Chapter 178 |
2016 -- S 2755 SUBSTITUTE B AS AMENDED Enacted 06/28/2016 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO BUSINESSES AND PROFESSIONS - PHARMACIES |
Introduced By: Senators Coyne, Lombardo, Cote, DiPalma, and Lombardi |
Date Introduced: March 10, 2016 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Section 5-19.1-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 5-19.1 entitled |
"Pharmacies" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
5-19.1-2. Definitions. – (a) "Biological product" means a "biological product" as defined |
in the "Public Health Service Act", 42 U.S.C. §262. |
(a)(b) "Board" means the Rhode Island board of pharmacy. |
(b)(c) "Change of ownership" means: |
(1) In the case of a pharmacy, manufacturer, or wholesaler that is a partnership, any |
change that results in a new partner acquiring a controlling interest in the partnership; |
(2) In the case of a pharmacy, manufacturer, or wholesaler that is a sole proprietorship, |
the transfer of the title and property to another person; |
(3) In the case of a pharmacy, manufacturer, or wholesaler that is a corporation: |
(i) A sale, lease exchange, or other disposition of all, or substantially all, of the property |
and assets of the corporation; or |
(ii) A merger of the corporation into another corporation; or |
(iii) The consolidation of two (2) or more corporations resulting in the creation of a new |
corporation; or |
(iv) In the case of a pharmacy, manufacturer, or wholesaler that is a business |
corporation, any transfer of corporate stock that results in a new person acquiring a controlling |
interest in the corporation; or |
(v) In the case of a pharmacy, manufacturer, or wholesaler that is a non-business |
corporation, any change in membership that results in a new person acquiring a controlling vote |
in the corporation. |
(c)(d) "Compounding" means the act of combining two (2) or more ingredients as a |
result of a practitioner's prescription or medication order occurring in the course of professional |
practice based upon the individual needs of a patient and a relationship between the practitioner, |
patient, and pharmacist. Compounding does not mean the routine preparation, mixing, or |
assembling of drug products that are essentially copies of a commercially available product. |
Compounding shall only occur in the pharmacy where the drug or device is dispensed to the |
patient or caregiver and includes the preparation of drugs or devices in anticipation of |
prescription orders based upon routine, regularly observed prescribing patterns. |
(d)(e) "Controlled substance" means a drug or substance, or an immediate precursor of |
such drug or substance, so designated under, or pursuant to, the provisions of chapter 28 of title |
21. |
(e)(f) "Deliver" or "delivery" means the actual, constructive, or attempted transfer from |
one person to another of a drug or device, whether or not there is an agency relationship. |
(f)(g) "Device" means instruments, apparatus, and contrivances, including their |
components, parts, and accessories, intended: |
(1) For use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in man |
or other animals; or |
(2) To affect the structure or any function of the body of man or other animals. |
(g)(h) "Director" means the director of the Rhode Island state department of health. |
(h)(i) "Dispense" means the interpretation of a prescription or order for a drug, |
biological, or device and, pursuant to that prescription or order, the proper selection, measuring, |
compounding, labeling, or packaging necessary to prepare that prescription or order for delivery |
or administration. |
(i)(j) "Distribute" means the delivery of a drug or device other than by administering or |
dispensing. |
(j)(k) "Drug" means: |
(1) Articles recognized in the official United States Pharmacopoeia or the Official |
Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia of the U.S.; |
(2) Substances intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or |
prevention of disease in man, woman, or other animals; |
(3) Substances (other than food) intended to affect the structure, or any function of the |
body, of man, woman, or other animals; or |
(4) Substances intended for use as a component of any substances specified in |
subdivision (1), (2), or (3) of this subsection, but not including devices or their component parts |
or accessories. |
(k)(l) "Equivalent and interchangeable" means a drug, excluding a biological product, |
having the same generic name, dosage form, and labeled potency, meeting standards of the |
United States Pharmacopoeia or National Formulary, or their successors, if applicable, and not |
found in violation of the requirements of the United States Food and Drug Administration, or its |
successor agency, or the Rhode Island department of health. |
(m) "Interchangeable biological product" means a biological product that the United |
States Food and Drug Administration has: |
(1) Licensed and determined meets the standards for interchangeability pursuant to 42 |
U.S.C. §262(k)(4) or lists of licensed, biological products with reference product exclusivity and |
biosimilarity or interchangeability evaluations; or |
(2) Determined is therapeutically equivalent as set forth in the latest edition of or |
supplement to, the United States Food and Drug Administration's Approved Drug Products with |
Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations. |
(l)(n) "Intern" means: |
(1) A graduate of an American Council on Pharmaceutical Education (ACPE)-accredited |
program of pharmacy; |
(2) A student who is enrolled in at least the first year of a professional ACPE-accredited |
program of pharmacy; or |
(3) A graduate of a foreign college of pharmacy who has obtained full certification from |
the FPGEC (Foreign Pharmacy Graduate Equivalency Commission) administered by the National |
Association of Boards of Pharmacy. |
(m)(o) "Limited-function test" means those tests listed in the federal register under the |
Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA) as waived tests. For the purposes |
of this chapter, limited-function test shall include only the following: blood glucose, hemoglobin |
Alc, cholesterol tests, and/or other tests that are classified as waived under CLIA and are |
approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration for sale to the public without a |
prescription in the form of an over-the-counter test kit. |
(n)(p) "Legend drugs" means any drugs that are required by any applicable federal or |
state law or regulation to be dispensed on prescription only or are restricted to use by practitioners |
only. |
(o)(q) "Manufacture" means the production, preparation, propagation, compounding, or |
processing of a drug or other substance or device or the packaging or repackaging. |
(p)(r) "Non-legend" or "non-prescription drugs" means any drugs that may be lawfully |
sold without a prescription. |
(q)(s) "Person" means an individual, corporation, government, subdivision, or agency, |
business trust, estate, trust, partnership or association, or any other legal entity. |
(r)(t) "Pharmaceutical care" is the provision of drugs and other pharmaceutical services |
intended to achieve outcomes related to cure or prevention of a disease elimination or reduction |
of a patient's symptoms or arresting or slowing of a disease process. "Pharmaceutical care" |
includes the judgment of a pharmacist in dispensing an equivalent and interchangeable drug or |
device in response to a prescription after appropriate communication with the prescriber and the |
patient. |
(s)(u) "Pharmacist in charge" means a pharmacist licensed in this state as designated by |
the owner as the person responsible for the operation of a pharmacy in conformance with all laws |
and regulations pertinent to the practice of pharmacy and who is personally in full and actual |
charge of such pharmacy and personnel. |
(t)(v) "Pharmacy" means that portion or part of a premise where prescriptions are |
compounded and dispensed, including that portion utilized for the storage of prescription or |
legend drugs. |
(u)(w) "Pharmacy technician" means an individual who meets minimum qualifications |
established by the board, that are less than those established by this chapter as necessary for |
licensing as a pharmacist, and who works under the direction and supervision of a licensed |
pharmacist. |
(v)(x) "Practice of pharmacy" means the interpretation, evaluation, and implementation |
of medical orders; the dispensing of prescription drug orders; participation in drug and device |
selection; the compounding of prescription drugs; drug regimen reviews and drug or drug-related |
research; the administration of adult immunizations pursuant to a valid prescription or physician- |
approved protocol and in accordance with regulations, to include training requirements as |
promulgated by the department of health; the administration of all forms of influenza |
immunizations to individuals between the ages of nine (9) years and eighteen (18) years, |
inclusive, pursuant to a valid prescription or prescriber-approved protocol, in accordance with the |
provisions of § 5-19.1-31 and in accordance with regulations, to include necessary training |
requirements specific to the administration of influenza immunizations to individuals between the |
ages of nine (9) years and eighteen (18) years, inclusive, as promulgated by the department of |
health; provision of patient counseling and the provision of those acts or services necessary to |
provide pharmaceutical care; and/or the responsibility for the supervision for compounding and |
labeling of drugs and devices (except labeling by a manufacturer, repackager, or distributor of |
non-prescription drugs and commercially packaged legend drugs and devices), proper and safe |
storage of drugs and devices, and maintenance of proper records for them; and the performance of |
clinical laboratory tests, provided such testing is limited to limited-function tests as defined |
herein. Nothing in this definition shall be construed to limit or otherwise affect the scope of |
practice of any other profession. |
(w)(y) "Practitioner" means a physician, dentist, veterinarian, nurse, or other person duly |
authorized by law in the state in which they practice to prescribe drugs. |
(x)(z) "Preceptor" means a pharmacist registered to engage in the practice of pharmacy |
in this state who has the responsibility for training interns. |
(y)(aa) "Prescription" means an order for drugs or devices issued by the practitioner duly |
authorized by law in the state in which he or she practices to prescribe drugs or devices in the |
course of his or her professional practice for a legitimate medical purpose. |
(z)(bb) "Wholesaler" means a person who buys drugs or devices for resale and |
distribution to corporations, individuals, or entities other than consumers. |
SECTION 2. Chapter 5-19.1 of the General Laws entitled "Pharmacies" is hereby |
amended by adding thereto the following section: |
5-19.1-19.1. Pharmacists - Substitution of biological products. – (a) Pharmacists when |
dispensing a prescription for any biological product shall, unless requested otherwise by the |
individual presenting the prescription in writing, substitute such product with an interchangeable |
biological product in accordance with the provisions of §21-31-16.1(g). No substitution under this |
section shall be allowed if the prescribing physician orders the pharmacist to dispense as brand- |
name necessary on the prescription form, or if the prescriber gives oral direction to that effect to |
the dispensing pharmacist. The requirements of this section shall not apply to an order to dispense |
a biological product for immediate administration to a licensed hospital, nursing facility, or |
hospice facility in-patient. The pharmacist will make a biological product selection from |
approved interchangeable prescription biological products in accordance with §21-31-16.1(g). |
When a biological product selection is made, the pharmacist shall inform the patient of the |
selection made and shall indicate the product dispensed on the written prescription or on the oral |
prescription, which has been reduced to writing, or product information may be maintained on a |
computerized system if information is readily retrievable. |
(b) Within five (5) business days following the dispensing of a biological product, the |
dispensing pharmacist, or the pharmacist's designee, shall communicate to the prescriber the |
specific product provided to the patient, including the name of the product and the manufacturer. |
(c) The communication shall be conveyed by making an entry electronically accessible to |
the prescriber through: |
(1) An interoperable, electronic medical-records system; |
(2) An electronic prescribing technology; |
(3) A pharmacy benefit management system; or |
(4) A pharmacy record. |
(d) Entry into an electronic records system as described in this subsection is presumed to |
provide notice to the prescriber. Otherwise, the pharmacist shall communicate the biological |
product dispensed to the prescriber using facsimile, telephone, electronic transmission, or other |
prevailing means; provided that the communication shall not be required where: |
(1) There is no interchangeable biological product for the product prescribed approved by |
the United States Food and Drug Administration; or |
(2) A refill prescription is not changed from the product dispensed on the prior filling of |
the prescription. |
SECTION 3. Section 21-31-16.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 21-31 entitled "Rhode |
Island Food, Drugs, and Cosmetics Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
21-31-16.1. Substitution of generic drugs. -- Substitution of generic drugs and |
biological products. -- (a) Product selection. Drug product selection. - The director shall permit |
substitution of less expensive generic, chemical, or brand-name drugs and pharmaceuticals, |
excluding biological products, considered by the director as therapeutically equivalent and |
interchangeable with specific, brand-name drugs and pharmaceuticals, if they are found to be in |
compliance with § 21-31-16 and standards set forth by the United States Food and Drug |
Administration under §§ 505 and 507 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C. §§ |
355 and 357. The director shall consider, but not be limited to, the determination of the United |
States Food and Drug Administration, or its successor agency, as published under §§ 505 and 507 |
of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. The director shall provide for the distribution of |
copies of lists of prescription drug products that the director deems, after evaluation, not to be |
therapeutically equivalent, and revisions to the lists, among physicians and pharmacists licensed |
and actively engaged in practice within the state, and other appropriate individuals, and shall |
supply a copy to any person on request. The list shall be revised from time to time so as to |
include new, pertinent information on approved prescription-drug products, reflecting current |
information as to standards for quality, safety, effectiveness, and therapeutic equivalence. |
(b) Appropriations. - The director shall provide necessary space, personnel, and material |
to carry out the provisions of this section. |
(c) Liability. - There shall be no civil liability incurred, and no cause of action of any |
nature shall arise, against the director, designated agents, or employees, as a result of the listing or |
omission of drugs or pharmaceuticals or biological products for product selection. |
(d) Annual reports. - The director shall make annual reports to the general assembly by |
February 10 of each year showing a list of approved prescription-drug products with therapeutic |
equivalence and approved prescription interchangeable biological products, and an estimate of the |
average savings to the general public. |
(e) Pharmacists. - When a pharmacist dispenses a therapeutically equivalent drug |
product or interchangeable biological product, there shall be no additional liability imposed on |
the prescriber who authorizes that product selection, or on the pharmacist dispensing the product |
selection from a physician's oral or written order. |
(f) Enforcement provisions. - It is made the duty of the department of health, its agents |
designated by the director of health, and of all peace officers within the state to enforce all |
provisions of this section and of §§ 5-19.1-19, 5-37-18 -- 5-37-18.2, and 21-31-3. |
(g) Biological-product selection. The director shall permit substitution of a less-expensive |
biological product, as defined in §5-19.1-2, for a prescribed biological product only if said less- |
expensive biological product is an interchangeable biological product as defined in §5-19.1-2. |
The director shall maintain on the Rhode Island state department of health website, a link to the |
current list of each biological product determined by the United States Food and Drug |
Administration to be an interchangeable biological product. |
SECTION 4. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC005328/SUB B |
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