Questions and Answers about the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program
Q1:
What roles are available in MHS PDMP?
A:
There are eight different roles that MHS staff can register for:
- MHS Prescriber with NPI number - licensed, credentialed, and privileged staff who are authorized to prescribe controlled substances for outpatient use, including, but not limited to, doctors of osteopathy, doctors of medicine, doctors of dental surgery, doctors of podiatric medicine, and nurse practitioners
- Physician Assistants - licensed (or NCCPA certified), credentialed, and privileged Physician Assistants who are authorized to prescribe controlled substances for outpatient use
- MHS Pharmacist with NPI number - all pharmacists (outpatient, inpatient, and clinical) with a NPI number; pharmacists without a NPI number may register as a MHS Pharmacy delegate
- Optometrist - optometrists that are licensed, credentialed, and privileged to prescribe controlled substances for outpatient use
- Psychologists - psychologists that are licensed, credentialed, and privileged to prescribe controlled substances for outpatient use
- Medical Interns - interns and residents with a doctor of medicine or doctor of osteopathy degree, but not licensed, credentialed, and privileged to prescribe independently
- Pharmacy delegate - pharmacy technicians or pharmacists without a NPI number
- Prescriber delegate - all other staff, to include, but not limited to, corpsmen, independent duty corpsmen, independent medical corpsman, registered nurses, midwives, or other medical staff that cannot register in the MHS PDMP as of the provider roles
Q5:
Am I required to utilize the MHS PDMP, and if so, how often?
A:
In accordance with DHA Procedural Instruction 6010.02, Military Health System Prescription Drug Monitoring Program, providers and pharmacists are required to conduct a PDMP search to the greatest extent possible when there is a suspicion of patient misuse or diversion.
Providers are recommended to check the MHS PDMP:
- When the patient is new to the provider and a DEA Schedule II-IV controlled substance is prescribed
- When a new or renewal DEA Schedule II-IV controlled substance is prescribed for an acute condition
- No less frequently than every 3 months when prescribing controlled substances
Pharmacists, or pharmacy delegates, should check the MHS PDMP when processing a new or renewed DEA Schedule II-IV prescription except:
- When the quantity is prescribed for a 72-hour or less supply
- When the prescription is for a patient under the care of an oncologist or for a terminal patient who has discontinued curative treatment
- At the discretion of the pharmacist based on the patient’s consistent therapy, consistent provider (or provider team), and on-time controlled substance prescription filling
Providers and pharmacists should check the MHS PDMP when a beneficiary is restricted as part of the Prescription Monitoring Program. This includes:
- MHS GENESIS Sole Provider Alert for providers who intend to prescribe a restricted medication
- “LOCKED IN” warning of at the time of prescribing in AHLTA
- Pharmacy warning (in CHCS) or reject (in MHS GENESIS) indicating the beneficiary is locked into a prescriber or pharmacy
Q8:
What can I do as a MHS PDMP user?
A:
- View your patient's controlled substance prescription history by submitting a Patient Request.
- Select from a broad list of states to include prescriptions paid with cash or processed under other health insurance.
- Approve a delegate to assist with review of your patient reports.
- Use the bulk patient report function to expedite review.
- View your prescribed controlled substance history using your NPI within the MyRx report function.
- Access the MHS User Guide for help navigating the system; under Menu, click AWARxE User Guide.
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