Current through Register Vol. 39, No. 6, September 16, 2024
(a)
Definitions as used in the Rule:
(1) "Medical
Board" means the North Carolina Medical Board.
(2) "Pharmacy Board" means the North Carolina
Board of Pharmacy.
(3) "Clinical
Pharmacist Practitioner" or "CPP" means a licensed pharmacist who is approved
to provide drug therapy management, including controlled substances, under the
direction or supervision of a Supervising Physician pursuant to a CPP Agreement
Only a pharmacist approved by the Pharmacy Board and the Medical Board may
legally identify himself as a CPP.
(4) "Supervising Physician" means a licensed
physician who, by signing the CPP Agreement, is held accountable for the
on-going supervision and evaluation of the drug therapy management performed by
the CPP as defined in written CPP Agreement. This term includes both Primary
Supervising Physician and Back-up Supervising Physician.
(5) "Primary Supervising Physician" means the
Supervising Physician who shall provide on-going supervision, collaboration,
consultation, and evaluation of the drug therapy management performed by the
CPP as defined in the CPP Agreement.
(6) "Back-up Supervising Physician" means a
Supervising Physician who shall provide supervision, collaboration,
consultation, and evaluation of the drug therapy management performed by the
CPP as defined in the CPP Agreement when the Primary Supervising Physician is
not available.
(7) "Approval" means
authorization by the Medical Board and the Pharmacy Board for a pharmacist to
practice as a CPP in accordance with this Rule.
(8) "Continuing Education or CE" is defined
as courses or materials which have been approved for credit by the American
Council on Pharmaceutical Education.
(9) "Clinical Experience approved by the
Boards" means work in a pharmacy practice setting which includes experience
consistent with the following components as listed in Parts (b)(2)(A), (B),
(C), (D), (E), (H), (I), (J), (N), (O), and (P) of this Rule. Clinical
experience requirements must be met only through activities separate from the
certificate programs referred to in Parts (b)(1)(B) of this Rule.
(10) "CPP Agreement" means a written
agreement between the CPP, Primary Supervising Physician and any Back-Up
Supervising Physician by which the Supervising Physician(s) have provided
written instructions to the CPP for patient-specific and disease-specific drug
therapy, which may include ordering, changing, or substituting therapies or
ordering tests.
(b) CPP
application for approval.
(1) The
requirements for application for CPP approval include that the pharmacist:
(A) has an unrestricted and current license
to practice as a pharmacist in North Carolina;
(B) meets one of the following
qualifications:
(i) has earned Certification
from the Board of Pharmaceutical Specialties, is a Certified Geriatric
Pharmacist as certified by the Commission for Certification in Geriatric
Pharmacy, or has completed an American Society of Health System Pharmacists
(ASHP) accredited residency program with two years of Clinical Experience
approved by the Boards; or
(ii)
holds the academic degree of Doctor of Pharmacy, has three years of Clinical
Experience approved by the Boards, and has completed a North Carolina Center
for Pharmaceutical Care (NCCPC) or American Council on Pharmaceutical Education
(ACPE) approved certificate program in the area of practice covered by the CPP
Agreement; or
(iii) holds the
academic degree of Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy, has five years of Clinical
Experience approved by the Boards, and has completed two NCCPC or ACPE approved
certificate programs with at least one program in the area of practice covered
by the CPP Agreement;
(C) submits the required application and fee
to the Pharmacy Board;
(D) submits
any information deemed necessary by the Pharmacy Board in order to evaluate the
application; and
(E) has a signed
CPP Agreement.
If for any reason a CPP discontinues working under an
approved CPP Agreement, the clinical pharmacist practitioner shall notify the
Pharmacy Board in writing within 10 days, and the CPP's approval shall
automatically terminate or be placed on inactive status until such time as a
new application is approved in accordance with this Subchapter.
(2) All certificate
programs referred to in Subpart (b)(1)(B)(i) of this Rule must contain a core
curriculum, including the following components:
(A) communicating with healthcare
professionals and patients regarding drug therapy, wellness, and health
promotion;
(B) designing,
implementing, monitoring, evaluating, and modifying or recommending
modifications in drug therapy to insure effective, safe, and economical patient
care;
(C) identifying, assessing,
and solving medication-related problems and providing a clinical judgment as to
the continuing effectiveness of individualized therapeutic plans and intended
therapeutic outcomes;
(D)
conducting physical assessments, evaluating patient problems, and ordering and
monitoring medications and laboratory tests;
(E) referring patients to other health
professionals as appropriate;
(F)
administering medications;
(G)
monitoring patients and patient populations regarding the purposes, uses,
effects, and pharmacoeconomics of their medication and related
therapy;
(H) counseling patients
regarding the purposes, uses, and effects of their medication and related
therapy;
(I) integrating relevant
diet, nutritional, and non-drug therapy with pharmaceutical care;
(J) recommending, counseling, and monitoring
patient use of non-prescription drugs, herbal remedies, and alternative
medicine practices;
(K) ordering of
and educating patients regarding proper usage of devices and durable medical
equipment;
(L) providing emergency
first care;
(M) retrieving,
evaluating, utilizing, and managing data and professional resources;
(N) using clinical data to optimize
therapeutic drug regimens;
(O)
collaborating with other health professionals;
(P) documenting interventions and evaluating
pharmaceutical care outcomes;
(Q)
integrating pharmacy practice within healthcare environments;
(R) integrating national standards for the
quality of healthcare; and
(S)
conducting outcomes and other research.
(3) The completed application for approval to
practice as a CPP shall be reviewed by the Pharmacy Board upon verification of
a full and unrestricted license to practice as a pharmacist in North Carolina.
The Pharmacy Board shall:
(A) approve the
application and, at the time of approval, issue a number which shall be printed
on each prescription written by the CPP;
(B) deny the application; or
(C) approve the application with
restrictions, in the even that restrictions are appropriate in order to protect
the public health, safety, and welfare in light of information received and
reviewed in the CPP application in Subparagraph (b)(1) of this Rule.
(c) Annual Renewal.
(1) Each CPP shall register annually on or
before December 31 by:
(A) verifying that the
CPP holds a current Pharmacist license;
(B) submitting the renewal fee as specified
in Subparagraph (j)(2) of this Rule;
(C) completing the Pharmacy Board's renewal
form; and
(D) reporting continuing
education credits as required by subsection (d) of this Rule.
(2) If the CPP has not renewed the
CPP's annual registration pursuant to Subparagraph (c)(1) of this Rule, within
60 days of December 31, the approval to practice as a CPP shall
lapse.
(d) Continuing
Education.
(1) Each CPP shall earn 35 hours
of practice-relevant CE each year, approved by the Pharmacy Board.
(2) Documentation of these hours shall be
kept at the CPP practice site and made available for inspection by agents of
the Medical Board or Pharmacy Board.
(e) A Supervising Physician who has a CPP
Agreement with a CPP shall be readily available for consultation with the CPP
and, at the meetings required by Subparagraph (f)(6) of this Rule, shall review
each order written by the CPP.
(f)
The CPP Agreement shall:
(1) be approved and
signed by the Primary Supervising Physician, and Back-Up Supervising Physician,
and the CPP, and a copy shall be maintained in each practice site for
inspection by agents of either Board upon request;
(2) be specific in regards to the physician,
the pharmacist, the patient, and the disease;
(3) specify the predetermined drug therapy,
which shall include the diagnosis and product selection by the patient's
physician and any modifications which may be permitted, dosage forms, dosage
schedules and tests which may be ordered;
(4) prohibit the substitution of a chemically
dissimilar drug product by the CPP for the product prescribed by the physician
without first obtaining written consent of the physician;
(5) include a pre-determined plan for
emergency services;
(6) for the
first six months of the CPP Agreement include a plan and schedule for monthly
meetings to discuss the operation of the CPP Agreement and quality improvement
measures between the Primary Supervising Physician and CPP, and thereafter
include a plan and schedule for meetings between the Primary Supervising
Physician and CPP at least once every six months to discuss the operation of
the CPP Agreement and quality improvement measures. Documentation of the
meetings between the CPP and the Primary Supervising Physician shall:
(A) identify clinical issues discussed and
actions taken;
(B) be signed and
dated by those who attended; and
(C) be retained by both the CPP and Primary
Supervising Physician and be available for review by members or agents of
either Board for five calendar years;
(7) require that the patient be notified of
the collaborative relationship under the CPP Agreement; and
(8) be terminated when patient care is
transferred to another physician and new orders will be written by the
succeeding physician.
(g) The Supervising Physician of the CPP
shall:
(1) be fully licensed with the Medical
Board and engaged in clinical practice;
(2) not be serving in a postgraduate medical
training program;
(3) be approved
in accordance with this Subchapter before the CPP supervision occurs;
and
(4) supervise no more than
three pharmacists.
(h)
The CPP shall wear a nametag spelling out the words "Clinical Pharmacist
Practitioner".
(i) The CPP may be
censured or reprimanded or the CPP's approval may be restricted, suspended,
revoked, annulled, denied, or terminated by the Medical Board or the Pharmacy
Board. In addition or in the alternative, the pharmacist may be censured or
reprimanded or the pharmacist's license may be restricted, suspended, revoked,
annulled, denied, or terminated by the Pharmacy Board, in accordance with
provisions of G.S. 150B. The Pharmacy Board or the Medical Board may take the
actions set forth in this Paragraph with respect to the pharmacist, the CPP
approval, or the pharmacist's license, if either Board finds one or more of the
following:
(1) the CPP has held himself or
herself out as, or permitted another to represent that the CPP is, a licensed
physician;
(2) the CPP has engaged
or attempted to engage in the provision of drug therapy management other than
at the direction of, or under the supervision of, a physician licensed and
approved by the Medical Board to be that CPP's Supervising Physician;
(3) the CPP has provided or attempted to
provide medical management outside the approved CPP Agreement or for which the
CPP is not qualified by education and training to provide;
(4) The CPP commits any act prohibited by any
provision of
G.S.
90-85.38 as determined by the Pharmacy Board
or G.S.
90-14(a)(1), (a)(3) through (a)(14) and
(c) as determined by the Medical Board;
or
(5) the CPP has failed to comply
with any of the provisions of this Rule.
Any modification of treatment for financial gain on the
part of the Supervising Physician or CPP shall be grounds for denial of Board
approval of the CPP Agreement.
(j) Fees:
(1) An application fee of one hundred dollars
($100.00) shall be paid at the time of initial application for approval and
each subsequent application for approval to practice as a CPP.
(2) The fee for annual renewal of approval,
due at the time of annual renewal pursuant to Paragraph (c) of this Rule, is
fifty dollars ($50.00).
(3) No
portion of any fee in this Rule is refundable.
Authority
G.S.
90-8.2(b);
90-18(c)3a;
90-18.4;
Eff. April 1,
2001;
Amended Eff. July 1, 2016; March 1, 2007; October 1,
2001.