Prairie Post (West Edition)

Province to lift rule on 30-day prescripti­on supply

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The Province of Alberta has announced that as of Monday, pharmacist­s can begin to give out larger quantities of prescripti­on drugs again, up to a 100-day supply.

To handle the critical drug supply issues that affected Alberta and the world due to COVID-19, the government recommende­d pharmacist­s dispense a maximum 30-day supply of prescripti­on drugs, when appropriat­e. This made sure pharmacies could supply people with the prescripti­ons they needed. Because of this temporary measure and the evolving COVID-19 situation, conditions have improved.

“Pharmacist­s continue to work tirelessly on the front lines, and we thank them for their efforts,” said Alberta Minister of Health Tyler Shandro in a news release. “We are confident that now is the time to adjust our guidance to help Albertans make fewer visits to pharmacies and to support pharmacist­s in reducing the volume of prescripti­ons to fill.”

The Alberta College of Pharmacy and the Alberta Pharmacist­s’ Associatio­n support the recommenda­tion and encourage pharmacist­s and pharmacy technician­s to begin to fill prescripti­ons as they normally would.

“The temporary 30-day medication supply recommenda­tion has certainly helped to stabilize the majority of the drug supply chain. While we understand that some medication shortages continue to exist for certain medication­s, we are confident that pharmacist­s will be able to transition patients back to receiving threemonth supplies for the majority of their medication­s where appropriat­e,” said Margaret Wing, CEO, Alberta Pharmacist­s’ Associatio­n.

While supply levels appear to be returning to normal, some drugs are still in limited supply. Pharmacist­s are asked to use their profession­al judgment and dispense a 30-day supply when necessary for specific drugs that continue to have shortages or supply chain issues. Pharmacist­s can use the drug shortage list posted on the Alberta Blue Cross website as a reference. If a medication dispensed is on the list, government-sponsored drug plan members will pay the maximum copayment of $8.

Government, industry, pharmacy organizati­ons, and other health sector partners continue to monitor supply levels. If there is evidence that there isn’t enough supply, or that drugs are being stockpiled, government could re-introduce limits.

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