Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Tracking




A secretive, for-profit service called ScriptCheck keeps track of all your prescriptions, even those you pay for with cash. Life insurers pay for the data.

Read more at the link below


Your prescription history is their business

Monday, August 19, 2013

Mary Jane for Your Daughter Jane

 From the ASHP Headlines

Christie Approves Medical Marijuana For Children.

The CBS Evening News reported that while New Jersey Governor Chris Christie vetoed part of a bill legalizing edible marijuana for pain relief, he did sign off on making it available for children under age 18 with certain chronic illnesses, if certain changes are made. Unlike 17 other states that only require one doctor to authorize medical marijuana for children, Christie will support the bill with a requirement for authorization from both a pediatrician and psychiatrist. Christie wrote, “While many will disagree with the decision to allow minors access to marijuana, even for serious illnesses, parents should remain empowered to make a choice based on their own reflections, study and physician consultation.”
        NBC Nightly News reported that either the pediatrician or psychiatrist has to be enrolled in the state’s marijuana program. The synthesized marijuana will not have the chemical that makes people high, but will have higher amounts of the chemical that impacts the brain to reduce problems like seizures.
        The New York Times (8/16, Zernike, Subscription Publication) noted the New Jersey marijuana registry includes two pediatricians and 16 psychiatrists. Parents of sick children oppose the double authorization requirement because “pediatricians and psychiatrists often know so little about the program that they do not want to support it, and finding a registered doctor willing to prescribe to a child is already difficult.”
        The Wall Street Journal (8/17, Haddon, Subscription Publication) added that marijuana for a child may also be authorized by three doctors, if none of them are on the registry. Christie is putting tight regulations on medical marijuana to not repeat the problem of other states having runaway growth for the industry.
        The Washington Post (8/16, Blake) reported in its “Post Politics” blog that State Assemblywoman Linda Stender criticized Christie saying, “it’s unfortunate that these families were forced to wait nearly two months while this legislation languished on the governor’s desk.”
        The Los Angeles Times (8/17, Mueller) noted that Christie’s decision “to allow sick children access to forms of pot that can be eaten,” is a move “supported by parents worried that the dry-leaf and lozenge forms of the drug pose health concerns.”
        Bloomberg News (8/16, Dopp) reported that Christie originally delayed the medical marijuana program established by his predecessor over concerns of violating Federal law.
        The AP (8/19, Santi, Mulvihill) reports that though the New Jersey legislature has a voting session scheduled for Monday, when it might consider Christie’s revisions is unclear.
        CBS News (8/16, Miller) reported Christie indicated, “I am making commonsense recommendations to this legislation to ensure sick children receive the treatment their parents prefer, while maintaining appropriate safeguards.”
        NBC News (8/16) reported Christie explained limiting the strain cultivation limit “will allow dispensaries to develop products tailored to the needs of particular patient populations, and thus provide additional options to those in need.”
        CNN (8/16, Frerrigno, Koenig, Hudson) reported that parent Brian Wilson, who forced Christie to act by confronting him at a campaign stop, said, “While it is a small victory ... it really just maintains the idea of making (New Jersey) one of the worst medical marijuana programs in the country. So it’s a small victory but it’s kind of ludicrous in a lot of ways.”
        MSNBC (8/16, Lockie) reported that New Jersey’s only medical marijuana dispensary re-opened last Thursday after a lack of supply closed it for seven weeks. Later this year, two more dispensaries are scheduled to open.
        The Bergen (NJ) Record (8/16, Hayes, Williams) reported that pediatric neurologist Dr. Rosario Trifiletti said marijuana is better than strong medications on the market for treating children with severe epilepsy, though Dr. Stephen Thompson, chief of pediatric neurology at Hackensack University Medical Center, “cautioned that child use of marijuana should be a last resort.”

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Counter Intuitive Rx Blog

A recent post by USA Today

The DEA accused Walgreens on Friday of endangering public safety and barred the company from shipping oxycodone and other controlled drugs from its Jupiter, Fla., distribution center.
The move is the latest action by the Drug Enforcement Agency in a crackdown on pharmaceutical companies, drug distributors and drugstore chains that sell large amounts of highly addictive narcotics. Earlier this week, the DEA revoked the controlled substances licenses for two CVS pharmacies in Sanford, Fla., accused of dispensing excessive amounts of oxycodone.
The DEA says Walgreens failed to maintain proper controls to ensure it didn't dispense drugs to addicts and drug dealers. Large increases in narcotic sales could be a sign that drug addicts and dealers are using fake prescriptions to purchase the drugs, the agency says. The addicts and dealers often get the prescriptions from clinics, known as "pill mills," where doctors prescribe the drugs after only cursory examinations.

And the community Pharmacist's blog response

My point is, why don’t they act on the entity that INITIATES the prescriptions? Because they are infringing on a physician’s decision making and that scares them to death! They are not physicians! By the time they get around to the obvious, thousands if not millions of prescriptions have been written.
Instead they pick the easy target, the community pharmacist. They question OUR judgment and give us ZERO opportunity to respond or explain why our decisions are made. They limit our ability to purchase medications. They threaten our suppliers if they don’t collect our patient’s private health data and turn it over to them.
We are being used as scapegoats for the meth craze and now the oxycodone explosion. The DEA is a typical bureaucratic entity that rather than solves the actual problem, would rather collect fines and pat themselves on the back publicly than listen to community pharmacists who MIGHT actually have some good ideas on how to address this problem.

Monday, June 3, 2013

Epiphany

Is it weird to think that I understand each bullet of the current Journal of Clinical Oncology?

This June's issue highlights.

Read more here

Adult prescription growth linked to kids' poisonings

As adult prescription medication use has increased, so have rates of poisonings in children of all ages.

Read more here

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Senate rejects bill on prescription monitoring program

California lawmakers fail to pass a measure calling for higher fees for pharmacists and doctors and a tax on drug makers to improve CURES' narcotics-tracking database.



Read more here.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Pierce, but not Pierce Morgan

Just wanted to share a great writer and great read with you.

Charles Pierce account of the Boston Waterton events for Esquire here.

Enjoy,

- Nicole