Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Copyrighted, SmartMoney.com. All Rights Reserved.
It seems that doctors are prescribing a lot more medication than they used to. In 2007 pharmacists filled 3.8 billion prescriptions, up from 3.3 billion in 2002. Michael Negrete, CEO of the Pharmacy Foundation of California, says that some physicians may actually be prescribing drugs unnecessarily, say for the flu. “It’s easier and quicker than explaining to a patient why they don’t need an antibiotic,” Negrete says.
The upshot is that your pharmacist is probably working harder than she should be—Paul Lofholm, owner of two pharmacies in Marin County, Calif., says his pharmacists fill prescriptions at a rate of 80 to 100 per shift. “Pharmacists are stressed out,” says Frederick Mayer, a veteran pharmacist and president and CEO of the Pharmacists Planning Service in California, “and it’s getting worse.” One side effect is that most pharmacists don’t have the time to offer the counseling federal and state law require with each prescription. It’s not just a formality—a pharmacist’s recommendation for how and when to take a certain medication can go a long way, for example, in helping to decrease some of the adverse side effects of medication.
Another big factor: the increasingly rapid pace of the work. “Things get so busy,” Mayer says, “that I have no time to look at the computer screen, or even to look inside the bottle and make sure that the pills I’m giving out are the right ones.” Pharmacists are also being asked to spend more time on administrative chores these days, especially those involved with insurance. “Add to that the small things—such as insurance companies only approving 30-day dosages at a time, causing more face time with each patient in the pharmacy, which only adds more to the administrative hassle,” says Lofholm. “It’s a spiraling effect, which means more distractions open up more room for error.”
But many pharmacists are woefully uninformed about the complications that can develop when various drugs get taken in tandem. Even if your druggist sees you purchasing, say, the memory enhancer ginkgo biloba as you pick up a prescription for the blood thinner Coumadin, studies have shown that he may fail to recognize that the two taken together increase your risk of internal bleeding and stroke. “It is a problem,” says Varro E. Tyler, former professor emeritus at the Pharmacy School of Purdue University. “Herbs get sold in this country as dietary supplements and foods, but they are drugs. And all drugs have interactions.”
“Don’t buy dietary supplements, period,” says Larry Sasich, chair of the department of pharmacy practice at the LECOM School of Pharmacy in Erie, Pa. “They’re not regulated, so you have no idea if what you’re seeing on the label is really what is in the bottle.”
Many epilepsy patients in particular have spent years trying to find the right drug and the right dosage to control their seizures, Finucane says, and a drug from an unfamiliar manufacturer can lead to unexpected side effects including seizures, blurred or double vision, or severe headaches. “Because the consequences of having a seizure are so dramatic, we want to do everything we can to avoid this,” Finucane says. Her suggestion: All epilepsy patients should inform their pharmacist of their condition and ask to have their records indicate that switching from one manufacturer to another is prohibited. “And if any questions come up, tell the pharmacist to call your doctor directly,” she says.
But as the medical profession goes digital—with doctors’ sending prescriptions electronically to pharmacists and the use of information exchange networks, which allow doctors, pharmacists, and even nursing homes to access patients’ electronic medical records—industry experts are worried that HIPAA may have some troubling loopholes. “The HIPAA privacy rule was written at a time when we weren’t aggressively moving towards a networked health-care system, so we have to review that law and strengthen that law to protect consumer privacy,” says Leslie Harris, president of the Washington, D.C.–based Center for Democracy and Technology. “If too many people have access to that database, you’ve got a big problem.”
If you’re concerned, ask your physician or pharmacist up front what their privacy policies are and exactly who will have access to your medical records, says Christine Bechtel, vice president of eHealth Initiative, a nonprofit organization in Washington, D.C. Only those who are authorized and authenticated should be able to look at your records, she says.
Other tricks he’s come across are equally dodgy. Sheehan says he’s seen pharmacists who buy deeply discounted drug samplesfrom doctors then turn around and sell them at retail prices. He also has encountered unethical druggists who will charge a customer her insurance plan’s $10 copayment even if the retail price for the drug is less than that.
But there’s another factor at work, explains Larry Sasich: “The pharmacist has to figure out his break-even point.” Among the variables is the percentage of prescriptions filled that are covered by insurance. In pharmacies with a lot of covered customers, the break-even cost is shifted heavily to patients who are paying full price—generally, the elderly on Medicare or the working poor. “Pharmacists can’t push around a big HMO,” says Sasich, “but they can push around a little old lady.”
The big losers in all this are consumers who end up with stale medication that hasn’t been properly stored, explains a spokesperson for the U.S. attorney’s office in Kansas City, Mo. There’s also a secondary price, since in the long run such practices raise the cost to the consumer. “Somewhere the drug manufacturers and wholesalers have to recoup their losses from having discounted drugs going to retail pharmacists,” the spokesperson says.
The bottom line: If the product is available commercially, you’re better off getting it that way. “Pharmacists don’t [compound] under good manufacturing guidelines; they do it in the back of their shops,” says Sasich, advising that “if you can buy the FDA product, you should.”
When purchasing prescription medication online, look for an insignia bearing the initials VIPPS—which stand for Verified Internet Pharmacy Practice Sites—to find reputable sellers.
Copyrighted, SmartMoney.com. All Rights Reserved.