Utah Administrative Code
Topic - Commerce
Title R156 - Professional Licensing
Rule R156-17b - Pharmacy Practice Act Rule
Section R156-17b-601 - Operating Standards - Pharmacy Technician and Pharmacy Technician Trainee
Universal Citation: UT Admin Code R 156-17b-601
Current through Bulletin 2024-24, December 15, 2024
Under Subsection 58-17b-102(56), practice as a licensed pharmacy technician is defined as follows:
(1) A pharmacy technician may perform any task associated with the physical preparation and processing of prescription and medication orders, including:
(a)
receiving written prescriptions;
(b) taking refill orders, including refill
authorizations;
(c) entering and
retrieving information into and from a database or patient profile;
(d) preparing labels;
(e) retrieving medications from
inventory;
(f) counting and pouring
into containers;
(g) placing
medications into patient storage containers;
(h) affixing labels;
(i) compounding;
(j) counseling for over-the-counter drugs and
dietary supplements under the direction of the supervising
pharmacist;
(k) receiving new
prescription drug orders when communicating telephonically or electronically,
if the original information is recorded so the pharmacist may review the
prescription drug order as transmitted, including accepting new prescription
drug orders saved on voicemail for a pharmacist to review;
(l) transferring prescriptions under Sections
58-17b-604 and
R156-17b-609;
(m) performing checks of certain medications
prepared for distribution filled or prepared by another technician within a
Class B hospital pharmacy, such as medications prepared for distribution to an
automated dispensing cabinet, cart fill, crash cart medication tray, or unit
dosing from a prepared stock bottle, in accordance with the following operating
standards:
(i) a technician authorized by a
hospital to check medications shall have at least:
(A) one year of experience working as a
pharmacy technician; and
(B) six
months of experience at the hospital where the technician is authorized to
check medications;
(ii) a
technician may only check steps in the medication distribution process that do
not require the professional judgment of a pharmacist and that are supported by
sufficient automation or technology to ensure accuracy, such as barcode
scanning, drug identification automation, checklists, or visual aids;
(iii) a hospital that authorizes technicians
to check medications shall:
(A) have a
training program and ongoing competency assessment that is documented and
retrievable during each technician's employment and at least three years beyond
employment;
(B) maintain a list of
technicians on staff that are allowed to check medications;
(C) have a medication error reporting system
and be able to produce documentation of its use;
(D) have a supervising pharmacist immediately
available during times that a pharmacy technician is checking medications;
and
(E) have comprehensive policies
and procedures that guide technician checking that include the following:
(I) process for technician training and
ongoing competency assessment and documentation;
(II) process for supervising technicians who
check medications;
(III) list of
medications, or types of medications that may or may not be checked by a
technician;
(IV) description of the
automation or technology to be utilized by the institution to augment the
technician check;
(V) process for
maintaining a permanent log of the unique initials or identification codes that
identify each technician responsible for checked medications by name;
and
(VI) description of processes
used to track and respond to medication errors; and
(n) additional tasks not
requiring the judgment of a pharmacist.
(2) A pharmacy technician may not:
(a) receive a new prescription or medication
order, except as described in Subsection (1)(k);
(b) clarify a prescription or medication
order from a prescriber;
(c)
perform a drug utilization review;
(d) perform final review of a prescribed drug
prepared for dispensing;
(e)
dispense a drug; or
(f) counsel a
patient with respect to a prescription drug.
(3) A pharmacy technician may administer vaccines and emergency medications pursuant to delegation by a pharmacist under the Vaccine Administration Protocol, if the pharmacy technician:
(a) has completed the initial training
required by Section R156-17b-621;
(b) is under direct, on-site supervision by
the delegating pharmacist as defined in Subsection
R156-1-102a(4)(a);
and
(c) for each renewal cycle
after the initial training, has completed a minimum of two hours of continuing
education in immunization or vaccine-related topics in accordance with Section
R156-17b-309.
(4) A pharmacy technician trainee:
(a) shall practice only under the direct
supervision of a pharmacist, and in a ratio not to exceed:
(i) one pharmacy technician trainee to one
pharmacist; or
(ii) two pharmacy
technician trainees to one pharmacist, if a licensed pharmacy technician or
intern is working during the same shift; and
(b) may perform any task in Subsection (1),
except performing checks of certain medications prepared for distribution
filled or prepared by a technician within a Class B hospital pharmacy as
described in Subsection (1)(m).
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