TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
Title of Regulation: 18VAC110-20. Regulations
Governing the Practice of Pharmacy (amending 18VAC110-20-690, 18VAC110-20-700,
18VAC110-20-710; adding 18VAC110-20-735).
Statutory Authority: § 54.1-2400 of the Code of
Virginia.
Effective Dates: May 8, 2017, through November 7, 2018.
Agency Contact: Caroline Juran, RPh, Executive Director,
Board of Pharmacy, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233-1463,
telephone (804) 367-4416, FAX (804) 527-4472, or email
caroline.juran@dhp.virginia.gov.
Preamble
Section 2.2-4011 of the Code of Virginia authorizes
agencies to adopt emergency regulations in situations in which Virginia
statutory law or the appropriation act requires that a regulation be effective
in 280 days or less from its enactment, and the regulation is not exempt under
the provisions of § 2.2-4006 A 4 of the Code of Virginia. Chapters 55 and
58 of the 2017 Acts of Assembly, which became effective on February 20, 2017,
establish additional circumstances under which the Board of Pharmacy is
authorized to issue a controlled substance registration and require the board
to promulgate regulations within 280 days of the enactment.
The emergency regulation authorizes issuance of a
controlled substances registration (i) to persons who have been trained in the
administration of naloxone in order to possess and dispense the drug to persons
receiving training and (ii) to an entity for the purpose of establishing a bona
fide practitioner-patient relationship for prescribing when treatment is
provided by telemedicine in accordance with federal rules. The amendments
include applicable recordkeeping, security, and storage requirements.
18VAC110-20-690. Persons or entities authorized or required to
obtain a controlled substances registration.
A. A person or entity which maintains or intends to maintain
a supply of Schedule II through Schedule VI controlled substances, other than
manufacturers' samples, in accordance with provisions of the Drug Control Act
(§ 54.1-3400 et seq. of the Code of Virginia) may apply for a controlled
substances registration on forms approved by the board.
B. Persons or entities which may be registered by the board
shall include, but not be limited to, hospitals without in-house pharmacies,
nursing homes without in-house pharmacies that use automated drug dispensing
systems, ambulatory surgery centers, outpatient clinics, alternate delivery
sites, crisis stabilization units, persons authorized by the Department of
Behavioral Health and Developmental Services to train individuals on the
administration of naloxone and to dispense naloxone for opioid overdose
reversal, and emergency medical services agencies provided such persons or
entities are otherwise authorized by law and hold required licenses or
appropriate credentials to administer the drugs for which the registration is
being sought.
C. In determining whether to register an applicant, the board
shall consider factors listed in subsections A and D of § 54.1-3423 of the
Code of Virginia and compliance with applicable requirements of this chapter.
1. The proposed location shall be inspected by an authorized
agent of the board prior to issuance of a controlled substances registration.
2. Controlled substances registration applications that
indicate a requested inspection date, or requests that are received after the
application is filed, shall be honored provided a 14-day notice is allowed
prior to the requested inspection date.
3. Requested inspection dates that do not allow a 14-day
notice to the board may be adjusted by the board to provide 14 days for the
scheduling of the inspection.
4. Any person wishing to change an approved location of the
drug stock, make structural changes to an existing approved drug storage
location, or make changes to a previously approved security system shall file
an application with the board and be inspected.
5. Drugs shall not be stocked within the proposed drug storage
location or moved to a new location until approval is granted by the board.
D. The application shall be signed by a person who will act
as a responsible party for the controlled substances. The responsible party may
be a prescriber, nurse, pharmacist, or pharmacy technician for alternate
delivery sites, a person authorized by the Department of Behavioral Health
and Developmental Services to train individuals on the administration of
naloxone and to dispense naloxone for opioid overdose reversal, or other
person approved by the board who is authorized to administer the controlled
substances.
E. The board may require a person or entity to obtain a
controlled substances registration upon a determination that Schedule II
through VI controlled substances have been obtained and are being used as
common stock by multiple practitioners and that one or more of the following
factors exist:
1. A federal, state, or local government agency has reported
that the person or entity has made large purchases of controlled substances in
comparison with other persons or entities in the same classification or
category.
2. The person or entity has experienced a diversion, theft, or
other unusual loss of controlled substances which requires reporting pursuant
to § 54.1-3404 of the Drug Control Act.
3. The person or entity has failed to comply with recordkeeping
requirements for controlled substances.
4. The person or entity or any other person with access to the
common stock has violated any provision of federal, state, or local law or
regulation relating to controlled substances.
F. The board may issue a controlled substance registration
to an entity at which a patient is being treated by the use of instrumentation
and diagnostic equipment through which images and medical records may be
transmitted electronically for the purpose of establishing a bona fide
practitioner-patient relationship and is being prescribed Schedules II through
VI controlled substances when such prescribing is in compliance with federal
requirements for the practice of telemedicine and the patient is not in the
physical presence of a practitioner registered with the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration, provided:
1. There is a documented need for such registration, and
issuance of the registration of the entity is consistent with the public
interest;
2. The entity is under the general supervision of a
licensed pharmacist or a practitioner of medicine, osteopathy, podiatry,
dentistry, or veterinary medicine; and
3. The application is signed by a person who will act as
the responsible party for the entity for the purpose of compliance with
provisions of this subsection. The responsible party shall be a prescriber,
nurse, pharmacist, or other person who is authorized by provisions of § 54.1-3408
of the Code of Virginia to administer controlled substances.
18VAC110-20-700. Requirements for supervision for controlled
substances registrants.
A. A practitioner licensed in Virginia shall provide
supervision for all aspects of practice related to the maintenance and use of
controlled substances as follows:
1. In a hospital or nursing home without an in-house pharmacy,
a pharmacist shall supervise.
2. In an emergency medical services agency, the operational
medical director shall supervise.
3. For any other type of applicant or registrant, a pharmacist
or a prescriber whose scope of practice is consistent with the practice of the
applicant or registrant and who is approved by the board may provide the
required supervision.
B. The supervising practitioner shall approve the list of
drugs which may be ordered by the holder of the controlled substances
registration; possession of controlled substances by the entity shall be
limited to such approved drugs. The list of drugs approved by the supervising
practitioner shall be maintained at the address listed on the controlled
substances registration.
C. Access to the controlled substances shall be limited to
(i) the supervising practitioner or to those persons who are authorized by the
supervising practitioner and who are authorized by law to administer drugs in
Virginia; (ii) such other persons who have successfully completed a training
program for repackaging of prescription drug orders in a CSB, BHA, or PACE site
as authorized in § 54.1-3420.2 of the Code of Virginia; or (iii)
other such persons as designated by the supervising practitioner or the
responsible party to have access in an emergency situation, or (iv) persons
authorized by the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services to
train individuals on the administration of naloxone and to dispense naloxone
for opioid overdose reversal. If approved by the supervising practitioner,
pharmacy technicians may have access for the purpose of delivering controlled
substances to the registrant, stocking controlled substances in automated
dispensing devices, conducting inventories, audits and other recordkeeping
requirements, overseeing delivery of dispensed prescriptions at an alternate
delivery site, and repackaging of prescription drug orders retained by a CSB,
BHA, or PACE site as authorized in § 54.1-3420.2 of the Code of Virginia.
Access to stock drugs in a crisis stabilization unit shall be limited to
prescribers, nurses, or pharmacists.
D. The supervising practitioner shall establish procedures
for and provide training as necessary to ensure compliance with all
requirements of law and regulation, including, but not limited to, storage,
security, and recordkeeping.
E. Within 14 days of a change in the responsible party or
supervising practitioner assigned to the registration, either the responsible
party or outgoing responsible party shall inform the board, and a new
application shall be submitted indicating the name and license number, if
applicable, of the new responsible party or supervising practitioner.
18VAC110-20-710. Requirements for storage and security for
controlled substances registrants.
A. Drugs shall be stored under conditions which meet USP-NF
specifications or manufacturers' suggested storage for each drug.
B. Any drug which has exceeded the expiration date shall not
be administered; it shall be separated from the stock used for administration
and maintained in a separate, locked area until properly disposed.
C. If a controlled substances registrant wishes to dispose of
unwanted or expired Schedule II through VI drugs, he shall transfer the drugs
to another person or entity authorized to possess and to provide for proper
disposal of such drugs.
D. Drugs shall be maintained in a lockable cabinet, cart,
device or other area which shall be locked at all times when not in use. The
keys or access code shall be restricted to the supervising practitioner and
persons designated access in accordance with 18VAC110-20-700 C.
E. In a facility not staffed 24 hours a day, the drugs shall
be stored in a fixed and secured room, cabinet or area which has a security
device for the detection of breaking which meets the following conditions:
1. The device shall be a sound, microwave, photoelectric,
ultrasonic, or any other generally accepted and suitable device.
2. The installation and device shall be based on accepted
alarm industry standards.
3. The device shall be maintained in operating order, have an
auxiliary source of power, be monitored in accordance with accepted industry
standards, be maintained in operating order; and shall be capable of sending an
alarm signal to the monitoring entity if breached and the communication line is
not operational.
4. The device shall fully protect all areas where prescription
drugs are stored and shall be capable of detecting breaking by any means when
activated.
5. Access to the alarm system shall be restricted to only
designated and necessary persons, and the system shall be activated whenever
the drug storage areas are closed for business.
6. An alarm system is not required for researchers, animal
control officers, humane societies, alternate delivery sites as provided in
18VAC110-20-275, emergency medical services agencies stocking only intravenous
fluids with no added drug, persons authorized by the Department of
Behavioral Health and Developmental Services to train individuals on the
administration of naloxone and to dispense naloxone for opioid overdose
reversal, and teaching institutions possessing only Schedule VI drugs.
18VAC110-20-735. Requirements for dispensing of naloxone by
trained individuals.
A. Persons authorized by the Department of Behavioral
Health and Developmental Services to train individuals on the administration of
naloxone and dispense naloxone for opioid overdose reversal pursuant to
subsection Y of § 54.1-3408 of the Code of Virginia shall maintain the
following records:
1. The prescriber's standing order issued in accordance
with subsection Y of § 54.1-3408 of the Code of Virginia authorizing the
trained individual to dispense naloxone.
2. Invoices or other records showing receipts of naloxone
shall be maintained, but may be stored in an electronic database or record as
an electronic image that provides an exact, clearly legible image of the
document or in secured storage either on site or off site. All records in
off-site storage or database shall be retrieved and made available for
inspection or audit within 48 hours of a request by the board or an authorized
agent.
3. A manual or electronic log indicating the name,
strength, lot, expiration date, and quantity of naloxone transferred to and
from the controlled substances registration location to the off-site training
location, along with date of transfer and the name of trained individual
approved by the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services.
4. Record of dispensing indicating the name of person
receiving naloxone, address or contact information if available, date of
dispensing, drug name, strength, quantity, lot number, expiration date, and the
name of trained individual approved by the Department of Behavioral Health and
Developmental Services to dispense naloxone.
B. The naloxone shall be labeled with directions for use
in accordance with the prescriber's standing order; date of dispensing; name of
person receiving the drug; drug name and strength; and the name and the
telephone number for the entity associated with the controlled substances
registration.
C. The naloxone shall be stored and transported under
appropriate storage conditions in accordance with the manufacturer's directions
to protect them from adulteration.
D. In the event of a manufacturer recall, the supervising
practitioner or responsible party associated with the controlled substances
registration certificate shall ensure compliance with recall procedures as
issued by the manufacturer, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, or board to
ensure an affected drug is transferred to a person or entity authorized to
possess the drug for return or destruction.
E. Except for a prescriber's standing order, which must be
maintained on site for a period of not less than two years from the date of the
last dispensing, records shall be filed chronologically and maintained for a
period of not less than two years from the date of transaction.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-5048; Filed May 8, 2017, 8:27 a.m.