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Prescription Monitoring Program Enhancement

Award Information

Award #
2010-PM-BX-0007
Location
Awardee County
Ada
Congressional District
Status
Closed
Funding First Awarded
2010
Total funding (to date)
$214,216

Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2010, $214,216)

Beginning in FY 2002, Congress appropriated funding to the U.S. Department of Justice to support the Harold Rogers Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP). Prescription monitoring programs 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 monitoring programs have the capability to collect and analyze prescription data much more efficiently than states without such programs, where the collection of prescription information requires the manual review of pharmacy files, a time-consuming and invasive process.

The Prescription Drug Monitoring Program assists states as they plan, implement, or enhance a PDMP to: build a state-level data collection and analysis system to enhance the capacity of regulatory and law enforcement agencies and public health officials for future prevention efforts; enhance existing programs' abilities to analyze and use collected data to identify drug abuse trends, identify and address sources of diversion, and increase the number of users of the PDMP; facilitate and participate in national evaluation efforts to assess efficiency and effectiveness; encourage and implement the exchange of information among states to prevent cross-border diversion; assess the efficiency and effectiveness of state-level programs to make improvements and encourage additional states to implement programs; and, enhance collaborations with law enforcement, prosecutors, treatment professionals, the medical community, and pharmacies to establish a comprehensive PDMP strategy.

The Idaho Board of Pharmacy will use the grant to enhance its Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) in order to reduce the inappropriate use of controlled substance prescriptions. The objective of this grant is to establish data analysis tools, provide educational presentations to law enforcement and healthcare providers on the PMP, and begin establishing information sharing with other states through the prescription monitoring information exchange (PMIX). Grant funds will also be used to purchase program equipment, such as computer programming software, hardware, staff travel expenses, and educational and training materials.

CA/NCF

Date Created: September 14, 2010