- Joined
- Sep 9, 2007
- Messages
- 304
- Reaction score
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I have 3 different scenarios:
Patient A has been getting hydrocodone/apap 10-325mg #150, phentermine 37.5 mg #30, promethazine /codeine syrup 473 ml, and Soma 350mg #90 every single month, with a diagnosis of "chronic pain and emphysema" for the past 3+ years, verified by her pain-clinic doctor, who writes all four scripts for her every month. She doesn't seem to have any symptoms of emphysema as her lung capacity is quite good when she shouted, screamed and threatened us for an entire 8 minutes at the drive-thru when we questioned her prescription.
Is it okay to fill? I read many times on this forum that as long as a real doctor says a script is legit, then it must be legit, and therefore it's the pharmacist's duty to fill the script. Is this still correct?
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Patient B fills for percocet #30 once a month, is never early, uses insurance and does not pay cash, and has been consistently filling for the percocet for the last 2 years at just one pharmacy. The patient is an MD himself. Is it okay to fill?
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Patient C fills for multiple controlled substances every month, including hydrocodone/apap 10-325mg #120, tramadol 50mg #120, phentermine 37.5mg #30, Fentora 400mcg, #112, Xanax 2mg, #30, Soma 350mg #30, diazepam 5mg, #30, morphine 15mg, #60, fentanyl 25mcg patch, #10, Xanax 0.5mg, #60, promethazine/codeine syrup 120ml. She had been getting all these filled at 12 different pharmacies.
She has filled for butrans #4 four times in 2014 and 2015, but has stopped filling for it this year.
The phentermine, diazepam, clonazepam, Soma and tramadol have also been discontinued. So all she has been filling this year are the hydrocodone/apap, morphine, fentora, fentanyl patches, promethazine/codeine syrup and Xanax.
All except for the cough syrup and the Xanax, which are written by two different doctors, a well-known local pain clinic doctor writes the rest of her scripts. He has verified over the phone that the patient is legit, and the prescriptions are legit. Still okay to fill?
I suppose it's late to ask, because I have already filled her hydrocodone/apap #120. She did not present with any other prescriptions at the time, my tech accepted the script without asking me, he typed it up and filled her script, I did not have time to run a PDMP check on her and just verified the script in a hurry. I had a bad feeling about it but ignored it for the time being because I was too busy attending to other prescriptions. Half an hour after she had left the store with the medication, I finally got a minute to do a PDMP check on her, and discovered her long history... Should I report myself and this patient to the DEA? I am a new pharmacist by the way. I recognize my error and have learned my lesson. I will tell all my technicians to consult me first before they type up and fill for any controlled scripts from now on, especially those that are more than #60, no matter the time-constraint.
________________________________________________________________________
Is a long history of filling at a single pharmacy enough evidence to justify that the patient should continue to receive the controlled substance for an apparently infinite amount of time, just because the prescribing doctor okays it (even if it is a pain clinic doctor)?
Lastly, what are some 100% fail-proof ways to tell that a controlled substance prescription is legit to fill? Other than that a patient does not use more than two pharmacies, does have insurance, the quantity is less than #60, and the script has been verified to be legitimate by her doctor?
Patient A has been getting hydrocodone/apap 10-325mg #150, phentermine 37.5 mg #30, promethazine /codeine syrup 473 ml, and Soma 350mg #90 every single month, with a diagnosis of "chronic pain and emphysema" for the past 3+ years, verified by her pain-clinic doctor, who writes all four scripts for her every month. She doesn't seem to have any symptoms of emphysema as her lung capacity is quite good when she shouted, screamed and threatened us for an entire 8 minutes at the drive-thru when we questioned her prescription.
Is it okay to fill? I read many times on this forum that as long as a real doctor says a script is legit, then it must be legit, and therefore it's the pharmacist's duty to fill the script. Is this still correct?
________________________________________________________________________
Patient B fills for percocet #30 once a month, is never early, uses insurance and does not pay cash, and has been consistently filling for the percocet for the last 2 years at just one pharmacy. The patient is an MD himself. Is it okay to fill?
________________________________________________________________________
Patient C fills for multiple controlled substances every month, including hydrocodone/apap 10-325mg #120, tramadol 50mg #120, phentermine 37.5mg #30, Fentora 400mcg, #112, Xanax 2mg, #30, Soma 350mg #30, diazepam 5mg, #30, morphine 15mg, #60, fentanyl 25mcg patch, #10, Xanax 0.5mg, #60, promethazine/codeine syrup 120ml. She had been getting all these filled at 12 different pharmacies.
She has filled for butrans #4 four times in 2014 and 2015, but has stopped filling for it this year.
The phentermine, diazepam, clonazepam, Soma and tramadol have also been discontinued. So all she has been filling this year are the hydrocodone/apap, morphine, fentora, fentanyl patches, promethazine/codeine syrup and Xanax.
All except for the cough syrup and the Xanax, which are written by two different doctors, a well-known local pain clinic doctor writes the rest of her scripts. He has verified over the phone that the patient is legit, and the prescriptions are legit. Still okay to fill?
I suppose it's late to ask, because I have already filled her hydrocodone/apap #120. She did not present with any other prescriptions at the time, my tech accepted the script without asking me, he typed it up and filled her script, I did not have time to run a PDMP check on her and just verified the script in a hurry. I had a bad feeling about it but ignored it for the time being because I was too busy attending to other prescriptions. Half an hour after she had left the store with the medication, I finally got a minute to do a PDMP check on her, and discovered her long history... Should I report myself and this patient to the DEA? I am a new pharmacist by the way. I recognize my error and have learned my lesson. I will tell all my technicians to consult me first before they type up and fill for any controlled scripts from now on, especially those that are more than #60, no matter the time-constraint.
________________________________________________________________________
Is a long history of filling at a single pharmacy enough evidence to justify that the patient should continue to receive the controlled substance for an apparently infinite amount of time, just because the prescribing doctor okays it (even if it is a pain clinic doctor)?
Lastly, what are some 100% fail-proof ways to tell that a controlled substance prescription is legit to fill? Other than that a patient does not use more than two pharmacies, does have insurance, the quantity is less than #60, and the script has been verified to be legitimate by her doctor?
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