Filling
prescriptions must be timely, but it is often a
chaotic process. An obstacle that pharmacists
face time and again is illegible handwriting on
prescription orders. In an effort to simplify
the tasks involved in the prescription process,
physicians and pharmacists are adopting
electronic prescribing
(e-prescribing).
The use of
e-prescribing holds enormous promise for
improving efficiencies and streamlining
prescriptions. For example, e-prescribing
results in more time for counseling the patient
and fewer drug errors. The Institute for Safe
Medication Practices believes that e-prescribing
could help significantly reduce medication
errors. Illegible prescriptions and confusion
caused by similar drug names are not uncommon.
The authors of a 1999 report from the Institute
of Medicine, To Err Is Human: Building a Safer
Health System, estimated that prescription
errors alone contribute to more than 7000 deaths
every year.
Implementing
e-prescribing is a huge undertaking. Therefore,
members of the National Community Pharmacists
Association and the National Association of
Chain Drug Stores formed SureScripts in 2001.
The goal of this joint venture is to improve the
quality, safety, and efficiency of the overall
prescribing process. “As a company, SureScripts
is looking at the entire process of
prescribing,” said Tammy Lewis, executive vice
president of SureScripts.
In August,
SureScripts, headquartered in Alexandria, Va,
announced the national rollout of SureScripts
Messenger Services, a network for e-prescribing
connectivity. The rollout began with the launch
of an early test program in Rhode Island in
partnership with the Rhode Island Quality
Institute. More than 50% of the nation’s 55,000
pharmacies will be connected to SureScripts
Messenger Services by the end of 2003, according
to Lewis. She said that the infrastructure would
save several hours of a pharmacist’s day that
are now spent communicating with physicians,
thereby requiring less time for administrative
tasks, improving safety and accuracy, and
improving the quality of patient
care.
Under the
current prescribing system, as many as 450
million of the approximate 3.4 billion
prescriptions dispensed annually require
physician authorization for additional renewals
before they are dispensed, translating to >9
million phone calls and faxes between physicians
and pharmacies and costing more than $2 billion
annually. Another reason for the need to improve
the prescription process is the increasing
demand for pharmaceuticals, which has risen by
more than 50% since 1992. The 3.4 billion
prescriptions handled annually are expected to
increase to 4 billion in the next 3 years,
according to SureScripts.
“E-prescribing
is not new. A big difference now is that the ‘e’
means electronic. Historically, e-prescribing
was by fax, and there was no way to automate
it,” said Lewis. SureScripts Messenger Services
will allow pharmacists to transmit prescription
information to and communicate with physician
practices in a 2-way, true electronic format,
which eliminates fax, phone, pen, and paper from
the prescribing process.
Lewis said that
in the beginning some pharmacies will use
e-prescribing for automating only the refilling
process and then later will incorporate the
entire prescription process, whereas other
pharmacies will do both automatically.
SureScripts is
not the only company offering e-prescribing
technology. ProxyMed, based in Fort Lauderdale,
Fla, was the first company to adopt the National
Council for Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP)
SCRIPT standard, which was developed in 1997.
SCRIPT is a data transmission standard intended
to facilitate the communication of prescription
information between prescribers and
pharmacists.
“We are 1 of
the pioneers in this field [e-prescribing]. We
have survived all the different changes that
have taken place, and we remain excited about
all the notoriety that e-prescribing has
received recently,” said Richard K. Brook, vice
president for pharmacy network development for
ProxyMed.
In fact,
ProxyMed works closely with the NCPDP by
participating in work groups and NCPDP meetings,
according to Brook. ProxyMed’s e-prescribing
technology provides connectivity to more than
30,000 pharmacies and processes more than 3.25
million transactions annually. ProxyMed’s
e-prescribing network allows for the
transmission of new prescriptions, refill
authorization requests, refill authorization
responses, change authorization requests, change
authorization responses, and stop orders.
ProxyMed has
established connectivity with Walgreens, Eckerd,
Rite Aid, Publix, and QS/1 Data Systems. Of
those 5, Walgreens, Rite Aid, and Publix are
using the SCRIPT standard. As of August 2003,
ProxyMed was actively e-prescribing in 27
states, with the most activity in Florida,
Texas, and Arizona. “Those states have a
critical mass of Eckerd, Walgreens, and Rite Aid
or some combination of the 3,” said
Brook.
In 2002,
ProxyMed and SureScripts signed a collaborative
agreement to sponsor and provide e-prescribing
services. Furthermore, both companies agreed to
interconnect their networks so that the
physicians and pharmacists on both networks have
seamless and direct access to each other.
The NCPDP is
very satisfied with the direction e-prescribing
is heading. “We love e-prescribing. We are happy
to see the action that is being taken by various
organizations,” said Phillip D. Scott, senior
vice president for health care relations and
development for NCPDP.
The SCRIPT
standard allows anything physicians and
pharmacies have done manually to be done
electronically, including refill prescriptions,
new prescriptions, and verification that a
customer has picked up a prescription.
Currently, the law has not allowed for
controlled substances to be processed using
e-prescribing, said Scott. “We’ve been working
with the DEA [Drug Enforcement Agency] and would
love for them [DEA] to adopt our standard,” he
said.
As for the
future of the prescription pad, Scott does not
believe that the traditional paper prescription
will be eliminated. “We hope to see the lion’s
share of it move in the e-prescribing direction.
There are always going to be segments of our
industry that will use the prescription pad. It
will never eliminate it, and I don’t think it’s
practical to think that.”
Although
e-prescribing may never completely mean good-bye
to handwritten prescriptions, it is changing the
face of the pharmacy profession. This change
will bring the community pharmacy to a new level
of service and allow pharmacists to get back to
the business of pharmac - patient
counseling.