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Friday, February 22, 2008

One Pharmacist’s View of Cardinal’s DEA Issues

Drug Topics just published a fascinating Letter to the Editor from Richard Molitor, Manager of the hospital-owned Evergreen Professional Center Pharmacy in Kirkland, WA. His pharmacy was directly affected when the DEA suspended Cardinal Health’s (CAH) license to distribute controlled substances. I contacted Richard directly and he was kind enough to provide me with some additional details (as well as the photo).

In Fresh DEA News from Cardinal, I asked whether an unfair burden is being laid on a corporation that never asked to be a police force. In my opinion, the experience of Evergreen Professional Center Pharmacy illustrates the risks to pharmacies and patients when wholesalers are (explicitly or implicitly) asked to become enforcers without normal due process protections.

THE VOICE OF THE CUSTOMER

You can read Richard’s complete Letter to the Editor online, but here are the key quotes:

  • “The week prior to the official DEA shutdown, Cardinal sales reps contacted their accounts (including ours), advising them to increase their on-shelf inventory of controlled substances in order to cope with the pending logistical nightmare.”

  • “Cardinal cancelled the ability of several West Coast accounts (including our outpatient pharmacy department) to order controlled substances. This jeopardized our pharmacy's ability to support our hospital's discharging surgical, inpatient, hospice, and oncology patients.”

  • “Notification from Cardinal came in the form of a fax sent by the corporate director of quality and regulatory affairs late on a Monday (after the sender, based in Ohio, was no longer available for contact). The fax stated that our account was cancelled in part due to ‘recent excessive quantities ordered’ as well as ‘a risk that diversion will occur if we continue to fill controlled substance orders.’”
OK, we can all see the irony in asking customers to order in advance of the suspension and then penalizing those same customers for actually following their sales rep’s advice! Like many large companies, it sounds like there was poor communication between the head office and the field.

DO (NOT) PROCESS

Apparently, the DEA now considers distributors and wholesalers to be responsible for ensuring that a pharmacy is only dispensing prescriptions issued for a legitimate medical purpose by an individual practitioner acting in the usual course of professional practice.

In a private email to me, Richard told me that Cardinal “didn't seem too willing to allow due process for their customers. Instead, based upon some ill-obtained assessment of 'risk,' they decided to shut us off as well as to restrict (via rationing, once I'd screamed loud enough about being cut off) further ordering (which nearly required our 250-bed hospital to shut down since the Inpatient Pharmacy couldn't get the injectable meds they routinely use).”

While a wholesaler or pharmacist should always “exercise diligence and caution” (as Tom Connelly wrote in his comment last week), I am not aware of formal rules or guidelines to define the precise level of diligence or caution, especially when there is uncertainty about whether an ordering pattern might represent purchases for diversion.

It’s especially tricky for the big 3 wholesalers – AmerisourceBergen (ABC), Cardinal Health (CAH), and McKesson (MCK) – because each company serves 20,000 or more active customer accounts placing millions of total orders per year. Most companies will (rationally) become very risk-averse about any questionable situations when faced with uncertainty.

I’m no lawyer (see disclaimer below), but I’m fairly certain that companies do not have to abide by the restraints and procedures of due process as enshrined in our Constitution. Therefore, the risks to pharmacies and patients will increase if wholesalers are (explicitly or implicitly) asked to become judge, jury, and executioner on behalf of the DEA.

Any of my pharmacist readers care to weigh in on this topic?

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P.S. BTW, Richard operates his own webpage with links to pharmacy-related materials. True Molitor fans can also see Richard’s vacation photos, proving once and for all that pharmacists travel the globe, too.

3 comments:

  1. The heavy handed DEA is once again making assumptions of inpropriety in the routine conduct of licensed businesses, prescibers and pharmacies.
    When some Senator can't get his legally prescribed whatever( viagra, PSE, pain med or other controlled substance), then the DEA will do as it always does..loosen the rules to pacify the supremely inconvenienced few.
    Meanwhile, if you are just in pain, well then get in line for the government allocation.
    Either they know who the bad guy is, or they know how to allocate.
    They know neither.......

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  2. We bumped up against one of our suppliers' limit on hydrocodone dosage units purchased per month a while back. I told our rep to have them check hc purchases versus everything else and see if the percent of sales was out of line. It wasn't, they raised our limit and we haven't had a problem since.

    As for pharmacies having trouble with Cardinal, this is just one more argument for using more than one supplier and spreading your business around if you can afford to.

    Tom Connelly, RPh
    Sun Pharmacy
    Rising Sun, MD

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  3. If you want to see abuse in prescribing controlled substances go to any V.A. hospital. If they dont know whats wrong with you they just prescribe stronger drugs...they even fedex oxycontin to the home...Government should police there own first..

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