Pubdate: Thu, 30 Jun 2005 Source: Regina Leader-Post (CN SN) Copyright: 2005 The Leader-Post Ltd. Contact: http://www.canada.com/regina/leaderpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/361 Author: Janet French, Saskatchewan News Network; CanWest News Service DRUG ABUSE PREVENTION GOAL OF NEW DATABASE SASKATOON -- Saskatchewan health professionals will soon have access to a provincewide database containing the prescription information of everyone in the province. Saskatchewan Health is in the process of linking computers in pharmacies across the province to compile the data as part of the new Pharmaceuticals Information Program (PIP). The province created the program in response to recommendations from a coroner's inquest into the death of Darcy Dean Ironchild, a Saskatoon man who died in February 2000 from an overdose of prescription drugs. Ironchild received over 300 prescriptions in the year before his death. The system will prevent people from abusing prescription drugs and help pharmacists and doctors prevent drug interactions, assistant deputy minister of health Lawrence Krahn said. "If (a pharmacist was) filling a prescription and he might see, 'gee, this one might conflict with another medication you got prescribed to you last week, and possibly somewhere else,' they're then able to have a chat about that or (say) 'let's get back to your doctor and talk about that,'" Krahn said. In January, the legislature passed a law requiring all pharmacies to transmit information about all prescriptions filled there. By fall, all pharmacies across the province should be hooked up and doctors and pharmacists can begin accessing the database, Krahn said. The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan is anxiously awaiting PIP, associate registrar Brian Salte said. Currently, the college operates the so-called triplicate program to track drugs with the potential for abuse like narcotics, ritalin and codeine-containing medication. "The current program is limited by a variety of things," Salte said. Also, prescription information for First Nations patients are entered by hand and take a month to appear in the college's database, he said. The Saskatchewan College of Pharmacists also supports the program. "It's something we've proposing for many, many years now and we're glad that it's finally coming to fruition," college registrar Ray Joubert said. Unlike each pharmacy's database, PIP will include prescriptions patients filled at other pharmacies. In times when thieves pilfer hard disks full of credit card numbers, people should be asking tough questions about how the privacy of their information in this database will be protected, said Wendy Armstrong, an independent health policy analyst and board member of the Alberta branch of the Consumers' Association of Canada. "There is some potential benefit to a database of all the prescriptions someone is on being accessible to certain key professionals at certain key times," Armstrong said. "But the risks and benefits to individual citizens are in the details, and the devil is in the details." Consumers should find out if health professionals need their permission to access PIP and if they themselves can access the information the database contains about them, Armstrong said. Professionals should be checking the accuracy of the data with patients and be aware of the limitations in the information collected, she said. It's important the information stays only in the hands of people who are meant to see it, Armstrong said. "We see an awful lot of discrimination based on one's health information." Patients who wish to will be able to "mask" their prescription information from being seen, Krahn said, but the province hasn't worked out the details of that process. Although the Health Department takes the protection of privacy seriously, Krahn said, they must also consider those who intend to abuse prescription drugs may also choose to opt out. Pharmacists and doctors can refuse to dispense or prescribe drugs if a patient's masking habits seem suspicious, Krahn said. Armstrong encourages consumers to enquire about information is collected, how it will be used, and by whom. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth