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What you need to know about Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs

What you need to know about Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs. Jennifer Fan, PharmD , JD Jinhee Lee, PharmD Division of Workplace Programs Division of Pharmacologic Therapies Center for Substance Abuse Prevention Center for Substance Abuse Treatment.

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What you need to know about Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs

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  1. What you need to know about Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs Jennifer Fan, PharmD, JD Jinhee Lee, PharmD Division of Workplace Programs Division of Pharmacologic Therapies Center for Substance Abuse Prevention Center for Substance Abuse Treatment 2012 USPHS Scientific and Training Symposium

  2. Disclosure Statement The presenters for this session, Jennifer Fan and Jinhee Lee, have disclosed no relevant, real or apparent personal or professional financial relationships.

  3. Outline PDMPs: The Context PDMPs: Description and Update Current System: Advantages and Limitations PDMPs and Patient Confidentiality: 42 CFR Part2 Integrating PDMPs into practice

  4. 1. PDMPs: The Context

  5. The Problem *Centers for Disease Control and Prevention The CDC* has declared that the U.S. is in the midst of an epidemic of prescription painkiller overdose deaths. Deaths from these drugs now outnumber deaths from heroin and cocaine combined.

  6. Past Month Illicit Drug Use among Persons Aged 12 or Older: 2010 Source: 2010 NSDUH 1 Illicit Drugs include marijuana/hashish, cocaine (including crack), heroin, hallucinogens, inhalants, or prescription-type psychotherapeutics used nonmedically.

  7. Challenges • In 2010, an estimated 22.1 million persons– 8.7% of the U.S. population aged 12 or older -- were classified with substance abuse or dependence. • 2.2 million reported past year dependence or abuse of psychotherapeutics (non-medical use) – 1.9 million of them for pain relievers • 20.4% persons reported non-medical use of psychotherapeutics at sometime during their lifetime – 13.7% reporting non-medical use of pain relievers, and • 2 million people (12 or older) initiated illicit use of pain relievers during 2010, second only to those who initiated marijuana use (2.4 million) Source: 2010 NSDUH

  8. Low Perception of Risk Prescription drugs obtained from a medicine cabinet or pharmacy are perceived to be less addictive and not as dangerous as illegal drugs obtained from a drug dealer. Teens’ perception of the risks associated with abusing prescription drugs is relatively low. Low perception of risk, coupled with easy availability, is a recipe for an ongoing problem.

  9. Source Where Pain Relievers Were Obtained for Most Recent Nonmedical Use among Past Year Users Aged 12 or Older: 2010 Source Where Respondent Obtained More than One Doctor (2.1%) One Doctor (17.3%) Source Where Friend/Relative Obtained Other1 (4.6%) Free from Friend/Relative (55.0%) More than One Doctor (3.6%) Bought on Internet (0.4%) Free from Friend/Relative (6.3%) Drug Dealer/Stranger (4.4%) One Doctor (79.4%) Bought/Took from Friend/Relative (6.5%) Bought/Took from Friend/Relative (16.2%) Drug Dealer/Stranger (2.3%) Bought on Internet (0.2%) Source: NSDUH 2010 Other1 (1.7%) 1The Other category includes the sources "Wrote Fake Prescription," "Stole from Doctor’s Office/Clinic/Hospital/Pharmacy," and "Some Other Way."

  10. Federal Strategy to Address the Problem of Prescription Drug Abuse • Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention Plan released by the White House in April 2011 • Educate patients and healthcare providers • Increase use of PDMPs • Implement and promote use of Rx drug disposal programs • Support law enforcement efforts against illegal prescribing • 2011,2012 National Drug Control Strategy

  11. SAMHSA’s Strategic Initiatives Prevention of Substance Abuse & Mental Illness Trauma and Justice Military Families Recovery Support Health Reform Health Information Technology Data, Outcomes, and Quality Public Awareness and Support

  12. 2. PDMPs: Description and Update

  13. What is a PDMP? • Description • Collect, manage, analyze, and provide prescription data under the auspices of a state, territory, district, or commonwealth • Purpose • Tool for curtailing drug abuse and diversion while ensuring controlled substance access to patients with legitimate medical need Courtesy of Dave Hopkins , Alliance of States of Prescription Monitoring Programs

  14. PDMP Goals Ensure access to controlled substances for legitimate medical purposes Provide education and information regarding drug abuse and diversion issues Support public health initiatives Identify potential misuse and abuse to support early intervention and treatment Enable more efficient investigation and enforcement Courtesy of Dave Hopkins , Alliance of States of Prescription Monitoring Programs

  15. PDMP History • First PDMPs • 1939 – 1943 – California, Hawaii • 1972 – 1990 – New York, Washington, Texas, Illinois, Michigan, Rhode Island, Indiana • Duplicate/Triplicate Prescription Forms • 1991 – Oklahoma first electronic program

  16. Federal Programs • Harold Rogers Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (Department of Justice) • National All Schedules Prescription Electronic Reporting Program (NASPER) (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration) • The Enhancing Access to PDMP project sponsored by ONC and funded by SAMHSA

  17. The Story So Far Federal & State Partners Action Plan State Participants Stakeholders White House Roundtable on Health IT & Prescription Drug AbuseJune 3, 2011 Organizations

  18. Enhancing Access to Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs • Use health IT to increase timely access to PDMP data in an effort to reduce prescription drug misuses and overdoses. • Develop the standards and policies necessary to connect existing health information technologies to increase timely use of PDMP data by providers, emergency department providers, and pharmacists.

  19. Research is current as of May 30, 2012. http://www.namsdl.org/documents/PMPProgramStatus05302012.pdf

  20. What Agency Administers the PDMP in each State? • Type of state agencies that administer the PDMP: • Consumer Protection – 1 • Substance Abuse – 2 • Law Enforcement – 7 • Professional Licensing – 5 • Departments of Health – 16 • Boards of Pharmacy – 18 Source: Dave Hopkins, Alliance of States of Prescription Monitoring Programs

  21. Drug Schedules Monitored Source: Alliance of States of Prescription Monitoring Programs, www.pmpalliance.org

  22. PDMP Data Collection Frequency Source: Alliance of States of Prescription Monitoring Programs, www.pmpalliance.org Daily – 3 States Weekly – 20 States Bi-Weekly – 11 States Monthly – 5 States

  23. Prescription Information Collected • Patient Information • Name, address, date of birth, gender, method of payment • Prescriber Information • DEA registration number • Date Rx issued • Dispenser Information • DEA registration number • Date Rx dispensed • Drug Information • National Drug Code (drug name, type, strength, manufacturer) • Quantity • Days supply • New or refill Source: Dave Hopkins, Alliance of States of Prescription Monitoring Programs

  24. Types of PDMP Reports • Typical PDMP reports include: • Patient • Prescriber • Pharmacy • Solicited – all PDMPs (except PA) • Unsolicited – not all states • States may also run specialized reports (e.g., by drug or region) Source: Dave Hopkins, Alliance of States of Prescription Monitoring Programs

  25. Who is authorized to Request Patient Rx Data? Prescribers Pharmacists Pharmacies Law Enforcement Licensing Boards Patients Others Source: Dave Hopkins, Alliance of States of Prescription Monitoring Programs, www.pmpalliance.org

  26. 3. Current System: Advantages & Limitations

  27. Advantages • Inappropriate use of Rx drugs can lead to: • Treatment failure • Drug-drug interactions • OD and death • PDMP = invaluable tool: • Patient monitoring • Treatment planning • Risk management

  28. Issue PDMPs collect a considerable amount of useful information but utilization of these programs in unacceptably low

  29. Limitations Some states do not have PDMPs yet, though most do (49 states with legislation, 42 operational) Lack of interoperable PDMPs to enable cross-State checks PDMPs are only one part of the effort to reduce prescription drug abuse

  30. Limitations (cont) • Time lag between Rx and reporting • “Extra” burden on provider • Potential errors (FP/FN) • Providers are only able to view some of their patient’s Rx data • Policy and technical standards – vary from state to state • Some states do not allow for unsolicited reporting (e.g. real-time push to prescribers via Direct messaging)

  31. 4. PDMPs and Patient Confidentiality: 42 CFR Part2

  32. Confidentiality: 42 CFR Part 2 42 CFR Part 2 enacted by Congress To protect confidentiality of patients receiving treatment for alcohol/substance use disorders by federally-assisted programs* Because stigma associated with substance abuse and fear of prosecution deter people to enter treatment

  33. Confidentiality (cont) Disclosure of patient-identifying information is permitted with written patient consent BUT redisclosure of such information is prohibited

  34. PDMPs and 42 CFR Part 2 Accessing patient information from PDMP disclosure of patient information Patient consent is NOT required to access PDMP Notifying patient that PDMP will be checked is, however, encouraged

  35. PDMPs and 42 CFR Part 2 (cont) PDMPs disclose patient information to authorized providers PDMPs do not fall under 42 CFR, part 2 THUS, if information is entered in PDMPs, it could be redisclosed If under 42 CFR, Part 2: Do NOT disclose patient information to PDMPs

  36. PDMPs and 42 CFR, Part 2 (cont) Once Rx is issued and either sent through electronic means or given to patient, no longer protected by 42 CFR, part 2 Rx information (buprenorphine) will be entered in PDMP by pharmacists Consider clarifying this with patient

  37. 5. Integrating PDMPs into practice

  38. Integrating PDMPs into practice Illicit use of prescription drugs (i.e., opioids, stimulants, and sedatives) has reached epidemic level Drug-drug interactions and increased risk of overdose in patients abusing rx drugs Self-report and U. Toxicology might not tell the whole story, in particular with Rx drugs

  39. Case study (March 2011) Setting: Large outpatient OTP Data: PDMP report on all patients Results: ~ 23% of patients, unknown to clinical staff, were Rx significant quantities of opioids, benzodiazepines, and other controlled substances by providers outside the clinic

  40. Case study-March 2011 (cont) Patients were advised that successful treatment and their own treatment required they d/c seeking unauthorized or duplicate Rx Most patients complied and were retained in treatment , subject to ongoing monitoring of State’s PDMP “I consider the database as one of the best tools I have to help identify and treat opioid addiction”

  41. Barriers Time lag: “I have called these pharmacies to explain why it is important to me they participate in the PDMP “ Technology: “I ‘m not particularly computer savvy, but it didn’t take long to become proficient in checking the database “ Time: “ I can check a patient in about 20 seconds, though much more time is required if I find any prescriptions”

  42. Rx drug abuse: Epidemic & Risks overlooked “Since most patients (…) in our State are addicted to Rx opioids (…) goldmine of information. Many (…) got at least part of their opioids by RX from doctors and were often Rx other (…) often did not seem to realize how addictive and dangerous Rx drugs can be (…)”

  43. Rx drug abuse: Epidemic & Risks overlooked (cont) “Methadone, oxcycontin, fentanyl, or relatively large amount of benzodiazepines (…) mostly alprazolam, diazepam, or clonazepam . Some patients … taking these Rx, and found methods to avoid detection on observed urine screens (…) some (…) giving (…) selling them. None of their community-based doctors knew (…) No one at our treatment center knew (…) prior to … PMP.”

  44. Intervention Sign up for your State PDMP Get familiar with system and limitations Check PDMP on all new and current patients Tailor PDMP monitoring based on patient’s risk profile (as you do with U. Tox) Inform patients through general notice, individual notice, patient agreement

  45. Intervention (cont) Confront patient if get unexpected report Explore if for own use and/or diversion Question if patient gets Rx drugs from other sources (out-of-state, friends or family, dealer) Discuss risks associated with use/diversion Obtain consent to talk with prescribing doctors

  46. Intervention (cont) • Establish clear practice guidelines in case of unexpected report: • Patient agrees to sign consent and subsequent checks are negative • Patient denies to sign consent but subsequent checks are negative • Patient misuses drugs and continues to have positive checks • Patient diverts Rx and continues to have positive checks • Patient states report is inaccurate

  47. Intervention (cont) “As long as the patient agreed to stop getting other opioids, they could stay in treatment with us, and the patient was better off. Many such patients later said they were glad this had happened. They said it burned the bridge of access to drugs they often misused.”

  48. Intervention (cont) Safety should always be #1 driver in treatment Keep countertransferance in balance and treatment goal in perspective “Thirty or forty patients on take home level five or six were found to be furtively obtaining methadone or Oxycontin or fentanyl, and I felt their deception was greater.” (Case study OTP Medical Director)

  49. Individual and PH outcomes Improved treatment outcomes Reduced risk of overdose and death Reduced diversion and risk of Rx drug abuse (over 70% of Rx drugs abused are obtained from family/friends)

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