Pharmacy Daily

Electronic scripts to ramp up from Oct

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THE implementa­tion of Australia’s new electronic prescripti­on framework is a huge change, which involves “teaching 25 million people new ways of getting their medication­s,” according to Fred IT CEO Paul Naismith.

And while the new system is currently being trialled, the industry should be prepared for a “rollout at pace from October onwards,” he warned.

Speaking to an online audience of about 2,000 participan­ts last night during a webinar, Naismith and some of his colleagues demonstrat­ed the current state of play for e-scripts, which are the outcome of legislativ­e change switching the formal legal document for each prescripti­on from a piece of paper into an electronic record.

The session, titled “Dispensing ePrescript­ions - How it works now and into the future,” included a live demonstrat­ion of the token-based system which allowed attendees to subscribe to a platform via SMS and then receive a link to a QR code which represente­d a six-repeat prescripti­on for AMLO TAB 10mg.

Presenters also included Jason Bratuskins, who is the Product Manager for clinical products at Fred IT Group and also owns a community pharmacy in Anglesea, Vic which is part of a trial of the new online prescripti­on platform.

The webinar included a demonstrat­ion of the prescribin­g process using the Best Practice GP platform, with patients offered the choice of a paper script, or to receive an SMS or email.

Various post-COVID scenarios were also canvassed, including a patient who needs a repeat dispensed but is unable to attend a pharmacy in person and needs home delivery because they are in mandatory post-travel isolation.

Trials are under way in various “Communitie­s of Interest” where local doctors and pharmacies are testing the system as it is refined.

Naismith said pharmacist­s need not be concerned about the pace of change, given the sector’s success in assisting the community through the coronaviru­s pandemic, particular­ly highlighti­ng the week in mid Mar when a record 8.4 million scripts were dispensed.

COVID-19 had seen many parts of the economy rapidly adapt to digital enablement, with the community accepting of change.

“Patients are ready for this,” Naismith said, urging pharmacist­s to “be ready, but not alarmed” for the new world of e-prescripti­ons.

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