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Rafferty Bill Would Crack Down on Prescription Drug
Abuse, Fraud
HARRISBURG -- In
response to the growing incidence of prescription drug fraud and abuse in
Pennsylvania, Senator John Rafferty (R-44) has introduced legislation to more
strictly regulate the dispensing and reporting requirements for prescription
medications.
Rafferty noted that prescription drug fraud and abuse are
becoming a serious problem in Pennsylvania and other states, and stricter
guidelines need to be in place to combat the problem. He said prescription
drug abuse accounts for approximately one-third of all drug abuse in the United
States.
“According to recent national statistics, more than four
million people reported using prescription medication for non-medical reasons,”
he said. “That represents a 400 percent increase since 1980. In
addition, drug abuse arrests have increased by more than 10 percent in the last
four years. Clearly, this problem is not going away -- it’s getting
worse.”
Recently, PA Attorney General Jerry Pappert held a news
conference in Philadelphia highlighting prescription drug addiction and
overdosing problems; and specifically mentioned prescription forgery, physicians
who sell prescriptions to drug abusers and doctor shopping schemes wherein
patients go to a number of doctors for the same prescription. He called on the
legislature to pass legislation to address these growing problems.
Rafferty’s legislation would set new guidelines for
dispensing and monitoring prescription drug use. Among them:
The Department of Health would be required to establish
procedures for regulating electronically transmitted prescriptions between
practitioners who prescribe drugs and pharmacies which fill the prescription.
Prescriptions would only be issued electronically or with
a new triplicate form -- with one to the patient, one to the Department of
Health and one retained by the practitioner. These “hard copy” forms would
include the practitioner’s number and a serial number.
The Department of Health would be required to establish
procedures and reporting requirements for pharmacies to dispense out-of-state
prescriptions.
Rafferty said his proposal would help to use new
technology and a more streamlined process of dispensing medication to more
carefully track prescription drug use and to ensure that drugs are being
dispensed correctly.
“People often think of heroin, crack cocaine and marijuana
when we talk about drug abuse,” Rafferty said. “But in so many cases, it
involves the abuse and misuse of pain killers, muscle relaxants and other
commonly prescribed drugs.”
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