Monday, February 14, 2011

DrugTopics has Suggestions for State Boards, Praises Remote Chemo Prep

The newest issue (Feb 15th) of DrugTopics has two articles about telepharmacy. The first is by Ned Milenkovich, PharmD, JD. He has some suggestions for the state boards who haven't written telepharmacy rules yet: Get with it, and do look to other states. Excerpt from Page 2:

Many state pharmacy laws and regulations are devoid of language regulating this area. Telepharmacy is still a novelty, and there is a lag in implementation of new laws after professional and technological innovations are deployed.

Moreover, in the few states where telepharmacy laws exist, there is a lack of uniformity among the various states' measures. Implementation of comprehensive and uniform state laws and regulations would provide a more certain medium for telepharmacy for the marketplace and patient population.

With regard to state laws and regulations in the telepharmacy arena, establishing requirements that any technology used must be able to electronically link drug product at the remote site back to the original packaging from the drug manufacturer would ensure patient safety and offer a de minimus chance of medication dispensing error. By electronically sending the drug product's bar-code information from the remote site back for comparison with the manufacturer's bar code, the electronic indicia of the drug can be confirmed without human intervention.

Similarly, laws and regulations should require that captured images of the drug product and prescription that are labeled and dispensed at the remote site must be retrievable and reviewable by the pharmacy and pharmacist at all times.

Finally, telepharmacy laws and regulations should provide for proper counseling by means of video technology that enables pharmacist and patient to interact directly.

The second article is by Fred Gebhart, called "Technicians key to telepharmacy success in North Dakota" and it praises technicians' roles in telepharmacy. The article's section that might be new to my readership also comes on the second page:

Techs prepare chemotherapy and other IV medications in a typical sterile facility; the supervising is pharmacist linked electronically.

"Even if the pharmacist is sitting in the next room, telepharmacy can give you a higher level of oversight than you have with a traditional sterile-prep situation," he said. "Telepharmacy gives you clear, visual records of drugs, bar codes, syringes — every step of the preparation process."

Friday, February 11, 2011

Rural Washington Hospitals Awarded Telemedicine Grant, Will Upgrade Telepharmacy Equipment

The US Department of Agriculture's Rural Utilities Services, Distance Learning and Telemedicine Grant Program recently awarded $487,000 to the North Central Washington Health Collaborative (NCWHC), which includes Lake Chelan Community Hospital, as well as other rural public hospitals in Leavenworth, Brewster, Omak, Quincy and Goldendale. From the Kozi Community Radio station article:
The hospital, along with its partners, will receive $487,000 to upgrade and expand their telemedicine network to improve access and bring new healthcare services to the rural communities they serve.

As the coordinating facility in the North Central Washington Health Collaborative (NCWHC), LCCH's award will fund a new ultrasound machine, additional computerized radiology equipment and telepharmacy equipment for the hospital's childbirth and surgical center departments.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

TrinityHealth Outfits North Dakota Hospital with Telepharmacy Equipment

Trinity Health's Foundation just released their "Report to the Community" for the fiscal year 2010, which ended June 30th. They received "nearly $700,000 in gifts" and dispersed this among their hospitals. A North Dakota hospital received part of it. From the release:

Kenmare Community Hospital

Exercise equipment for patients

Telepharmacy equipment to better serve the community

Unfortunately there are no more details.

VA Soliciting Bids for After-Hours Telepharmacy Service at Maine Hospital

The Federal Business Opportunities website has an offer from the Department of Veterans Affairs to remotely staff the Togus VA Medical Center in Augusta, Maine. Details as follows:
The Togus VA Medical Center in Augusta, ME requires after hours telepharmacy services for inpatients. This entails the vendor providing drug knowledge resources and pharmacist medication order review and entry services. This will include review of authorized physician medication ordered during "after hours" time periods that are scanned, sent, transmitted to or accessed by vendor. Pharmacists will enter via remote access, orders into VAMC medication order entry system. This contract is needed to relieve the present system of after hour's pharmacy orders. This work is presently being performed by VAMC TOGUS staff pharmacists on call and on overtime.

Solicitation Information: This telepharmacy contract will include a base year with 4 option periods at an estimated amount between $50,000 and $100,000 annually. The solicitation documents will be posted at the Federal Business Opportunities website (http://www.fbo.gov) on or about February 15, 2011.
So far there have been nine bids by providers from around the country, mostly from the Northeastern states.

PharmaTrust Receives More Canadian Government Funding

The Industrial Research Assistance Program, under Canada's National Research Council (NRC-IRAP) is contributing an addition $300,000 to PharmaTrust to "support the software and engineering development activities required to deliver a working prototype of MedHome™. From the press release:
The funding will enable the further development of MedHome™, a personal medication management system that addresses the critical issue of medication compliance, helping patients safely and effectively manage their own medications.

Rural Idaho Hospitals Look to Telepharmacy to Offer Better Healthcare Services

George Prentice of the Boise Weekly details the use of two machines in Idaho's rural Adams County Health Center named Beatrice and Norman that dispense drugs approved remotely by a pharmacist in Ontario, Oregon. Live video via Skype allows for remote patient consultations should the patient want it. From the article:

You can't believe how thrilled our providers are," said Langston-Groves. "We had this installed here after obtaining a special order from Gov. Otter."

The success in Council has led Langston-Groves to consider duplicating their effort to nearby Valley County where, by all accounts, the need is as great.

...

But administration at McCall Memorial, which just three months ago joined the St. Luke's network of hospitals, isn't so sure they want to see a low-cost clinic near their turf. Two weeks ago, hospital administrators told the McCall Star News that "adding more medical providers could damage our long-term financial viability." But officials back-pedaled a bit when BW asked about the proposal.

"We're going to do a formal assessment to determine the need," said Lee Rhodes, CEO of St. Luke's McCall.

"I really hope the hospital doesn't try to shut this effort down," said Backus. "With these hard times and people struggling as much as they are, I don't know why folks aren't jumping at this. There's no way that a low-cost clinic in Donnelly is going to be, in any way, competition toward a large medical facility in McCall."

Considering that McCall is less than 13 miles away from Donnelly, I don't think it's a big logical leap to worry about considering what the McCall Memorial "administrators" said. Hopefully they will put peoples needs before their own profits...

Kansas Sets New Telepharmacy Regulations

Out of the January Kansas Register comes the announcement that Kansas has drafted new regulations for Telepharmacies:

K.A.R. 68-17-1 through 68-17-9 is a set of new regulations to address telepharmacy branch pharmacies. The following is a summary of the new regulations:
K.A.R. 68-17-1. Definitions. This regulation defines terms used in the telepharmacy branch pharmacy regulations.
K.A.R. 68-17-2. Status of telepharmacy branch pharmacy. This regulation addresses the status of the telepharmacy branch pharmacy and limits the number of such branch pharmacies a retail pharmacy may have.
K.A.R. 68-17-3. Requirements for approval of location. This regulation establishes the requirement that each location of a telepharmacy branch pharmacy must be approved by the Pharmacy Board and establishes criteria for approval.
K.A.R. 68-17-4. Application for approval of a telepharmacy branch pharmacy. This regulation establishes the requirement of an application for a registration of a proposed telepharmacy branch pharmacy and establishes the required content of the application.
K.A.R. 68-17-5. Equipment requirements. This regulation establishes requirements for equipment in a telepharmacy branch pharmacy and its use.
K.A.R. 68-17-6. Minimum operating requirements. This regulation establishes operating requirements that must be met when a telepharmacy branch pharmacy is open for operations and dispensing drugs.
K.A.R. 68-17-7. Minimum security requirements. This regulation establishes minimum security requirements for the physical location of the telepharmacy branch pharmacy.
K.A.R. 68-17-8. Renewal registration. This regulation establishes the requirement that the registration of a telepharmacy branch pharmacy be renewed with the renewal application of the parent pharmacy by application to the Pharmacy Board.
K.A.R. 68-17-9. Fees. This regulation establishes the fees for the registration and renewal of a registration for a telepharmacy branch pharmacy.
This article from the Kansas Health Institute details problems that gave rise to the new regulations, the reasoning behind the rules, the model they followed in drafting them, and when they're likely to be encoded:

“We should definitely have those approved in March,” she said.

The regulations initially met resistance from retail pharmacists worried that telepharmacy operations would hurt their business.

“A lot of of people were concerned it was going to impact their brick-and-mortar pharmacy,” she said. “We’re trying to make sure we're not doing that. They don't want a Walgreens or somebody in Kansas City setting up a location in their town that doesn't have to be manned by a pharmacist.

"There was some fear we were going to come up with something like that," she said. "But that wouldn't have been acceptable to anybody. We'd rather you go to a real pharmacist in a real pharmacy, but if you're someplace where there’s not a real pharmacist, we want to make sure there's another option.”