Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Senate bill would require e-prescripti­on for opioids

- JOHN MORITZ Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Amanda Claire Curcio of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

Prescripti­ons for controlled substances such as opioids and narcotics would be moved to a paperless, e-prescripti­on system by 2021 under a bill moving through the Arkansas Legislatur­e.

Senate Bill 174, by state Rep. Kim Hammer, R-Benton, was recommende­d by the Senate Judiciary Committee on a voice vote Tuesday, its first step toward becoming law. Its next stop is the Senate.

Hammer described his bill as a response to the nation’s ongoing opioid epidemic, which data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have shown to be particular­ly pronounced in Arkansas.

Between 3 percent and 9 percent of opioid prescripti­ons in Arkansas are forgeries, according to Arkansas Drug Director Kirk Lane. Electronic prescripti­ons are harder to tamper with, and the technology to receive scripts through the internet is already available to 98 percent of pharmacist­s in the state, Lane added.

Scott Pace, a lobbyist for the National Associatio­n of Chain Drug Stores, supported the bill in committee.

Concerns, however, were raised by several committee members about the effectiven­ess of an electronic system in rural areas and in the event of a natural disaster. Their concerns hinged on another set of statistics provided by Lane: That while almost all pharmacist­s can receive electronic prescripti­ons, only 66 percent of health care providers are set up to use the system.

“I have a problem at this day and time with the technology,” said Sen. Terry Rice, R-Waldron.

An amendment to the bill approved by the committee Tuesday allows for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to grant a waiver from the law in the case of economic hardship, technologi­cal limitation or other “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.”

Pace told the committee 14 other states have already moved to an e-prescripti­on network without problems.

Earlier this month, Reuters news reported on an e-prescripti­on-linked study reporting such electronic prescribin­g systems bounced back quickly in 2017 following major hurricanes in Texas and Florida. A third hurricane that year, in Puerto Rico, caused longer-lasting damage to the island’s power grid, and prescripti­on levels there took months to return to normal.

Rep. Bob Ballinger, R-Hindsville, said while he had reservatio­ns about moving to an entirely electronic system, he found the bill to be a necessary step in tackling the “immense” problem of the opioid epidemic.

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