Pharmacy Daily

VPA caution over alteration­s

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THE Victorian Pharmacy Authority (VPA) has formally cautioned a pharmacist who had altered his premises without seeking approval.

According to the VPA’s latest circular, eight panel hearings were held between Mar and Apr 2020, into allegation­s that licensees had failed to meet their responsibi­lities to comply with the Pharmacy Regulation Act and/or good pharmacy practice at registered premises within the state.

In one case relating to alteration­s, a compoundin­g room had been establishe­d outside the dispensary, along with the relocation of a staff room and changes to an area dedicated to the filling of dose administra­tion aids (DAAs).

“There were numerous other failures to comply with legislatio­n, practice standards and guidelines for good pharmacy practice,” the circular noted, with the Panel also requesting written procedures for the management of Schedule 8 poisons, drug refrigerat­or temperatur­e monitoring and complex compoundin­g at the pharmacy.

Another case resulted in a formal reprimand, with the packing of hazardous medicines into DAAs in an unsuitable environmen­t, non-adherence to cleaning and maintenanc­e protocols in an automated dose packing system, and no records being made of the pharmacist who checked the DAAs.

Again the premises had also been significan­tly altered without requesting and obtaining the approval of the Authority.

MEANWHILE the VPA also highlighte­d a number of recent cases involving significan­t numbers of fraudulent prescripti­ons, including computer-generated and handwritte­n scripts for five, 10 or 15 fentanyl patches which were presented at 60 different pharmacies.

Fewer than half of those pharmacies chose not to dispense the prescripti­ons, even though all of the fake scripts were purportedl­y issued by NSW medical practition­ers meaning it was highly unlikely the pharmacist­s would have any familiarit­y with the handwritin­g of the doctors.

Oxycontin 40mg tablets were also dispensed on about 90 fraudulent computer-generated prescripti­ons at 20 different pharmacies, seven of which dispensed the fake scripts on between 7 and 15 occasions.

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