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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOklahoma proposes landmark rule to keep mailed medications safe from extreme temperatures
Patients who get their prescription medications by mail in Oklahoma may soon have better protections for the safety of those drugs than any other state. On Wednesday, Oklahoma regulators proposed the nations first detailed rule to control temperatures during shipping, according to pharmacy experts.
This is a huge step, said Marty Hendrick, executive director of the Oklahoma State Board of Pharmacy, after the board voted to approve the rule Wednesday. Weve got a tremendous amount of prescriptions that get mailed to patients.
What we did today was make sure our patients in Oklahoma are receiving safe products.
Exposure to extreme temperatures can degrade or weaken drugs, potentially changing their dosage or chemical makeup and rendering them ineffective or unsafe for patients. But while government oversight of how pharmacies store medications to keep them in defined safe temperature ranges is very detailed, an NBC News investigation in 2020 found oversight of shipping to patients during which drugs might be exposed to heat waves and below-freezing temperatures is largely a system of blind trust. Mail-order pharmacy is a booming business, with soaring profits for some of the nations largest companies last year and more than 26 million people receiving their medication by mail in 2017 more than double the number two decades earlier, according to federal data.
NBC News found that most state pharmacy boards, the regulators responsible for pharmacy safety, did not have specific rules for how pharmacies should ship customers medication, few asked about this process in their inspections, and many said it was simply up to the pharmacy to ensure safe shipping.
Industry standards are clear that pharmacies should ship medications in their safe temperature range set by the manufacturer after extensive testing under Food and Drug Administration guidelines yet many patients have no way of knowing if the medications that arrive at their door have stayed within that range.
So many insurance providers are really pushing patients to use mail order, said Erin Fox, director of drug information at the University of Utah Health hospital system, who researches drug quality and shortages. Unfortunately, many patients dont have a choice in their insurance coverage to be able to use a local pharmacy, so having these protections is important.
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/oklahoma-proposes-rule-keep-drugs-safe-hot-cold-rcna57492
I trash Oklahoma a lot, but this is a good thing. I hope they pass it.
nature-lover
(1,480 posts)Brick-enclosed mailboxes are like miniature pizza ovens in the summer heat.
Diamond_Dog
(32,518 posts)Such as abortion pills? Could this be a way for govt. to determine whos getting abortion pills?