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Enhancement of Connecticut's Prescription Drug Monitoring Program

Award Information

Award #
2007-PM-BX-0028
Location
Congressional District
Status
Closed
Funding First Awarded
2007
Total funding (to date)
$314,206

Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2007, $314,206)

Since the beginning of FY 2002, Congress has appropriated funding to the U.S. Department of Justice to support the Harold Rogers Prescription Drug Monitoring Program. Prescription drug monitoring programs enhance the capacity of regulatory and law enforcement agencies to collect and analyze controlled substance prescription data through a centralized database administered by an authorized state agency. These programs are designed to help prevent and detect the diversion and abuse of pharmaceutical controlled substances, particularly at the retail level where no other automated information collection system exists.

States that have implemented prescription drug monitoring programs have the capability of collecting and analyzing prescription data much more efficiently than states without such programs, where the collection of prescription information requires the manual review of pharmacy files which is a very time consuming and invasive process. The increased efficiency of prescription drug monitoring programs allows for the early detection of abuse trends and possible sources of diversion.

The Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection's Drug Control Division will use the grant funds to develop and implement an electronic Prescription Drug Monitoring Program. The goals of the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program are to: identify drug diversion and drug abuse cases in a more timely fashion; identify prescribing drug trends; reduce investigation time; enhance a prescribers decision process when prescribing a drug therapy; enhance a pharmacist's decision process when dispensing a drug; and, decrease health care fraud. The Connecticut State Legislature recently passed a bill, signed by the Governor, establishing an advisory panel to: design the electronic Prescription Drug Monitoring Program; set thresholds for what constitutes suspicious activity; determine accessibility and allowing access to the information in the database; and, determine the format that the information will be made available. The Drug Control Division will work with local, state, and Federal law enforcement agencies, as well as with the State and local Prescribing Boards on various prescribing issues, to adopt rules, and to evaluate the achievement of the program goals, the performance measures, and the educational programs relating to the drug database and monitoring program.

CA/NCF

Date Created: August 20, 2007