Ariz. Admin. Code § R4-23-658 - Drug Distribution and Control
A. General. The Director of Pharmacy or
pharmacist-in-charge shall in consultation with the medical staff, develop,
implement, review, and revise in the same manner described in
R4-23-653(A)
and comply with written policies and procedures for the effective operation of
a drug distribution system that optimizes patient safety.
B. Responsibility. The Director of Pharmacy
is responsible for the safe and efficient procurement, dispensing,
distribution, administration, and control of drugs, including the following:
1. In consultation with the appropriate
department personnel and medical staff committee, develop a medication
formulary for the hospital;
2.
Proper handling, distribution, and recordkeeping of investigational drugs;
and
3. Regular inspections of drug
storage and preparation areas within the hospital.
C. Physician orders. A Director of Pharmacy
or pharmacist-in-charge shall ensure that:
1.
Drugs are dispensed from the hospital pharmacy only upon a written order,
direct copy or facsimile of a written order, or verbal order of an authorized
medical practitioner; and
2. A
pharmacist reviews the original, direct or facsimile copy, or verbal order
before an initial dose of medication is administered, except as specified in
R4-23-653(E)(1).
D.
Labeling. A Director of Pharmacy or pharmacist-in-charge shall ensure that all
drugs distributed or dispensed by a hospital pharmacy are packaged in
appropriate containers and labeled as follows:
1. For use inside the hospital.
a. Labels for all single unit packages
contain at a minimum, the following information:
i. Drug name, strength, and dosage
form;
ii. Lot number and
beyond-use-date; and
iii.
Appropriate auxiliary labels;
b. Labels for repackaged preparations contain
at a minimum the following information:
i.
Drug name, strength, and dosage form;
ii. Lot number and beyond-use-date;
iii. Appropriate auxiliary labels;
and
iv. Mechanism to identify
pharmacist accountable for repackaging;
c. Labels for all intravenous admixture
preparations contain at a minimum the following information:
i. Patient's name and location;
ii. Name and quantity of the basic parenteral
solution;
iii. Name and amount of
drug added;
iv. Date of
preparation;
v. Beyond-use-date and
time;
vi. Guidelines for
administration;
vii. Appropriate
auxiliary label or precautionary statement; and
viii. Initials of pharmacist responsible for
admixture preparation; and
2. For use outside the hospital. Any drug
dispensed to a patient by a hospital pharmacy that is intended for
self-administration outside of the hospital is labeled as specified in A.R.S.
§§
32-1963.01(C) and 32-1968(D) and A.A.C.
R4-23-402.
E. Controlled substance
accountability. A Director of Pharmacy or pharmacist-in-charge shall ensure
that effective policies and procedures are developed, implemented, reviewed,
and revised in the same manner described in
R4-23-653(A)
and complied with regarding the use, accountability, and recordkeeping of
controlled substances in the hospital, including the use of locked storage
areas when controlled substances are stored in patient care areas.
F. Emergency services dispensing. If a
hospital permits dispensing of drugs from the emergency services department
when the pharmacy is unable to provide this service, the Director of Pharmacy,
in consultation with the appropriate department personnel and medical staff
committee shall develop, implement, review, and revise in the same manner
described in
R4-23-653(A)
and comply with written policies and procedures for dispensing drugs for
outpatient use from the hospital's emergency services department. The policies
and procedures shall include the following requirements:
1. Drugs are dispensed only to patients who
have been admitted to the emergency services department;
2. Drugs are dispensed only by an authorized
medical practitioner, not a designee or agent;
3. The nature and type of drugs available for
dispensing are designed to meet the immediate needs of the patients treated
within the hospital;
4. Drugs are
dispensed only in quantities sufficient to meet patient needs until outpatient
pharmacy services are available;
5.
Drugs are prepackaged by a pharmacist or a pharmacy intern, graduate intern,
pharmacy technician, or pharmacy technician trainee under the supervision of a
pharmacist in suitable containers and appropriately prelabeled with the drug
name, strength, dosage form, quantity, manufacturer, lot number,
beyond-use-date, and any appropriate auxiliary labels;
6. Upon dispensing, the authorized medical
practitioner completes the label on the prescription container that complies
with the requirements of
R4-23-658(D);
and
7. The hospital pharmacy
maintains a dispensing log, hard-copy prescription, or electronic record,
approved by the Board or its designee and includes the patient name and
address, drug name, strength, dosage form, quantity, directions for use,
medical practitioner's signature or identification code, and DEA registration
number, if applicable.
Notes
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