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Paperless Prescriptions Get Government Boost



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Dec 23, 2008 01:44 PM

Paperless Prescriptions Get Government Boost


from Tulsa World ..

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The push for paperless prescriptions is about to get a boost: Starting in January, doctors who e-prescribe can get bonus pay from Medicare.

For patients, the benefits are obvious -- from shorter drugstore waits to increased safety, as pharmacists no longer squint to decipher doctors' messy handwriting.

But persuading U.S. doctors to ditch their prescription pads for electronic prescribing so far has been a long, uphill battle. Only about 10 percent of doctors are taking the plunge, such as Dr. Ted Epperly in Boise, Idaho, who's adopting the technology now.

Still, the movement is gaining steam as Medicare warns that its bonus payments are for a short time only: Holdouts still sticking to paper in 2012 will find their Medicare payments cut.

And continuing the push for medical information technology is a key part of President-elect Barack Obama's health-reform plans, in hopes that moving to computerized records -- not just prescriptions, but all those troublesome paper charts that contribute to medical errors and wasted care -- ultimately could save millions of dollars a year.

"We'd never go back," says Epperly, also president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. Patients "recognize that, 'Hey, Dr. Epperly's in the information age, and my safety is better and the quality of care is better.' "

What's a paperless prescription? When the doctor writes it by computer and sends it directly to the drugstore by computer, there's no little piece of paper to get lost or stolen along that trail.

In December 2007, 35,000 doctors were writing at least some paperless prescriptions, according to SureScripts-RxHub, which tracks the drugstore network.

The 2008 count isn't finished yet, but SureScripts estimates that number has more than doubled, to more than 70,000. Moreover, the volume of prescriptions filled electronically has grown about 15 percent a month since August, faster than the 5 percent to 8 percent monthly increase seen earlier in the year -- presumably as doctors geared up for the Medicare incentive.

The biggest reason for the paperless push is to improve safety. More than 1.5 million Americans are injured every year by medication mistakes. Deciphering doctors' chicken-scratch -- was that 100 milligrams or 100 micrograms? -- does play a role. But perhaps more important, electronic prescribing systems can flash an alert if the dose seems wrong or patient records show use of another drug that can dangerously interact.

By avoiding unnecessary medication injuries, Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt has estimated that widespread e- prescribing could save as much as $156 million over five years.

It can save patients cash, too. Most insurance plans divide their formularies into tiers with escalating co-pays, and e-prescribing can let doctors take patient cost into account when recommending a drug. A study published last week found that Massachusetts doctors increased use of the cheapest drugs by 6.6 percent during their first year of e-prescribing.

Patients appreciate that price discussion, says Dr. Joe Heyman, chairman of the American Medical Association's trustees and a longtime e-prescriber. An obstetrician/gynecologist, he regularly discusses big contraceptive price differences.

While some patients may need Brand X instead of Generic Y, "in general any of the birth-control pills will do the job," Heyman says. "If when you e-prescribe, it tells you this is a Tier 3 drug and will cost the patient $50 instead of $10, somehow that can be more persuasive" than the ad the woman saw for a pricier version.

(c) 2008 Tulsa World. Provided by ProQuest LLC. All rights Reserved.

A service of YellowBrix, Inc.


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2 Comments
No. 1
Old Dec 23, 2008, 06:58 PM
Updated Dec 23, 2008 at 07:00 PM by Not_A_Hat_Person

Default Re: Paperless Prescriptions Get Government Boost
What if you decide not to fill a prescription? My husband had to go the ER last year, and came home with 6 prescriptions. One was for OxyContin, which he left over from surgery 6 months earlier. One was for docusate sodium, which is available OTC. Not filling the scripts saved us about $50. If they just sent them automatically, would we have had to pay for all of them?
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No. 2
from Atheos
Old Dec 23, 2008, 07:13 PM

Default Re: Paperless Prescriptions Get Government Boost
Originally Posted by Not_A_Hat_Person View Post
What if you decide not to fill a prescription? My husband had to go the ER last year, and came home with 6 prescriptions. One was for OxyContin, which he left over from surgery 6 months earlier. One was for docusate sodium, which is available OTC. Not filling the scripts saved us about $50. If they just sent them automatically, would we have had to pay for all of them?

No, it would sit on a server somewhere until it expired. I don't see why it would be paid for until it was picked up. Maybe they could even automatically notify the prescribing doctor that their patient never filled the prescription.

I imagine they could do all sorts of things with it. Put a lifespan on the prescription, make the prescriptions available to any pharmacy anywhere using the system and not just one, allow a patient to login to a website and select a pharmacy to prefill it so that thye can just pick it up when it's ready, allow doctors/ER's to track what prescriptions people are getting filled from different doctors (in the case of drug seekers, maybe not list the meds if it's a hippa violation but maybe throw a flag and block the prescription).

I've seen some military hospitals where the Doc does the prescription online, the patient goes to this sort of 'vending machine' inserts their military id, it spits out a container, drops the prescription in and prints a label. Not sure where in the process the pharmacist checks it but it is very efficient.

Gotta love technology. You can make it do anything.
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