- Nevada to pursue separate opioid litigation against major drug companies; new statewide distribution plan adopted (thenevadaindependent.com)
Nevada will not sign on to a proposed $26 billion multistate settlement with the nation’s three largest drug distribution companies and drugmaker Johnson & Johnson — businesses accused of fueling the nation's opioid epidemic that has killed thousands of Nevadans — in hopes of getting a better deal...Attorney General Aaron Ford told The Nevada Independent...that the state would have received roughly $240 million from the settlements — an amount he called “woefully insufficient” — and that the state will instead pursue separate negotiations with the companies “to ensure that the people in this state are adequately recompensed for the damages that opioids have caused in our communities.”...READ MORE
- New law will allow pharmacists to administer HIV prevention medication without prescription (thenevadaindependent.com)
Nevada will become one of the first states to allow pharmacists to prescribe human immunodeficiency virus prevention drugs to patients at risk of contracting the virus, as the state works to combat one of the highest rates of HIV diagnoses in the country...A bill signed by Gov. Steve Sisolak on June 6 authorizes pharmacists with sufficient liability coverage to prescribe, dispense and administer HIV prevention drugs — including post-exposure prophylaxis to people who may have come into contact with HIV and pre-exposure prophylaxis for people at risk — without a prescription from a practitioner starting as early as Oct. 1, in accordance with protocols to be developed by the State Board of Pharmacy over the next several months...READ MORE
- Industry-heavy Patient Protection Commission could get significant membership overhaul (thenevadaindependent.com)
When Gov. Steve Sisolak proposed establishing a Patient Protection Commission to conduct a top-to-bottom review of Nevada’s health care system, he told industry representatives that his goal was compromise — and that those not working toward that goal could lose their seats at the table...Under a bill Sisolak put forward and the Legislature approved in 2019, the commission was established as an industry-heavy body, with a few patient and general public representatives added in, that would come together to address pressing health care issues in the state — in the vein of an industry working group that had successfully compromised on surprise emergency room billing legislation earlier that year...READ MORE
- Lawmakers look to strengthen organ transplant anti-discrimination laws (thenevadaindependent.com)
Denying organ transplants for people with intellectual and physical disabilities is considered illegal under the federal Americans with Disabilities Act, but disability rights advocates say a lack of enforcement means the law isn’t being fully followed throughout the United States...Nevada lawmakers are looking to beef up that section of law this session — during an Assembly Health and Human Services Committee hearing last week, Sen. Scott Hammond (R-Las Vegas) presented his bill SB305 that would prohibit medical providers from denying access to organ transplants based on disability status..."We are attempting to ensure people with disabilities, whether intellectual or cognitive, are not denied an organ transplant because of their disability," Hammond said...READ MORE
- ACLU, press association sue state, demand transparency in execution of Zane Floyd (thenevadaindependent.com)Nevada press group sues for transparency in Zane Floyd execution (reviewjournal.com)
The American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada and the Nevada Press Association have filed a federal lawsuit calling for a halt to the state’s planned execution of Zane Floyd – which would be the state’s first in 15 years — unless the process is more transparent...The lawsuit...argues that the state violates the First Amendment by interfering with the media’s ability to observe Zane Floyd’s execution in its entirety and without obstruction. The lack of transparency is especially concerning given that the state is “using experimental drug cocktails and an untested facility,”...READ MORE
- Nevada plans to use 3 or 4 drugs for late-July execution (msn.com)
Nevada prison officials...disclosed that they want to use a never-before-tried combination of drugs for the state’s first lethal injection in 15 years, including the powerful opioid fentanyl, the sedative ketamine and a heart-stopping salt, potassium chloride...An execution manual provided to a federal judge ahead of a possible late-July death date for convicted mass killer Zane Michael Floyd said a similar-acting drug, alfentanil, might substitute for fentanyl and potassium acetate might substitute for potassium chloride...U.S. District Judge Richard Boulware II said he may issue a stay of execution by the end of the month to allow time to review the choice of drugs and the 65-page Execution Manual...READ MORE
- Nevada’s drug transparency program could get two years of funding as lawmakers consider expanding its scope (thenevadaindependent.com)
Four years after passing the state’s first drug transparency law, lawmakers may finally put dollars behind the effort as they continue to build upon the original legislation this session...Members of the Senate Finance Committee this week considered a $780,000 fiscal note from the Department of Health and Human Services on the latest drug transparency bill, SB380, which would allow state health officials to transfer the existing drug transparency database to the state’s Enterprise Information Technology Services Division, where it would live and be maintained moving forward. It also would allow the state to hire a pharmacist to manage the drug transparency program and a management analyst to assist with the program’s facilitation...READ MORE
- Nevada State Board of Pharmacy Newsletter July 2021 (bop.nv.gov)
- Practice Guidelines for the Administration of Buprenorphine for Treating OUD
- Resumption of In-person Inspections
- New Law CE
- Inspector RetiredPharmacy Inspector
Joe “Batman” Depczynski - New Board Investigator/Inspector
Monica S. Segedy
Mui Lee, RPh,
- New data released on Nevada’s rare breakthrough COVID cases (reviewjournal.com)
Dozens of Nevadans fully vaccinated against COVID-19 have been hospitalized after contracting rare breakthrough cases of the disease, state health officials reported in new data...The majority of the 51 cases were white, male, and age 70 and older, among those most at risk of severe infections. But 32 of the patients showed no symptoms of COVID-19 infection, according to the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services data...health officials had reported at least two deaths among 186 breakthrough cases...READ MORE
- Lawmakers seek greater oversight of billions in opioid settlement funds projected for the state (thenevadaindependent.com)
A few state lawmakers are hoping to establish greater legislative oversight over how the state spends billions of dollars in opioid settlement funds projected to be won by the attorney general in litigation throughout the next decade...SB390, a bill presented by Sen. Julia Ratti (D-Sparks) and sponsored by the Senate Health and Human Services Committee, would create a state fund to house proceeds from opioid settlements, such as the $45 million Nevada is set to receive from the settlement of a lawsuit against consulting firm McKinsey & Company, which provided services for opioid manufacturers...READ MORE