Louisiana Administrative Code
Title 46 - PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL STANDARDS
Part LIII - Pharmacists
Chapter 25 - Prescriptions, Drugs, and Devices
Subchapter B - Prescriptions
Section LIII-2515 - Prescriptions Based upon Electronic Questionnaires

Universal Citation: LA Admin Code LIII-2515

Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024

A. A prescription issued solely on the results of answers to an electronic questionnaire, in the absence of a documented patient evaluation including a physical examination, is issued outside the context of a valid physician-patient relationship, and is not a valid prescription.

B. If a pharmacist has reasons to suspect that a prescription was authorized solely on the results of an electronic questionnaire and in the absence of a documented patient evaluation including a physical examination, the pharmacist shall ascertain if that practitioner's standard of practice allows that practitioner to authorize a prescription under such circumstances. Reasons to suspect that a prescription may have been authorized in the absence of a valid physician-patient relationship, or in violation of the practitioner's standard of practice, include:

1. the number of prescriptions authorized on a daily basis by the practitioner;

2. the manner in which the prescriptions are authorized by the practitioner or received by the pharmacy, i.e., electronically;

3. the geographical distance between the practitioner and the patient(s);

4. knowledge by the pharmacist that the prescription was issued solely as a result of answers to an electronic questionnaire; or

5. knowledge by the pharmacist that the pharmacy he works for directly or indirectly participates in an internet site that markets prescription drugs to the public.

C. A pharmacist who has reasons to suspect that a prescription may have been authorized in the absence of a valid physician-patient relationship, or otherwise in violation of the prescriber's standard of practice, shall not fill such prescription until he has obtained proof to a reasonable certainty of the validity of such prescription.

D. A pharmacist who dispenses prescription drugs in violation of this Section is not acting in the best interest of the patient and is dispensing outside the course of the professional practice of pharmacy.

AUTHORITY NOTE: Promulgated in accordance with R.S. 37:1182.

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