CVS: Our pharmacists are empowered to refuse to fill prescriptions they feel are not being used for legitimate medical purposes

Fighting Opioid Abuse with Technology

https://cvshealth.com/content/fighting-opioid-abuse-technology-0

According to this press release from CVS.. there Pharmacist only have to have A FEELING… that a Rx is not for a legit use… they don’t need REAL FACTS… so OPIOPHOBIC PHARMACISTS are able to use their personal feelings, biases, phobias to deny care to legit pts.

Much has been written about prescription opioid abuse, and with good reason – it has reached epidemic proportions in the United States. One of the biggest challenges associated with opioid abuse is ensuring that patients with a legitimate need for the medications can access them, while preventing those who abuse or divert the drugs from obtaining them.

With a national spotlight on the problem, public awareness continues to grow. A recent survey by CVS Health shows the public agrees that pharmacists can help reduce prescription drug abuse by using their knowledge and professional judgment. In fact, pharmacists from across our enterprise are trained in identifying patients who are at risk for abuse or inappropriate use of controlled substances. Our pharmacists are empowered to refuse to fill prescriptions they feel are not being used for legitimate medical purposes.

Technology can also help. Prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) are statewide electronic databases that gather information from pharmacies on prescriptions for controlled substances, including opioids, that have been dispensed. They allow both pharmacists and prescribers to review prescription histories for signs of abuse or diversion, and can help prevent unnecessary prescriptions from being written in the first place. The data can also provide a useful starting point for getting patients who are struggling with prescription drug abuse on the path to treatment for addiction.

While PDMP technology is currently available in 49 states, its scope is somewhat limited. For example, providers can only see information for the state in which they practice, not for all states where a patient may have been prescribed medication. And although PDMPs have been identified by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy as an important tool in fighting prescription drug abuse, utilization rates are suboptimal. Health care professionals are not required to review PDMP information, and the process of accessing data is time-consuming, leading many to skip this step altogether1.  

CVS Health is working at the federal and state level to implement policy changes to curb prescription drug abuse. Our recommendations include:

  • Mandatory utilization of Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP) data at the point of prescribing would require prescribers to review the patient’s pharmacy prescription history, showing the prescriber whether the patient is doctor shopping (using more than one prescriber to obtain controlled substance prescriptions).
  • PDMP data pushed directly to the prescriber’s e-prescribing device would give the provider instant access to the patient’s history before deciding whether the medication is for a legitimate medical purpose.
  • PDMP interoperability across state lines would allow prescribers full visibility into patient prescription fill patterns and reduce or eliminate doctor and pharmacy shopping that occurs across state lines. PDMPs can currently share data across state lines in 22 of the 49 programs.
  • E-prescribing for controlled substances has proven to be effective in reducing drug diversion and fraud.
  • Daily PDMP data submission from pharmacies to the state database will ensure that each database is accurate and encourage use by reducing lag time between updates.

CVS Health is fully committed to the fight against prescription drug abuse, and has been actively engaging members of the health care community in robust discussions about the issue.

Learn more about what we’re doing to address this national crisis.

9 Responses

  1. Pharmacists are not doctors and to refuse to fill my prescription that is due to be refilled should not be in their powers. Now I am without my medication for a sleep disorder I have. My medication is not an opiod. So yes I filed a complaint with the State Board of Pharmacists and the AMA against CVS for trying to play Doctor.

  2. It’s all good until you need two days worth because you have a extra attack and then they deny a two day supplie to refill.

  3. What I actually see CVS pharmacists doing is deciding they know better than a physician and not narcotics. Insulin and antibiotics are being questioned They want to be doctors — go to school.

  4. What is up with this barrage of retarded logic. What kind of morons would allow a pharmacist to deny medication based on their ‘feelings’. There’s too many fucking morons out there and I dont want them making any kinds of decisions for me, at all. They just need to shut the fuck up, give me my shit, and shut the fuck up. fuck

  5. When I lived in MN (moved in 2014) there was the drug monitoring database in effect, which I believe is a great tool to help with the abuse problems we have. I don’t really know if it is here in FL — I would think so, but haven’t run across any issues that brought it up for me. I do have a question, however, from what my new pharmacist at a WalMart asked me when I started going there. He said he would need me to bring in the “treatment plan” my PM doctor has for me. Is that a legitimate request? I am seeing my doc on Monday, and knowing him, he will likely poo-poo the idea. I’ve just never had a pharmacist ask for documentation from a doctor before. Anyone know about this? (I don’t mind if he has anything from my doc or records, I just found the question surprising.) If it’s part of helping to reduce abuse, then I’m for it.

    • Some bad apples mess things up for people that really need pain relief CVS get a LIFE leave ours alone

Leave a Reply

Discover more from PHARMACIST STEVE

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading