Category Archives: eRx script exchange

Pharmacies with FRED Dispense ready for eHealth

Huge news for those Pharmacies who use Fred Dispense!

The Fred IT group has released a new PCEHR enabled version of their software. . This will hopefully encourage other pharmacies to sign up as the useful software will now be available for their use.

McDonald (2013) explains that this update provides Fred equipped Pharmacies with the ability to send information through the eRx and the National Prescription and Dispense Repository (NPDR), which is due to do live this week. Further, the NPDR and the PCEHR are estimated to be able to talk to each other before the end of the month which is great news for those Pharmacies who are currently registered for the PCEHR. What a huge step toward paperless prescriptions and something that most people do not think about, a huge step forward for the environmentally-friendliness of this Profession! 

We can hope that this will encourage Pharamcists to begin promoting ehealth to their customers and patients and advising them to sign themselves, or even receive help from the Pharmacist to be signed up for their own PCEHR. Pharmacists will be integral to the uptake and application of this program as they can identify and counsel those who would most benefit from having an ehealth record, such as parents of small children, the elderly and those with chronic illnesses about the benefits, also provide a helping hand in signing up for the program. It would be great to see a greater uptake of PCEHR when the NPDR and PCEHR are both live and able to communicate with one another. 

These are exciting times for ehealth in Australia and one can only hope that these new software updates provide a platform in which Pharmacists can lead the way in promoting eHealth in Australia to ensure a more cohesive 21st Century healthcare system.

 

REFERNCE

McDonald, K., (2013) Pharmacies ready for NPDR as PCEHR v3 nears. PusleITMagazine. accessed from http://www.pulseitmagazine.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1420:pharmacies-ready-for-npdr-as-pcehr-v3-nears&catid=16:australian-ehealth&Itemid=327 on 09/05/13

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Filed under Aged Care, E-Health for parents, E-Health opt-in, eRx script exchange

Electronic Prescriptions, Proxy Collection and Privacy Issues for Pharmacists

The Electronic transfer of prescription information is in the first stages of implementation, with most of us who work in community pharmacy having access to (most likely) the eRx system. In this program, electronically dispensed (not hand written) prescriptions can be scanned by the bar code on the bottom of  a new script, or at the top of a repeat form and the information  contained on this prescription is safely and accurately downloaded into our dispensing software. This is a handy tool as it ensures continuity between what has been prescribed, quantity and instructions when prescription information is entered, reducing human data entry errors.

The eventual product of this program will involve a paperless system where prescriptions are “written” and connected to a patients ehealth record, this script information will then be held in a secure database until the time that the patient would like it to be dispensed. This information would then be downloaded securely to the pharmacies dispensing software through access to the patients ehealth record. This will be of such great importance when/ if the system gets off the ground and will help it work as a well oiled machine.

But I had a thought when I was driving home from University today. This paperless system sounds fantastic and will relieve some of the paperwork headaches that we all face when working in pharmacies…however, in terms of patients and the collection/request for scripts to be dispensed, privacy issues for Pharmacists may come to light.

When a doctor sees a patient, access to that patients health record is all they will need..they would not under any circumstances need to access this persons husband,brother, mother’s record if that person was not present with the original patient. Essentially doctors are not to access someones health information on the request of another patient. Even more, a doctor would never prescribe a medication for someone on the request of someone else (family, friend etc.)

The situation presented in a pharmacy is really quite different, and it opens the pharmacist profession up to more risks than they already face. Say for example, Mrs Jones comes into your pharmacy now, she has a pile of prescriptions for her and also another list for her husband. You would not think twice about dispensing these items and allowing her to collect her husband’s items on his behalf. His consent to have her collect his prescriptions is implied to us by her bringing them in along with hers- and if they are elderly/on concession they would have the same benefit number so we understand they have family connection.

Scenario Two: Mrs and Mr Jones have signed themselves up for eHealth records and are now excited about not having remember where all of their prescriptions are, they can simply go to any pharmacy and have them filled no paperwork required. Mrs Jones comes in to your pharmacy and requests 3 scripts for herself and 2 for her husband. In order to have access to this information you need to access their ehealth records, but only Mrs Jones is present. So accessing her information is no problem as you have consent from her, however how is it justified to access her husbands ehealth record on her request when he is not present? They are family yes, and previously we would have assumed implied consent, but is that really in line with the privacy principles regarding healthcare providers access to eHealth records? A doctor would not do this..so why should pharmacists be put in the risky situation this involves?

If the patient is unknown to us this could be even more awkward and lead to anger on the patients side, if they feel as though pharmacists are keeping them from information they are entitled to.

I am unsure how much thought and planning has been put in to this dilemma, however I did notice that according to the PCEHR Act (2012), commanding access over ehealth records can be granted to an authorised or nominated representative of the consumer, such as a parent of a child under 18 years, or a carer for someone with disabilities or an elderly family member/patient. However, does this mean that when signing up for an ehealth record, in order to avoid these kinds of issues consumers need to name a proxy who can request access to health information and scripts on their behalf? If this is the case, family members would be the most easily serviced, but how about that new couple who haven’t really been dating very long and the last thing that they would think of would be ehealth records. Then one gets sick and needs a script filled..how would this person go about accessing this script on their partners behalf? Through a phone call sure, but this may not be the most effective answer…how can we be sure this person is who they say they are when we cannot see them in front of us?

Further, how can we be certain that our customers will even think to name family members as authorised individuals who can ask for such things as their scripts being filled? Pharmacists cannot allow themselves to be in a situation where liability due to unauthorised access to a patients ehealth record is suspected, even if this may not be the case, if consent cannot be determined than access cannot be granted. And thus could potentially lead to anger on the part of the customer which could negatively impact the business.

Customers need to be adequately  informed of what is expected of them in regards to this before this program were to get up and running on a large scale!

There are so many unanswered questions in this area of eHealth, in some ways it seems that by making life easier in some ways we will also be making life harder in other ways….a double edged sword one might say.  No matter which way it goes more problems arise, but there is a need to bring our healthcare system into the 21st Century.

I am interested to know your thought on this topic…how would Pharmacists maintain the integrity of patient privacy if this new system was implemented on a large scale?

 

 

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Filed under About E-Health, E-Health for parents, eRx script exchange, Issues with E-Health, Privacy, Security

PCEHR-An untapped database of patient medication history?

After choosing to blog on this particular topic of issues around eHealth for Pharmacists, I decided to do a little investigating. I wanted to know what this PERSONALLY controlled electronic health record system was all about. Signing up for the eHealth record was quite easy, all you really need is your medicare card and to have some knowledge of your own personal details…seems reasonable. Once I had registered and looked at my own yet to be populated eHealth record, I was struck by how this system could make the entire healthcare process so much more integrated and efficient, as long as it is widely adopted. The second thing that struck me was a little sidebar of information running down the left side of the record. As the eHealth record seems to be largely administered by Medicare, all of my doctors visits and PBS prescriptions that had been dispensed over the past 3 or so years were there. I believe this to be an untapped resource.

One problem that we still have in our society is a dependence and in some cases an addiction to certain medications. The people who are addicted to these medications sometimes do drastic things to ‘beat’ the system to get them. This includes seeing multiple doctors to get prescriptions for the same items, and having these dispensed at different pharmacies so as not to be detected. Further, at a Pharmacy we only have the medication history of a patient to the extent of the medication that they have had dispensed at our pharmacy. This can prove problematic at times when we do not receive the whole medicinal history of our patients. How does this tie in to electronic health records you may ask?

The information that is collected by Medicare regarding dispensed prescriptions is already providing us with an avenue to cut down the level of medication misuse and abuse, and to gain a more complete medical history of our patients to cater more efficiently to their needs. Currently this information it is not used in this manner by Medicare. All PBS prescriptions which have been dispensed show up on that particular individuals eHealth record. A record that, if widely or universally adopted in Australia would lead to a greater benefit to society as a whole, which would provide pharmacists and other health professionals with an extra tool in their ability to treat patients effectively and provide other forms of therapy if needed.

But now we come back to the main issue for pharmacists and the Ehealth initiative. If the system is purely based on personal choice to opt-in, how will better health outcomes for patients to be reached? Can a system where compliance is not mandatory in an area as pivotal to our society as healthcare truly achieve better outcomes without a complete framework and information database to work with?

Alternatively, is an integrated Electronic Prescription Database (independent of the eHealth initiative at this time), with mandatory membership of all pharmacies a more reasonable answer at this time? The ETP is somewhat attempting to create this with efficient flow of paper-less prescriptions from doctors to pharmacies planned for the future, but is this really integrating our dispensing systems enough? An all encompassing national database would contain the information already collected through medicare and all of the patient records within individual pharmacies which would work together to help strengthen the foundations of conscientious dispensing within this country. We have the technology so why not the initiative? An inter-connected database and transfer of prescription information between all pharmacies nationally is really not all that far-fetched as an idea.

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Filed under E-Health opt-in, eRx script exchange, Issues with E-Health