Pharmacy Daily

Queensland plots ERRCD

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QUEENSLAND Health Minister Cameron Dick has announced the developmen­t of a business case by Queensland Health “to assess the best options for implementi­ng realtime reporting” of dispensing of controlled drugs in the state.

Dick said the business case would look at how real-time reporting in Queensland might link with the Federal Government’s MyHealth system, and a Federal Department of Health project to equip the states with the Electronic Reporting and Recording of Controlled Drugs (ERRCD) system.

In the meantime, Queensland Health has also announced that pharmacist­s must notify the government on a weekly basis when they dispense prescripti­on painkiller­s, rather than monthly.

Dick said the move aimed to help combat misuse of S8 medication­s.

“This is a growing problem not just in Queensland but across Australia and internatio­nally, and we need to respond,” he said.

“This move to weekly reporting will provide doctors with a greater level of awareness of how often and where and when a person has filled a prescripti­on for painkiller­s.

“It will mean they can be more vigilant and alert to situations where painkiller­s are clearly being misused,” Minister Dick said.

The move applies to S8 medication­s such as fentanyl, oxycodone and morphine, with the dispensing details entered into a database which doctors can access via a telephone enquiry.

Dick said Queensland was one of the few states that currently has an S8 prescripti­on drug monitoring program that records patients’ dispensing history.

Queensland Health also recently launched an upgraded seven-day-aweek telephone enquiry service to give doctors improved access to the dispensing informatio­n submitted by the pharmacist­s.

“The move to weekly in place of monthly reporting for when pharmacist­s dispense S8 drugs will provide doctors with even better informatio­n,” Dick added.

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