smith. What brings you in today?”

Some self-identified Walgreen employees have voiced frustration with the slogan over the past year on a Facebook page run by a workers advocacy group. One complaint was that the “Be well” phrase sounded robotic.
Ditto! And we can add “I like to be transparent,” something that Pelosi, Reid, Boehner and all other politicians state.
concerned citizen2013
at 4:18 PM March 25, 2015

“I love and respect my customers, and of course, want them to be well, but it’s just not necessary to sound like an insincere carbon copy routine Walgreens worker,” said one poster, who wrote that she’s worked at the same Walgreens store for about 12 years. “This is definitely a step in the right direction.”

Can’t wait until Pharmacists get provider status ?

usedcardsales

Are pharmacists turning into salespeople?

Internal company emails show push on pharmacists to keep ‘driving those numbers’

http://www.cbc.ca/news/health/are-pharmacists-turning-into-salespeople-1.3007463

Some pharmacists feel that business pressures to push billable services turn them into salespeople. (iStock)

​ Do you think of your pharmacist as a health-care professional or a salesperson?

Internal emails from top Canadian chain drugstores show the pressures that pharmacists say they get from companies to push billable services in order to boost revenue.

The emails were shared with CBC’s Marketplace by pharmacists who are speaking out about increasing business pressures to perform extra services that can be billed to patients or to provincial governments. These services include medication reviews, flu shots, smoking cessation programs and food intolerance testing kits.

“I think as a pharmacist, it’s embarrassing,” Derek Jorgenson, a pharmacist and professor at the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Pharmacy and Nutrition, told Marketplace co-host Erica Johnson.

‘I think a quota makes it feel like you must sell 10 cars today, or you’re going to be fired,’ says Derek Jorgenson, a professor at the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Pharmacy and Nutrition. (CBC)

“I think it makes you feel like you’re not a health professional. It makes you feel like a door-to-door salesman or a used car salesman,” he said. “We as pharmacists didn’t go into this profession to do that.”

An ongoing investigation by CBC News and Marketplace found that some pharmacists feel that pressure to meet business quotas increases the likelihood that they could make mistakes. With no mandatory national tracking of pharmacy errors, there is little data on why and how often mistakes happen.

Several pharmacists spoke out about how the expectation to perform as many billable services as possible means that services like medication reviews are done quickly and not always directed at patients who need those services.

‘Continue driving those numbers’

The pharmacists approached Marketplace after the initial investigation to show how corporate pressures negatively affect their work.

“What we’re becoming is salesmen,” one former Rexall pharmacist told Marketplace.

Marketplace agreed to protect the identity of the pharmacists who spoke out because they fear retribution in the industry.

“They want us to sell med checks, flu shots, Hemocode tests, A1C tests, things that don’t cost the store anything, but make money for the store,” she said.

The pharmacists shared internal emails from management that discuss daily targets for medication reviews.

The College of Pharmacists of BC is set to become the first regulatory body in Canada to propose new regulations that would ensure that if quotas are in place they do not compromise patient safety. (CBC)

“Our ask is that you all work towards a goal of 7 per day per store unit,” one email from a Rexall regional manager reads.

Medication reviews are free for the patient, but the province pays for the service. Fees for medication consultations range from $52.50 to more than $150 for an initial assessment, depending on the type of review and province. There’s another lower fee for a followup review.

Another internal email shared with Marketplace says:

“Below, you will see how much your store needs to do next week in order to be ‘on track’ for the quarter so far. In order to help us get back on track, this Tuesday we will have a PFS [patient-focused services] focus day: The goal for Tuesday will be $500 or more PFS revenue for each store…. Reminder, each store must do a minimum of $500 in revenue.”

The email also details financial incentives for pharmacies that perform billable services.

“For every hemocode you do — the store will get $30 to use towards a meal or activity of their choice,” the email says.

Pharmacists also shared emails from Shoppers Drug Mart management.

“Be sure to remind your entire team as to your expectations with respect to MedsChecks. Are your assistants and technicians pre-printing the profile report? Are your staff pharmacists meeting your goals?” says one email from a Shoppers Drug Mart pharmacy operations specialist.

‘They want us to sell med checks, flu shots, Hemocode tests, A1C tests, things that don’t cost the store anything, but make money for the store,’ one pharmacist told Marketplace. (CBC News)

“Celebrate early success and challenge those on your team who aren’t contributing.”

Marketplace also obtained an internal chart where stores that were underperforming on medication reviews targets were highlighted in red.

“I encourage you all to continue driving those numbers,” one of the Shoppers Drug Mart emails reads.

The United Association of Pharmacist Franchisees, an organization that supports Shoppers Drug Mart franchisees, also confirmed that quotas are an issue.

“Let us be clear; associates have targets for professional services placed on them from corporate office,” the association wrote on its website.

The group says that these targets have consequences and are tied to bonuses based on district and provincial goals. The post also says that “associates who do not reach their targets are also potentially penalized financially.”

“There have also been some aggressive emails from some district managers to their district associates who were not achieving targets on professional services.”

Jorgenson said that medication reviews should be conducted only for patients who need that service and that it is unethical to use billable services as a means to drive revenue.

“As a health professional, as all health professionals, we’re trained to identify when our services are needed and how we provide them,” he says.

“I think a quota makes it feel like you must sell 10 cars today, or you’re going to be fired. And that may be reasonable in that industry, but as a health professional that’s not how we’re trained and that’s not how we’re trained to utilize the health system resources.”

Pharmacies respond

Marketplace reached out to the pharmacies about the concerns raised by pharmacists. Both Shoppers Drug Mart and Rexall declined to speak about these issues on camera.

Rexall denied that head office issues specific quotas for these services.

In a statement, Rexall wrote that: “Rexall and Rexall Pharma Plus pharmacies have a long and proud history of being a pharmacy first. Health care is the core of our business.”

Rexall says that pharmacists’ roles are about more than just dispensing medication, and that they play an important role in patient care by performing additional services such as immunizations, medication reviews, monitoring blood pressures and helping patients quit smoking.

Chain pharmacies contacted by Marketplace say they put patient care above business. (Mark Blinch/Reuters)

“Our pharmacists use their professional judgment when a patient-focused service should be provided.”

Shoppers Drug Mart denied that the company has quotas for pharmacists or that pharmacists are punished for failing to perform a set number of billable services.

“We support our pharmacists to exercise their professional judgment in the delivery of appropriate care,” the statement reads.

“We do not exercise punitive measures to pressure our pharmacies to provide services that would be counter to optimal patient care. Working with our pharmacist-owners, we measure the delivery of pharmacy services so that we can plan appropriately for the labour needs required to deliver those services. This planning is based on industry-wide standards set for each type of pharmacy service.”

BC college cracking down

The College of Pharmacists of BC is set to become the first regulatory body in Canada to propose new regulations that would ensure that if quotas are in place they do not compromise patient safety.

According to a survey conducted by the college and the University of British Columbia, 59 per cent of pharmacists who work in chain drugstores who responded say they have quotas for medication reviews.

Surveyed pharmacists who said they have quotas were more likely to report inadequate staffing at their pharmacy and “a work environment that was not conducive to safe and effective patient care,” an executive summary of the survey said.

 

Corresponding responsibility vs Duty to Warn

Lawsuits Claiming That Pharmacies Must Warn Customers About Dangers Associated With Prescription Drugs

Complete Text   duty_to_warn

INTRODUCTION
Patients injured by prescription drugs sometimes claim that their pharmacists had a duty to warn
them about potential side effects and other dangers associated with prescription drugs. This
memorandum provides citations to court decisions from across the country that address the issue
of whether and when pharmacists have a duty to warn.
Most courts have ruled that pharmacists do not have a general duty to warn patients about their
prescribed drugs. Instead, the general rule is that drug manufacturers have a duty to provide
general warnings to physicians, and then physicians have a duty to warn their patients about the
drugs they prescribe. Most courts impose this duty to warn on physicians, rather than
pharmacists, because physicians decide which drugs to prescribe. Physicians know which
warnings are appropriate for a particular patient because they have access to the patient’s
complete medical history. This “learned intermediary doctrine” is the traditional rationale for
rejecting claims that pharmacists have a duty to warn.
A few state courts have rejected the learned intermediary doctrine, and have instead decided that
pharmacists do have a general duty to warn patients. Although most courts that have considered
the issue reject the notion that state counseling laws create a duty to warn, a minority of courts
have pointed to counseling laws as evidence that pharmacists have a duty to warn.
Other courts have held that pharmacists have a duty to warn only in certain circumstances. For
example, some courts have ruled that pharmacists have a duty to warn about known
contraindications, or clear errors on the face of a prescription (e.g., excessive dosages). Other
courts reject the notion of a general duty to warn, but hold that a pharmacy can voluntarily
assume a duty to warn. For example, a pharmacy that advertises its drug utilization review and
computer warning systems may have assumed a duty to warn about dangerous side effects.

It would seem that the edicts by the DEA and the rulings of our court system.. in regards of a Pharmacist’s responsible are in conflict.. Courts in different states have come to different conclusions as to a Pharmacist’s Duty to Warn… some of which are in direct conflict to the DEA’s interpretation of a Pharmacist’s Corresponding Responsibility.

CVS employee calls for better security as police investigate four weekend robbery attempts

guntohead

CVS employee calls for better security as police investigate four weekend robbery attempts

http://fox59.com/2015/03/23/cvs-employee-calls-for-better-security-as-police-investigate-four-weekend-robbery-attempts/

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (March 23, 2015)– An Indianapolis CVS pharmacy employee is calling on the company to make big changes in their stores in order to discourage robbery attempts. The woman, who does not want to be identified, says she has been through five robberies and two robbery attempts at her job. She has personally been handed a robbery demand note while working at the pharmacy counter.

“It always starts as a list of drugs,” she said, recalling a recent robbery note.  “Toward the end of the note, it says ‘this is a robbery, I have a gun, I’ll kill everybody in here.’”

The employee says she and her coworkers are constantly on edge, never knowing when the next robbery attempt may happen.

“Every person who walks through the door in a hoodie, you want to say ‘is this that guy,’” she said.  “Oh no, here it goes.  You get that sick feeling.  And when you have to turn your back to get a medication off the shelf, you have to look over your shoulder.”

Her concerns follow another rash of CVS pharmacy robbery attempts over the weekend.  On Saturday, robbery attempts were reported at CVS locations in the 2300 block of East 46th Street, the 6500 block of North Keystone Avenue and the 6200 block of Allisonville Road.  All three northeast side incidents happened between 12:40 and 1:50pm.  In each case, employees told police a male between the ages of 18 and 20 approached the pharmacy counter and presented a note, demanding several prescription pain killers.  Only one of the robbery attempts was successful.  One attempt was thwarted when a security guard approached the suspect and he ran out the door.  In another attempt, the suspect left the store empty handed when the pharmacist simply refused to accept the note.

A fourth CVS robbery attempt was reported Sunday afternoon around 3 p.m. in the 7200 block of North Michigan Road.  A male suspect in his 20s approached the pharmacy counter and presented a note that listed several prescription painkillers.  The rest of the note said “This is a robbery!  I am armed!  Do not push button or I’ll shoot you!  Give everything!  No trackers!”

The suspect in that incident also left empty handed when the pharmacist got on the phone to call police.

While three of the four robbery attempts were thwarted, the CVS employee we spoke to says the company needs to take steps to discourage people from even attempting the robberies.

“I mean there`s things they can do as a company to secure the safety of their employees and at least take part of the anxiety level off of us,” she said.

Michael DeAngelis, a CVS corporate spokesperson, sent a statement in response to the recent robberies:

“The safety and well-being of our customers and employees is our highest priority and we work closely with law enforcement in their investigations of robbery incidents.  We have security policies and procedures in place at all of our stores and we regularly review them to ensure effectiveness, including hi-def security cameras (pop over to this web-site for options)and security guard presence at select locations. We do not comment on specific security measures because we do not want to undermine them. We are committed to ensuring that CVS/pharmacy remains a safe environment for our customers to shop and fill their prescriptions.”

The CVS employee says the company needs to remodel their older stores to make working conditions safer for employees.  She says pharmacy counters should be protected behind bulletproof safety glass, security guards should be posted at all locations from open until close, and popular narcotics should be stored in special safes behind the safety glass.

Steve Dubois, of Central Indiana Crime Stoppers doesn’t know if bulletproof glass is the answer.  He believes it could get in the way of the personal interaction between a pharmacist and a customer.  But he also thinks CVS and other pharmacies need to constantly be analyzing their security measures and store layouts.

“So that industry has to create something,” Dubois said.  “They have to get something in between, where they can still have that interaction but they keep their pharmacists and their people safe.”

Dubois also points out that people who are addicted to prescription painkillers, and those who make their money from illegally selling them, will stop at nothing to get them.

“You could probably have an armed policeman in some of these places, and there’s still going to be a robbery,” Dubois said.  “And there’s going to be that confrontation between the policeman and the armed robber.”

Metro police are still investigating the weekend robbery attempts.  It’s not clear if all the incidents were the work of the same suspect, but detectives always investigate possible connections between cases.