- Few California pharmacists prescribing birth control (reuters.com)
A California law allowing pharmacists to prescribe birth control sought to make it easier for women to obtain contraception, but few drug stores provide the service... Only 11 percent of retailers in the state offered pharmacist-prescribed contraception one year after the law went into effect, the research shows...Our findings strongly suggest that more pharmacies need to offer this service to live up to the promise of widespread, easier access to birth control...Four states - California, Oregon, Colorado and New Mexico - allow pharmacists to prescribe contraceptive pills, patches, rings and injections after training about how to assess health risks and counsel women on contraceptive choices... Most stores that offered the service charged a fee...Under the Affordable Care Act, insurance carriers must pay for family planning consultations with healthcare providers. But the law does not cover pharmacists...Oregon requires Medicaid to pay pharmacists for the service. California’s law has a similar provision, but it doesn’t take effect until 2021...
- This Week in Managed Care: December 15, 2017 (ajmc.com)
Laura Joszt, assistant managing editor at The American Journal of Managed Care. Welcome to This Week in Managed Care from the Managed Markets News Network
- Pharmacy Week in Review: December 15, 2017 (pharmacytimes.com)
Nicole Crisano, PTNN. This weekly video program provides our readers with an in-depth review of the latest news, product approvals, FDA rulings and more.
- Charity Delays Giving New Aid After U.S. Faults Pharma Ties (bloomberg.com)
A medical charity that lost a crucial stamp of approval from the U.S. government because it had worked too closely with its drug-company donors said it will decide in January whether it can continue to help patients pay for their prescriptions...the Caring Voice Coalition, one of the biggest patient-assistance charities in the U.S., said it is delaying offering patients financial help for 2018 until it decides what to do...“We are very concerned that we may not be able to remain as a long-term viable resource for individuals with chronic illness,”...the Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services rescinded its favorable advisory opinion of the Caring Voice Coalition, in part because the charity had provided drugmakers with data that could help them see if their contributions were helping their own customers. That could potentially give drug companies greater power to raise prices, the HHS said. It was the first time the HHS has rescinded a favorable advisory opinion for a patient-assistance charity.
- FDA lays groundwork for regulating 3D-printed drugs (biopharmadive.com)
The Food and Drug Administration has issued guidance on 3D printing and the role it plays in manufacturing healthcare products...While the guidance focuses largely on medical devices, Commissioner Scott Gottlieb acknowledged in a Monday statement that the innovative technology also holds the potential to disrupt drug development. Already, the agency has approved one medicine crafted with 3D printers, Aprecia Pharmaceutical Co.’s Spritam..."This is likely just the tip of the iceberg given the exponential growth of innovative research in this field," Gottlieb said, referring to the 3D-printed products on the market. "We envision that burn patients in the near future will be treated with their own new skin cells that are 3D printed directly onto their burn wounds. Further down the road, there is the potential for this same technology to eventually be used to develop replacement organs."...The promise of 3D printing, however, could spark new innovation and invention in how drugs, and the devices that deliver them, are formulated and made. In response, the FDA is moving to stay ahead of the technology's advances....
- Medication errors reduced when pharmacy staff take drug histories in ER (healthcarefinancenews.com)
When pharmacy professionals, rather than doctors or nurses, take medication histories of patients in emergency departments, mistakes in drug orders can be reduced by more than 80 percent, according to a study led by Cedars-Sinai...Cedars-Sinai now assigns pharmacy staff members to take medication histories for high-risk patients admitted to the hospital through the emergency department...Injuries resulting from medication use are among the most common types of inpatient injuries at U.S. hospitals, affecting hundreds of thousands of patients every year. Errors in medication histories contribute significantly to such problems, and those errors can lead physicians to order the wrong drug, dose or frequency.
- Clark County School employees sue Teachers Health Trust (reviewjournal.com)Fraud and deception alleged in class action lawsuit against Teachers Health Trust (ktnv.com)
When former Clark County School District school psychologist Diana Goodsell was injured by an alleged drunken driver in 2015, she required a cervical spinal fusion surgery...just before the operation...she was told it would cost her $6,800 out of pocket...that was part of the agreement with the Teachers Health Trust...Now Goodsell and other current and former district employees have filied (filed) a class action lawsuit against the Teachers Health Trust, which provides health insurance for thousands of Clark County School District employees and their dependents. The lawsuit...alleges breach of contract, consumer fraud and other actions that the plaintiffs say have forced them to pay more for health care and receive less...The lawsuit names the trust, seven of its trustees and WellHealth Quality Care...as defendants. It claims that WellHealth violated its contract by refusing to pay claims, charging double the $10 co-pay for doctor visits and leaving teachers with higher yearly out-of-pocket expenses than the specified cap of approximately $6,800...The School Board said it has received numerous complaints about the trust’s health care coverage...
- Apotex founder Barry Sherman and wife, Honey Sherman, found dead in North York home (cbc.ca)Autopsies underway for Canadian billionaires found dead (ottawacitizen.com)
Canadian pharmaceutical giant Apotex has confirmed its founder Barry Sherman and his wife, Honey Sherman, are dead, amid reports that two bodies were found in their Toronto home...Deaths deemed 'suspicious'...investigators are still trying to "determine if there is foul play involved or not. And at this point we cannot say 100 per cent with certainty if there is or there is not...
- ISMP Names Top Medication Safety Issues of 2017 (pharmacytimes.com)
During a session at the American Society of Health System Pharmacists Midyear Clinical Meeting and Exhibition, Christina Michalek, PharmD, of the ISMP presented the organizations’ annual review of the year’s biggest medication safety issues...From January 2017 to September 2017, the drug classes most often involved medication errors events included:
- Narcotics/Opioids (10%)
- Antimicrobial agents (10%)
- Antihypertensive agents (6%)
- Antithrombotic agents (6%)
- Anticonvulsant agents (4%)
- Insulin and antidiabetic agents (4%)
- Central nervous system stimulants (4%)
Of these, narcotics/opioids, antithrombotic agents, and insulin and antidiabetic agents are listed as “high alert” drugs by the ISMP, indicating that they are associated with a high risk of harm when used in error.
- Cities, counties and schools sidestep FDA foreign drug crackdown, saving millions (washingtonpost.com)
Schenectady County, N.Y., is on track to pay 20 percent less on prescription drugs for its employees this year than in 2003...Flagler County, Fla., expects to save nearly $200,000 in 2017 on brand-name medicines for its 800 workers, thanks to drug costs that have fallen 10 percent since 2016...dozens of cities, counties and school districts have found a solution they say protects their budgets and saves workers money: They are helping employees buy medicines from Canada and overseas, where prices are up to 80 percent cheaper...“We love it. . . . It’s a win-win,” said Anita Stoker, benefits and wellness manager for Flagler County, which has a program enabling its employees to get drugs from pharmacies in Canada, Britain, Australia and New Zealand...The number of municipalities offering this benefit is growing, even though the Food and Drug Administration considers such drug importation to be illegal and this fall began stepping up enforcement against storefronts advertising the same service. In October it raided nine central Florida locations that helped a mostly senior population order drugs from pharmacies in other countries. Investigators warned the stores’ owners that they were operating illegally and could face fines or jail time...Drugs ordered from overseas often come with the same packaging as in the United States. CanaRx, based in Windsor, Ontario, and ElectRx, based in Detroit, say they vet pharmacies to ensure customers get the real product. Counties, cities and schools, plus an increasing number of private companies, contract with one of these businesses for online service.










