‘Partial Fill’ Rule for Pharmacies Would Harm Pain Patients
By Pat Anson, PNN Editor
A retired Nevada pharmacist who lives with chronic back pain is warning that patients will suffer if the Drug Enforcement Administration enacts a rule that allows pharmacists to only partially fill opioid prescriptions.
The DEA is under pressure from Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and other members of Congress to stop “foot-dragging” and finalize a regulation that would allow patients to take home only part of their opioid prescription. They would have to return a second time to get the rest.
“I think it (the DEA partial refills) would have a huge impact on patients who regularly get their pain meds filled. Can you just imagine people already in pain having to go back to their pharmacy again to get the balance? Going once a month is already problematic for many. Twice a month would be inhumane,” Rick Martin said in an email to PNN.
“Pharmacists might not like it either because it would make them have to account for their inventory more often and maybe double the amount of work to fill the same Rx again.”
Warren, along with Sen. Dianne Feinstein, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, Rep. Kathleen Clark and Rep. Steve Stivers, sent a bipartisan letter to acting DEA Administrator Timothy Shea last week urging him to update the “partial fill” regulation, as required under the 2018 Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act (CARA).
“DEA has failed to issue its proposed rule, despite assurances in recent years that ‘this proposed rule is a top priority’ for the agency,” the letter says. “Defining ‘partial fill’ and fully implementing Section 702 of CARA will reduce the number of prescription opioids in circulation, a crucial step in addressing the opioid crisis that is devastating communities across the country. DEA’s continuing foot-dragging on this issue puts Americans at risk.”
Warren and her colleagues asked the DEA to provide an update and staff-level briefing on the matter no later than October 20.
Under current rules, the DEA only allows pharmacists to do a partial fill if they don’t have enough medication on hand to completely fill a prescription – something that many patients say is already happening. In a report issued earlier this year, the DEA said the supply of prescription opioids was at its lowest level since 2006.
“Once again, the letter just shows a bunch of busy-body ignorant uneducated senators sticking their nose where it doesn't belong,” said Martin. “They (pharmacists) shouldn't be doing this unless they don't have an adequate amount to fill or unless the patient gives them permission to partial fill.”
The Warren letter claims over half of those who abuse opioid medication obtain it from a friend or family member. The DEA, however, has said less than one percent of opioids that are legally prescribed are diverted.
Illicit fentanyl, heroin and other street drugs are responsible for the vast majority of overdoses. A 2019 study of overdoses in Massachusetts – Warren’s home state – found only 1.3% of overdose victims had an active opioid prescription.