Letter to Secretary Burwell Re: Long-Term Care Pharmacy
The Senior Care Pharmacy Coalition (“SCPC”), on behalf of the long term care (“LTC”) pharmacies it represents and the residents of LTC facilities whom those pharmacies serve, is writing to ask your help in reconciling a conflict between two of the agencies within your Department – the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) and the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”) – related to packaging of prescription drugs in long term care (“LTC”) pharmacies. The CMS Requirements of Participation for nursing homes require LTC pharmacies to dispense medications to residents in specialized packaging and provide emergency medications that must be kept on-site at the facility (known as “e-kits”). However a draft FDA guidance issued in 2015 entitled “Draft Guidance for Industry: Repackaging of Certain Human Drug Products by Pharmacies and Outsourcing Facilities” (Feb. 2015) (the “Draft Guidance”) would, if finalized, prohibit LTC pharmacies for preparing the very same packaging and providing e-kits for residents of LTC facilities that the Requirements of Participation demand. The vast majority of medications dispensed for these patients are not available from manufacturers, wholesalers or licensed repackagers in the appropriate specialized packaging. Given that LTC pharmacies have for decades been safely packaging these medications in compliance with CMS and pharmacy requirements, we seek your assistance to avoid the emerging conflict.
Recent Posts
-
SCPC Applauds President Trump’s Executive Order Calling on HHS and Congress to Improve the IRA, Rein In PBMs and Lower Drug Costs
The Senior Care Pharmacy Coalition (SCPC), the leading national voice for the long-term care (LTC) pharmacy community, released the following statement applauding President Trump’s recent Executive Order aimed at improving the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), lowering drug prices and addressing the harmful actions of PBMs. “For far too long, pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) have taken […]
-
60 percent of LTC pharmacies warn of closure amid major drug pricing changes
Facing deep losses on high-demand medications, 85% of long-term care pharmacies say they will limit essential services and 60% will close locations without changes to Medicare drug pricing efforts. Those are among the “unintended consequences” revealed in a Senior Care Pharmacy Coalition survey released Wednesday. The trade association has been increasingly vocal about pricing changes set to go into effect in January.
-
More than half of LTC pharmacies may close unless Congress takes action, group says
Up to 60% of long-term care pharmacies may have to close if Congress doesn’t intercede by January, according to a report released Wednesday by the Senior Care Pharmacy Coalition.
Stay in the Know
Get the latest news and updates on issues impacting the long-term pharmacy community.