Current through Register Vol. 30, No. 38, September 20, 2024
A. Permissible
tasks of a pharmacy technician trainee. Acting in compliance with all
applicable statutes and rules and under the supervision of a pharmacist, a
pharmacy technician trainee licensed under
R4-23-1103
may assist an intern or pharmacist with the following when applicable to the
pharmacy practice site:
1. Record on the
original prescription order the serial number of the prescription medication
and date dispensed;
2. Initiate or
accept verbal or electronic refill authorization from a medical practitioner or
medical practitioner's agent and record, on the original prescription order or
by an alternative method approved by the Board or its designee, the medical
practitioner's name, patient name, name and quantity of prescription
medication, specific refill information, and name of medical practitioner's
agent, if any;
3. Record
information in the refill record or patient profile;
4. Enter information for a new or refill
prescription medication as required under A.R.S. §
32-1964;
5. Type and affix a label for the
prescription medication. A pharmacist or intern working under the supervision
of a pharmacist shall verify the accuracy of the label as described under
R4-23-402(A)(11);
6. Reconstitute a prescription medication, if
a pharmacist checks the ingredients and procedure before reconstitution and
verifies the final product after reconstitution;
7. Retrieve, count, or pour a prescription
medication, if a pharmacist verifies the contents of the prescription
medication against the original prescription medication container or by an
alternative drug identification method approved by the Board or its
designee;
8. Prepackage drugs in
accordance with
R4-23-402(A);
and
9. Measure, count, pour, or
otherwise prepare and package a drug needed for hospital inpatient dispensing,
if a pharmacist verifies the accuracy, measuring, counting, pouring, preparing,
packaging, and safety of the drug before the drug is delivered to a patient
care area.
B. Permissible
tasks of a pharmacy technician. Acting in compliance with all applicable
statutes and rules and under the supervision of a pharmacist, a pharmacy
technician licensed under
R4-23-1102
may:
1. Perform the tasks listed in subsection
(A);
2. After completing a pharmacy
technician drug compounding training program developed by the pharmacy
permittee or pharmacist-in-charge under
R4-23-1105(C),
assist a pharmacist or intern in compounding prescription medications and
sterile or non-sterile pharmaceuticals in accordance with written policies and
procedures, if the preparation, accuracy, and safety of the final product is
verified by a pharmacist before dispensing;
3. Perform a final technology-assisted
verification of product if the pharmacy technician is qualified under
R4-23-1104.01(D);
4. If technology-assisted verification is
performed, type and affix a label for the prescription medication. A pharmacist
or intern shall verify the accuracy of the label as described under
R4-23-402(A)(12);
5. Perform a task
not related to professional judgment if the task is delegated to the pharmacy
technician by the pharmacist on duty after the pharmacist on duty ensures the
pharmacy technician is trained to do the task and evidence of the training
exists in the pharmacy file.
6. A
pharmacist on duty shall not delegate or attempt to delegate the following
tasks to a pharmacy technician:
a.
Administering an emergency medication,
b. Counseling a patient,
c. Conducting a drug utilization
review,
d. Performing any task that
requires the exercise of clinical judgment,
e. Issuing a prescription order,
f. Receiving a new prescription order for a
controlled substance, or
g.
Transferring by telephone an existing prescription order for a controlled
substance; and
7. The
pharmacist on duty shall not delegate or attempt to delegate to a pharmacy
technician the administering of an immunization or vaccine unless authority for
the administration is specifically provided by statute or rule.
C. A trained and licensed pharmacy
technician or pharmacy technician trainee who performs a task as authorized
under subsections (A) and (B) shall ensure the task is performed
accurately.
D. Prohibited
activities. A pharmacy technician or pharmacy technician trainee shall not
perform a professional practice reserved for a pharmacist or intern in
accordance with
R4-23-402
or
R4-23-653
unless otherwise allowed by rule.
E. A pharmacy technician or pharmacy
technician trainee shall wear a badge indicating name and title while on
duty.
F. Before employing a
pharmacy technician or pharmacy technician trainee, a pharmacy permittee or
pharmacist-in-charge shall develop, implement, review, and revise in the manner
described in
R4-23-653(A)
and comply with policies and procedures outlined in subsection (G) for pharmacy
technician and pharmacy technician trainee tasks.
G. A pharmacy permittee or
pharmacist-in-change shall ensure policies and procedures required under
subsection (F) include the following:
1. For
all practice sites:
a. Supervisory controls
and verification procedures to ensure the quality and safety of pharmaceutical
service;
b. Employment performance
expectations for a pharmacy technician and pharmacy technician
trainee;
c. The tasks a pharmacy
technician or pharmacy technician trainee may perform as specified under
subsections (A) and (B);
d.
Pharmacist and patient communication;
e. Reporting, correcting, and avoiding
medication and dispensing errors;
f. Security procedures for:
i. Confidentiality of patient prescription
records, and
ii. The pharmacy
area;
g. Automated
medication distribution system;
h.
Compounding procedures for pharmacy technicians; and
i. Brief overview of state and federal
pharmacy statutes and rules;
2. For community and limited-service pharmacy
practice sites:
a. Prescription dispensing
procedures for:
i. Accepting a new written
prescription order,
ii. Accepting a
refill request,
iii. Selecting a
drug product,
iv. Counting and
pouring,
v. Labeling, and
vi. Obtaining refill authorization;
and
b. Computer
data-entry procedures for:
i. New and refill
prescriptions,
ii. Patient's drug
allergies,
iii. Drug-drug
interactions,
iv. Drug-food
interactions,
v. Drug-disease state
contraindications,
vi. Refill
frequency,
vii. Patient's disease
and medical condition,
viii.
Patient's age or date of birth and gender, and
ix. Patient profile maintenance;
and
3. For
hospital pharmacy practice sites:
a.
Medication order procurement and data entry,
b. Drug preparation and packaging,
c. Outpatient and inpatient drug delivery,
and
d. Inspection of drug storage
and preparation areas and patient care areas.