KASPER Reports now contain Ohio Data
Monday, August 15, 2011
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Posted by: Leila Faucette
Kentucky, Ohio to Share Drug Data through Interstate Prescription Monitoring Program Pilot Project Allows Users to Access Data from Both States FRANKFORT, KY (Aug. 8, 2011)
– Governor Steve Beshear announced today that Kentucky and Ohio are
automatically exchanging prescription medication data, following this
week’s launch of the electronic Prescription Monitoring Information
Exchange (PMIX). The announcement marks a highly anticipated milestone
for prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) and ongoing work to
fulfill a need to share data across state lines. The
PMIX program is a partnership between the Kentucky All Schedule
Prescription Electronic Reporting (KASPER) system and the Ohio Automated
Rx Reporting System (OARRS). "I
have long advocated for multi-state cooperation in fighting this
scourge of prescription drug abuse, because no state is an island,” said
Gov. Beshear. "I have personally spoken with Ohio Gov. John Kasich
about the importance of partnership on this issue, and I am very pleased
to launch this shared program today. I have no doubt that improved
monitoring across state lines will help to save lives.” Kentucky’s
Cabinet for Health and Family Services oversees KASPER, which is
considered a national model for prescription drug monitoring. "While
KASPER provides an effective tool for health care providers and law
enforcement officers in the fight against prescription drug abuse and
diversion, interstate data sharing among prescription drug monitoring
programs is needed to enhance the effectiveness of the programs as tools
to improve public health and safety,” said Health and Family Services
Cabinet Secretary Janie Miller. "Prescription drug abuse is a public
health epidemic and it simply isn’t enough to monitor drugs dispensed
only in our state. Having the ability to report data from other states
will dramatically strengthen our ability to monitor and detect abuse.” The
goal of PMIX is to help states implement a cost effective technology
solution to facilitate interstate prescription drug monitoring data
sharing. The program utilizes a centralized PMIX Hub server to
facilitate data sharing. Under
the pilot program, authorized users in Kentucky and Ohio can securely
access live PDMP data from both states’ prescription monitoring systems
utilizing the PMIX Hub server. For example, a physician in Kentucky
will be able to request a KASPER patient report and stipulate that they
need Ohio data included on the report. The resulting KASPER report will
include any prescription records that the Ohio PDMP provides for the
patient as well as the KASPER prescription records, and will identify in
which state each prescription was dispensed. "We
are extremely pleased with the success of the PMIX pilot and hope to
expand this program to other states,” said CHFS Inspector General Mary
Begley. "Sadly, prescription drug abuse continues to increase and we’re
now seeing more deaths from overdoses than fatal car accidents. The
reality is people are not obtaining these drugs only in Kentucky and we
need tools that provide broader understanding of where and when drugs
are being obtained.” Doctor
shopping (also called provider shopping) is the term used to describe
acquiring controlled pharmaceutical substances by deception. Doctor
shoppers often seek controlled substances from multiple providers and
cover increasingly large territories to obtain the drugs. "The
effectiveness of KASPER and other state PDMPs would increase
significantly if the available data included all controlled substance
prescriptions for a patient regardless of the state in which they were
dispensed,” said Dave Hopkins, who coordinates the KASPER program. "In
fact, our KASPER users overwhelmingly agree that the ability to access
information from other states would dramatically increase the
effectiveness of the system.” Several
states, including Kentucky, currently allow a prescriber, dispenser, or
law enforcement officer from another state to register and obtain
access to their PDMP. However, due to the effort required to establish
and maintain separate accounts with each state and review multiple
reports and formats, only a limited number of practitioners and law
enforcement officers have done so. "We
think the PMIX pilot will facilitate efforts to share prescription drug
monitoring program data among all states,” added Hopkins. The
PMIX project is sponsored by the U.S. Bureau of Justice Assistance
(BJA) with project management provided by the IJIS Institute.
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