The state originally passed the law in 2018 to address concerns of inadequate staffing in community pharmacies. Inadequate staffing impairs pharmacists’ judgment and ability to do their jobs, and endangers public health because it leaves pharmacists unable to do their job safely, according to JD Supra.
Before the law was passed, pharmacists had to perform a number of nonpharmacist functions, including staffing cash registers, cleaning bathrooms and taking out the trash.
The new regulations approved by the board require that when a pharmacist is the only employee in a pharmacy that is open to the public, the pharmacy must make another employee available to assist the pharmacist. That employee must:
- Be identified to the pharmacist
- Be able to perform duties that non-icensed pharmacy personnel do
- Be qualified to have access to controlled substances
- Be able to assist the pharmacist within five minutes of the request
The rules don’t require the employee to work in the pharmacy at all times that it is open.
Read the full article here.
More articles on pharmacy:
FDA now requiring boxed warning for benzodiazepines
CVS accused of patient steering
HHS general counsel scolds Eli Lilly for halting 340B drug discounts