Federal Pharmacy Law and Regulation: Reading 3 Flashcards
the ________ ____________ amendment of ________:
1) established and defined what qualities make a drug a prescription drug, and WHO is allowed to prescribe these drugs
2) allowed both written and oral rxs from prescribers, meaning prescribers were now able to call-in rxs over the phone
3) allowed refills on rxs, whereas previously refills rxs could only be filled once
Durham-Humphrey Amendment of 1951
Prescribing authority is defined by:
states and other jurisdictions, NOT the federal government
**discussed here as a general overview of who can and can’t prescribe (this deck is a general federal idea, NOT indiana law)
Who are considered the BIG FOUR prescribers which are recognized in ALL states and jurisdictions?
Prescriptions written by these practitioners are accepted and filled in any part of the United States as long as the prescriber is licensed in at least one jurisdiction, meaning state or territory, of the United States.
Physicians (MD/DO)
Dentists (DDS/DMD)
Podiatrists (DPM)
Veterinarians (DVM)
“Big Four”
__________ ___ _________ is best described as what a practitioner can do within their practice, based on their education and professional licensure
Scope of practice
**a general rule is that practitioners are only permitted to prescribe within their scope of practice
Physician’s scope of practice:
Whole body responsibility
T or F?
Physicians when specialized can only prescribe in that specialty.
FALSE -
** physicians may choose to specialize in a particular area, but this specialization does NOT take away their education, licensure, and ability to prescribe whatever they want.
ie. internal medicine, but ALSO surgeons! even tho they specialize in surgery, they aren’t required to only prescribe for only surgical issues or surgical patients)- we may want to know more about why a surgeon is prescribing Adderall for a patient, and we may even refuse to refill this prescription based on the physician’s reasoning, but it’s not illegal.
Dentists scope of practice:
dentists education only involves the mouth and maxillofacioual area; therefore, dentists can prescribe medications for these areas, related structures, and conditions affecting these areas:
pain meds for toothache, antibiotic (amoxicillin, cephalexin, augmentin) for gum infection, denzodiazepine for dental anxiety = ALL ACCEPTABLE
HOWEVER, an antibiotic for an upper respiratory infection (azithromycin) = NOT ACCEPTABLE = call dentist for further info
Podiatrists scope of practice:
treat feet, ankles, and in some jurisdictions, hands (refer to state of licensure)
Podiatrists are much more likely to stay within their scope than dentists (one controversy- podiatrist using heart drug to affect edema in the ankle: would you dispense? something to consider)
Veterinarian scope of practice:
can only prescribe for animals: they are allowed to prescribe human drugs for animals or animal drugs.
No limitations on the types of drugs they can use as long as those drugs are prescribed for an animal. (some weird requirements for DISPENSING in Indiana)
Midlevel practitioner scope of practice:
More difficult to determine compared to the big four.
NP and PAs are usually limited to the specialty of their supervising physician – this means, under internal medicine dr= wide scope, whereas for derm= only prescribe drugs related to derm issue.
some midlevel prescribers are sometimes limited to a specific formulary of drugs they’re allowed to prescribe ** refer to state.
Federal law-
To be exempted and not considered misbranded, the rx label MUST contain all of the following:
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
- The name AND address of the dispenser.
- Serial number of the prescription.
- Date of the rx OR its filling date
- Name of the prescriber.
- IF STATED ON THE RX, the name of the patient
- IF CONTAINED ON THE PRESCRIPTION, any directions for use.
- IF CONTAINED ON THE PRESCRIPTION, any cautionary statements.
(5-7 NOT ALWAYS REQUIRED BY FEDERAL LAW!)
For an rx that was filled at a central pharmacy, according to federal law, which address would be on the rx label?
the label would contain the address of the pharmacy dispensing it to the patient.
FEDERAL REFILL RULES:
OTC, Non-control: how long can a prescription be refilled?
No rule*
*different than indiana
FEDERAL REFILL RULES:
Rx-only, non-control: how long can a prescription be refilled?
No rule*
*different than indiana
FEDERAL REFILL RULES:
OTC or Rx-only, CIII, CIV, CV: how long can a prescription be refilled?
6 months
FEDERAL REFILL RULES:
OTC, non-control: how many refills are allowed?
No rule