Philippine Daily Inquirer

PHYSICAL PRESCRIPTI­ON FORMS REQUIRED AGAIN

- By Dexter Cabalza @dexcabalza­INQ

Patients are again required to present a physical prescripti­on to purchase medication for certain illnesses, including mental health issues, that are considered dangerous drugs, after President Marcos lifted in July the state of public health emergency due to COVID-19.

In an advisory dated Aug. 3, the Dangerous Drugs Board (DDB) directed physicians, dentists, veterinari­ans and other medical practition­ers to use the special prescripti­on form in issuing prescripti­ons for dangerous drugs to their patients. The DDB, an agency under the Office of the President, is the policy-making and strategy-formulatin­g body on drug prevention and control.

“Please be advised that all prescripti­ons for dangerous drugs from July 21, 2023, and thereafter shall revert to the special prescripti­on form exclusivel­y issued by and obtainable from the Department of Health,” said the advisory signed by DDB chair Secretary Catalino Cuy.

The advisory added Proclamati­on No. 297 series of 2023 issued by President Marcos categorica­lly stated that all “prior orders, memoranda and issuances that are effective only during the state of public health emergency shall be deemed withdrawn, revoked or canceled and shall no longer be in effect.”

Among those rescinded by the proclamati­on were DDB’s advisories issued on March 18, May 14, May 15 and July 2 in 2020. These advisories allowed the use of electronic prescripti­ons for dangerous drugs when the government under then-President Rodrigo Duterte imposed a series of intermitte­nt lockdowns due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The proclamati­on also revoked the advisory on Feb. 1, 2023, when the DDB extended the use of electronic prescripti­ons since the state of public health emergency has not been officially lifted despite the end of the state of calamity on Dec. 31, 2022.

Hindrance

Jan (not his real name), a 33-year-old media worker diagnosed with clinical depression, was worried the new policy would hinder him from getting his prescripti­on medicine.

During the pandemic, he only needed to do online consultati­ons with his psychiatri­st, who also provided him with a digital prescripti­on.

He would just show the copy saved in his cellular phone to the pharmacist to be able to purchase Xanax pills for his anxiety attacks.

Xanax’s generic name, alprazolam, is among the dangerous drugs listed under Republic Act No. 9165, or the Comprehens­ive and Dangerous Drugs Act.

As a Schedule IV drug, it currently accepted for medical use in the country and has a low potential for abuse compared with drugs listed in Schedule I, II and III that may lead to limited physical or psychologi­cal dependence.

“But with the return of this policy, this would entail us additional time, energy and money just to get our medicine,” he told the Inquirer on Saturday.

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