1 / 22

Victoria A. Hanson, R.Ph., B.S. Pharmacy Consultant Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement

Controlled Substances in the Institutional Setting NYS Council of Health-system Pharmacists May 3, 2009. Victoria A. Hanson, R.Ph., B.S. Pharmacy Consultant Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement NYS Department of Health. Questions to Ask Yourself….

saul
Download Presentation

Victoria A. Hanson, R.Ph., B.S. Pharmacy Consultant Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Controlled Substances in the Institutional SettingNYS Council of Health-system PharmacistsMay 3, 2009 Victoria A. Hanson, R.Ph., B.S. Pharmacy Consultant Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement NYS Department of Health

  2. Questions to Ask Yourself… • How do I handle patients who are admitted on methadone or buprenorphine? • What are the inventory requirements? • Am I handling emergency kits correctly? • Can I spot signs of diversion…and if I do, what next? • Do I understand my legal responsibilities?

  3. Bureau Responsibilities New York State Controlled Substances Act Protects NYS citizens by combating the illegal use and trafficking of prescription Controlled Substances (CSs) while allowing the legitimate use of CSs. Through administration and enforcement of Public Health Law, Article 33 the Bureau: • Regulates CS from manufacture/distribution prescribing dispensing possession destruction; • Manages the PMP including analysis; • Conducts case investigations that can result in civil or criminal actions; and • Provides the Official NYS Rx (ONYSRx) to prescribers.

  4. “To Methadone or not to Methadone…” Question #1: A pt admitted to hospital w/acute condition (broken leg) and was previously obtaining methadone from Methadone Maintenance Treatment Provider (MMTP). Can the hospital administer methadone to pt if hospital not an MMTP? What about buprenorphine?

  5. “To Methadone or not to Methadone…” Question #1: A pt admitted to hospital w/acute condition (broken leg) and was previously obtaining methadone from Methadone Maintenance Treatment Provider (MMTP). Can the hospital administer methadone to pt if hosp not an MMTP? What about buprenorphine? Answer #1: Yes, for both drugs, provided pt was not admitted solely for detox. With methadone, hospital must get orders from original MMTP provider. Can’t  or  dosage/strength w/o consult from original MMTP. *Per 21CFR 1306.07(c).

  6. “To Methadone or not to Methadone…” Question #2: Can hospital that detox’s administer buprenorphine to detox /rehab if pt previously obtaining it from an approved MD? What about methadone?

  7. “To Methadone or not to Methadone…” Question #2: Can hospital that detox’s administer buprenorphine to detox /rehab if pt previously obtaining it from an approved MD? What about methadone? Answer #2: BUPR: No; in this case, pt is admitted for detox therefore MD needs “X” # or can be admin as emergency txt x3 days, per CFR. METD: Must be lic’d by OASAS as MMTP to administer methadone for detox.

  8. “To Methadone or not to Methadone…” Question #3: Who is authorized to issue Rxs for methadone? What about buprenorphine?

  9. “To Methadone or not to Methadone…” Question #3: Who is authorized to issue Rxs for methadone? What about buprenorphine? Answer #3:NO Rxs for addiction for methadone —methadone cannot be dispensed for addiction txt—can only dispense for pain txt. If unsure of diagnosis- Call MD! Methadone issued for addiction pursuant to order from MMTP. Buprenorphine Rxs for addiction only by those MDs authorized by DEA (‘X’ number).

  10. PHL 3320 Authorized Distribution 1. Controlled substances may be lawfully distributed within this state only to licensed distributors or manufacturers, practitioners, pharmacists, pharmacies, institutional dispensers, and laboratory, research or instructional facilities authorized by law to possess the particular substance distributed. 2. A person authorized to obtain a controlled substance by distribution may lawfully receive such substance only from a distributor licensed pursuant to this article.

  11. Class 3 vs. Class 3a • Class 3 • Article 28 • Pharmacy on-site • CSs administered pursuant to medical order • Can NOT obtain CSs from outside source • Class 3a • No pharmacy on site (use ‘vendor’ pharmacy) • CSs administered pursuant to prescriptions

  12. Emergency Kits in Class 3a • §80.11: exempts distribution from pharmacy practitioner • §80.47: authorizes administration of CS to pt by means other than from an Rx. • §80.49: authorizes admin of CS to pt in an emergency situation pursuant to medical order • §80.49: recordkeeping requirements • §80.50: authorizes possession of CS by Class 3a-specific amounts, specific safeguarding

  13. Types of Orders in Class 3 1. Oral emergency orders 2. PRN Orders 3. Routine Orders 4. Standing Orders

  14. Types of Orders in a Class 3 • Oral emergency orders * Administer ONCE only * Practitioner must sign within 48hrs 2.PRN Orders * No specific time * Good for 72hrs only * Administer ONCE only

  15. Types of Orders in a Class 3 3.Routine Orders * No specific written order (i.e. after heart cath, give 40mg) NOT allowed for controlled substances! 4.Standing Orders * CS to be administered at specific time * Good for 7 days only, must rewrite every 7 days * Except: if patient in: (1) RHCF; or (2) stabilized pt in Class 3 and has : Convulsive Disorder; or Chronic Spasticity; or Minimal Brain Dysfunction. Such order may be for 30 days and rewritten every 30 days.

  16. 80.112 Inventory Who? What? When? How?

  17. 80.112 Inventory Who?: All who procure CSs What?: Separate entry for ea kind of substance or preparation, & ea. pkg size. When?: After initial inventory, every 2yrs on May 1st of odd years. (After close of business 4/30 or prior to opening 5/1). How?: Ea entry shall include: name, qty & content of CS & size of indiv pkg, # of pkgs, & total content of all pkgs on hand as of date of inventory True count of CSs- not estimate.

  18. Legal Responsibilities • PYL • Know the Law & Regulations • Documentation • Safeguard • Losses of CSs • Suspected Diversion

  19. NYS PHL Article 3374 • Notification by licensee • Persons licensed . . . pursuant to this article shall be under a continuing duty to promptlynotify the department of each incident or alleged incident of theft loss or possible diversion of controlled substances manufactured, ordered, distributed or possessed by such person.”

  20. Reporting Suspected Diversion NYS Public Health Law Article 33, Section 3374: 'Notification by licensee' http://public.leginfo.state.ny.us/menugetf.cgi 10NYCRR, Part 80 Title 10, Section 80.110: 'Notification by licensee' http://www.health.state.ny.us/nysdoh/phforum/nycrr10.htm Code of Federal Regulations Title 21, Section 1301.91: ‘Employee Responsibility to Report Drug Diversion’ http://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/21cfr/1301_91.htm

  21. Case History

  22. 433 River Street, Suite 303 Troy, NY 12180 Phone: (518) 402- 0707 or (866)- 811-7957 Fax: (518)- 402-0709 www.health.state.ny.us/professionals/narcotic/ E-mail: narcotic@health.state.ny.us Regional Offices: NYC: (212) 417-4103 Buffalo: (716) 847-4532 Syracuse: (315) 477-8459 Rochester: (585) 423-8043 Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement

More Related