Title: Southeastern Pharmacy Officers Conference
1Southeastern Pharmacy Officers Conference
- Dale D. Masten
- August 2, 2008
- Director, State Government Affairs
- National Association of Chain Drug Stores
2What Am I Talking About?
- Pedigree, Track and Trace
- Health Information Technology and Privacy
- Federal Internet Legislative Activity
3Pedigree
- Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of
2007 added 21 USC 355e Pharmaceutical Security
to the Food Drug and Cosmetic Act - FDA to develop standards and identify and
validate effective technologies for the purpose
of securing drug supply chain against
counterfeit, diverted, substandard, adulterated,
misbranded or expired drugs.
4Federal Pedigree Requirement Where are we
now?
- 21 USC 355e
- Standards development - Secretary
- Consultation
- Federal and state agencies, manufacturers,
distributors, pharmacies and other supply chain
stakeholders - Prioritize and develop standards
- Identification, validation, authentication, and
tracking and tracing of prescription drugs - Develop Standardized numerical identifier
- By March 2010
- Applied at point of manufacture and repackaging
(linked to manufacturer identifier) - At package or pallet level
5Federal Pedigree Requirement Where are we
now?
- 21 USC 355e
- Standards development continued
- Standards developed shall address promising
technologies which may include - RFID
- Nanotechnology
- Encryption technologies, and
- Other trace and trace or authentication
technologies
6Federal Pedigree Requirement Where are we
now?
- FDA Standards development
- In March 2008 FDA issued requests for information
from stakeholders on what standards are needed
for - Standardized numerical identifier
- Technologies for drug identification, validation,
track and trace, authentication - NACDS was just one group that submitted comments
- Waiting for FDA to provide further information
7HR 5839 (Reps Buyer and Matheson) Safeguarding
Americas Pharmaceuticals Act
- Introduced
- No action yet by Energy and Commerce Comm.
- Includes
- Allows FDA to destroy counterfeit drugs
- Interim Provisions
- Applicable before track and trace
- Manufacturer to provide packing list with
information on drugs shipped - Pedigrees (paper or electronic)
- Each person except mfg and wholesaler to provide
pedigree ? 2 types of pedigrees - Direct purchase pedigree (ADRs)
- Standard pedigree
8Federal HR 5839 (Reps Buyer and Matheson)
- Additional provisions
- Returns
- Must be shown on the pedigree
- Different categories of returns
- Saleable returns
- Mistakes in ordering/shipment
- Returned in 7 days with Certified Statement
- Other returns
- Drugs with Direct Purchase pedigree
- Returned with Certified Statement
- Non-saleable
- Returned without pedigree
9Federal HR 5839 (Reps Buyer and Matheson)
- TRACKING AND TRACING Requirements for
prescription drugs - Different requirement dates for high risk and
generic drugs - Complicated Timelines
- For when drugs must be tracked and traced i.e.
not later than - For when regulations must be issued
10Federal HR 5839 (Reps Buyer and Matheson)
- TIMING DEPENDS ON WHEN FDA announces STANDARDS
- POSSIBLE TIMELINE Scenario under the bill
- March 2009 FDA announces
- Standard identifier
- List of high risk drugs
- September 2010
- Manufacturers must apply std identifier to high
risk drugs - March 2012
- Manufacturers must apply std identifier to other
drugs - March 2012 to September 2012
- Track and trace starts for high risk drugs
- September 2012 to December 2012
- Track and trace starts for other drugs
11HR 5839 (Buyer and Matheson)
- Grants to independent pharmacies
- Not owned or operated by a publicly traded
company - Grant preference to independent pharmacies with
annual gross revenues of 6,500,000 or less - Purchase qualified identification and tracking
technologies - 1 matching for 3 federal funds
- Must report to Secretary within 1 year on impact
of grant
12HR 5839 (Buyer and Matheson)
- Preemption of state laws for
- Pedigrees
- Manufacturer packing lists
- Unique standard identifiers
- Drug identification and tracking system
13HR 5839 (Buyer and Matheson)
- Other provisions
- Wholesale distributor licensure
- Increased requirements
- Bonds
- Mandatory background checks
- Fingerprinting
- Key personnel qualifications
- Mandatory physical inspections prior to licensure
- Injunctions, civil penalties
- States may bring civil enforcement proceedings
- Study on threats to domestic prescription drug
supply chain
14Senate Approach
- In the Food Safety Bill there is a requirement
that requires manufacturers to incorporate Track
and Trace on raw products.
15Health Information Technology (HIT)/Privacy
- H.R. 6357 the Protecting Records, Optimizing
Treatment, and Easing Communication through
Healthcare Technology Act of 2008 or the
PRO(TECH)T Act of 2008. - Sponsored by Chairman Dingell (D-MI) and
Representative Joe Barton (R-TX). - Has Bi-partisan support.
- Passage is a priority of sponsors.
16Health Information Technology (HIT)/Privacy
- Weighed down with onerous privacy provisions.
- Substituted and passed by voice vote in House
Energy and Commerce Committee. - Some concerns addressed, agreement to address
others prior to full passage.
17Health Information Technology (HIT)/Privacy Contd
- Changes made in Committee
- Clarifies that consent may be a one-time
aggregated consent, revocation of consent can
only be for data collected prospectively (not
retrospectively), and that providers can maintain
a patients information in an electronic medical
record (whether or not the provider receives
consent). - Requires the Secretary of HHS to promulgate
regulations implementing the consent provisions
in a manner that protects health information and
is deemed reasonable and workable, including
providing the Secretary with the authority to
exempt certain healthcare operations from the
consent requirement.
18Health Information Technology (HIT)/Privacy Contd
- Provides a safe harbor by which an individual
would not need to be notified if the breached
information was encrypted and clarifies that good
faith disclosures of health information will not
constitute a breach. - Allows for industry-developed technology
standards to determine what information is
unsecured personal health information and require
the Secretary of HHS to develop and disseminate
model, informed consent through notice and
comment, respectively.
19Health Information Technology (HIT)/Privacy Contd
- Changes the accounting for disclosures for
treatment, payment, and healthcare operations so
that it goes into effect either when an entity
acquires or upgrades its electronic medical
record or six months after a technical standard
is adopted by the Secretary of HHS (whichever is
sooner). In addition, the amount of time a
provider must retain the information was reduced
from six years to three years.
20Health Information Technology (HIT)/Privacy Contd
- Concerns to be addressed prior to passage
- Sponsored by Representative Rogers (R-MI)
- Change the bill requirement of accounting for
disclosures so pharmacies would have to account
only for disclosures made for the purpose of
healthcare operations. - change the bill requirement for obtaining patient
consent by stating that the regulations to
implement the consent requirement must ensure
that such requirement does not impede access to
healthcare or reduce healthcare quality or
safety.
21Federal Internet Legislative Activity
- Senate passed S. 980, Feinstein
- Referred to House, introduced their version, H.
6353 - Provisions
- Restrictions on dispensing controlled substances
over the Internet - Requires valid prescription
- Legitimate medical purpose
- At least 1 in-person medical evaluation
22Federal Internet Legislative Activity
- Requires online pharmacies to meet additional
requirements - Supplemental DEA registration as online pharmacy
- Website disclosure of pharmacy information name,
address, telephone numbers, name, license and
professional degree of PIC for each pharmacy,
list of states where pharmacy is licensed to
dispense controlled substances, certification
that the pharmacy has required supplemental DEA
registration to dispense controlled substances
over the Internet, and name and other information
on any practitioner who has a contractual
relationship to provide medical evaluations or
issues prescriptions for controlled substances
23Federal Internet Legislative Activity
- Reporting to the DEA - in an aggregate total
quantity - the amount of each controlled
substance dispensed - Statement on website of compliance with the law
- Specific Statement as required in the law that
the online pharmacy will only dispense a
controlled substance pursuant to a valid
prescription
24Federal Internet Legislative Activity
- Increases criminal penalties
- List of offenses involving unlawful dispensing of
controlled substances by means of the Internet - Rule of construction nothing in the law to be
construed to authorize, limit, or prohibit
electronic prescriptions for controlled
substances
25Federal Internet Legislative Activity
- Exempts certain entities from being online
pharmacies - DEA registered pharmacies that by means of the
Internet refill controlled substances
prescriptions or obtain new Rx for patient with
existing CS Rx - Manufacturers, distributors, hospitals operated
by US, Indian tribal health care facilities, mere
advertisements on the Internet that do no attempt
to facilitate transaction with a controlled
substance - Non-US Internet sites that do not facilitate
dispensing controlled substances by the Internet
to persons in the US
26THANK YOUQUESTIONS ??