Chapter 589 Oregon Laws 2001
AN ACT
SB 568
Relating to information
provided by pharmacy about prescription medications; amending ORS 689.515.
Be It Enacted by the People of the State of Oregon:
SECTION 1.
ORS 689.515 is amended to read:
689.515. (1) As used in this section unless the context
requires otherwise:
(a) “Brand name” means the proprietary or trade name
selected by the manufacturer and placed upon a drug, its container, label or
wrapping at the time of packaging.
(b) “Dosage form” means the physical formulation or medium
in which the product is intended, manufactured and made available for use,
including but not limited to tablets, capsules, oral solutions, aerosols,
ointments, inhalers and suppositories, and the particular form of which utilizes
a specific technology or mechanism to control, enhance or direct the release,
targeting, systemic absorption or other delivery of a dosage regimen in the
body.
(c) “Generic name” means the official title of a drug or
drug ingredients published in the latest edition of the official Pharmacopoeia,
Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia or Formulary.
(d) “Substitute” means to dispense without the prescriber’s
express authorization a different drug product in place of the drug ordered or
prescribed.
(e) “Therapeutically equivalent” means drugs that are
approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration for interstate
distribution and the Food and Drug Administration has determined that the drugs
will provide essentially the same efficacy and toxicity when administered to an
individual in the same dosage regimen.
(2) Except as limited by subsections (3) and (5) of this
section, unless the purchaser instructs otherwise, the pharmacist may
substitute as follows:
(a) A drug product with the same generic name in the same
strength, quantity, dose and dosage form as the prescribed drug which is, in
the pharmacist’s professional opinion, therapeutically equivalent.
(b) When the prescriber is not reasonably available for
consultation and the prescribed drug does not utilize a unique delivery system
technology, an oral tablet, capsule or liquid form of the prescribed drug so
long as the form dispensed or administered has the same strength, dose and dose
schedule and is therapeutically equivalent to the drug prescribed.
(3) A practitioner may specify in writing or by a
telephonic communication that there shall be no substitution for the specified
brand name drug in any prescription. The phrase “no substitution” or the
notation “N.S.” must be in the practitioner’s handwriting or, if the
prohibition was communicated by telephonic communication, in the pharmacist’s
handwriting and shall not be preprinted or stamped or initialed on the
prescription form.
(4) Every pharmacy shall post a sign in a location easily
seen by patrons at the counter where prescriptions are dispensed or
administered stating that, “This pharmacy may be able to substitute a less
expensive drug which is therapeutically equivalent to the one prescribed by
your doctor unless you do not approve.” The printing on the sign shall be in
block letters not less than one inch in height. If the pharmacist has
reasonable cause to believe that the purchaser cannot read the sign or
comprehend its content, the pharmacist shall endeavor to explain the meaning of
the sign.
(5) A pharmacist shall substitute a drug product under this
section only when there will be a savings in or no increase in cost to the
purchaser.
(6) If the practitioner prescribes a drug by its generic
name, the pharmacist shall, consistent with reasonable professional judgment,
dispense or administer the lowest retail cost, effective brand which is in
stock.
(7) Except as provided in subsection (8) of this section,
when a pharmacist dispenses a substituted drug as authorized by subsection (2)
of this section, the pharmacist must label the prescription container with the
name of the dispensed drug. If the dispensed drug does not have a brand name,
the prescription label shall indicate the generic name of the drug dispensed
along with the name of the drug manufacturer.
(8) A prescription dispensed by a pharmacist shall bear
upon the label the name of the medication in the container [except if the prescriber writes “do not
label,” or words of similar import, on the prescription or so designates in an
oral transmission of the prescription]
or shall be labeled as intended by the prescriber.
(9) The substitution of any drug by a licensed pharmacist
or the pharmacist’s employer pursuant to this section does not constitute the
practice of medicine.
(10) No substitution of drugs made by a pharmacist or the
pharmacist’s employer in accordance with this section and any rules that the
State Board of Pharmacy may adopt thereunder shall constitute evidence of
negligence if the substitution was made within reasonable and prudent practice
of pharmacy or if the substituted drug was accepted in a generally recognized
formulary or government list.
(11) Failure of a practitioner to specify that no
substitution is authorized does not constitute evidence of negligence unless
the practitioner knows that the health condition of the patient for whom the
practitioner is prescribing warrants the use of the brand name drug product and
not the substituted drug.
Approved by the Governor
June 25, 2001
Filed in the office of Secretary
of State June 25, 2001
Effective date January 1,
2002
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