Pharmacy industry uses patients to pressure doctors to e-prescribe

Posted by Robert Lowes on May 2nd, 2008. Filed under: e-prescribing, .

Maybe you’ve seen the signs at your local pharmacy saying “E-prescriptions filled here” and “Give your prescription a head start” They’re part of a campaign to encourage patients to convert their doctors to electronic prescribing.

The organization behind the campaign is SureScripts, a company created by the pharmacy industry to promote e-prescribing. That’s technically defined as a prescription that goes directly from the doctor’s computer to the pharmacy’s computer (faxed prescriptions don’t meet the definition). SureScripts estimates that more than 40,000 pharmacies have computer systems capable of receiving e-prescriptions. The bulk of these pharmacies are in national chains such as Walgreens or part of discount retailers such as Wal-Mart. SureScripts operates a nationwide data exchange that connects these pharmacies to doctors who use compatible e-prescribing software.

The e-prescribing signs started appearing in pharmacies on April 29. The one that states “Give your prescription a head start” adds “Ask your doctor for an e-prescription” and invites customers to a SureScripts-sponsored website. Besides explaining the benefits of this technology, the website asks “Does your doctor e-prescribe?” By clicking on the question, a visitor can then enter his ZIP code and find out whether his doctor appears on a list of area e-prescribers. If his name isn’t there, the website invites the visitor to print a flyer about e-prescribing that he can give to his doctor.

Assuming that patients buy into e-prescribing, a lot of flyers could get printed. Only six percent of physicians have the kind of software that can transmit prescriptions electronically to pharmacies, according to SureScripts.

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Starting in 2012, doctors in Massachusetts hospitals must order medications, tests, and procedures electronically if those hospitals want to earn quality-of-care bonuses from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts. continues…

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Last January, the National ePrescribing Safety Initiative (NEPSI) launched with great fanfare a supposedly free e-prescribing program called eRx NOW. The software, provided gratis by Allscripts, was predicted to expand the universe of e-prescribing physicians significantly. continues…

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CMS to bar computer-faxing of scripts

Posted by Ken Terry on July 20th, 2007. Filed under: e-prescribing, , , , , , .

Since January 2006, physicians who prescribe electronically for Medicare patients have been required to use the same standard for sending scripts online to pharmacies that SureScripts uses in its electronic network. But despite the spread of pharmacy interoperability, the majority of e-prescribing doctors still computer-fax their scripts to pharmacies. continues…

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