Complaints Filed Against Pharmacies for Failure to Dispense
Contraceptives
IDFPR Vigorously Enforcing Gov. Blagojevich's Birth Control Rules
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[SEPT. 16, 2005] Chicago - The Department of Financial
and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) today filed three new complaints
against Illinois pharmacies that carry contraceptives for not
filling prescriptions for FDA approved contraceptives. Earlier this
year Gov. Rod Blagojevich submitted an emergency rule clarifying the
responsibilities of licensed retail pharmacies to fill prescriptions
for all FDA approved
contraceptives if the drug store dispenses birth control
medications. That rule became permanent in
August. Today's formal complaints charge that three licensed
pharmacies failed to comply with the
Pharmacy Practice Act and the new regulations, by refusing to fill
legally obtained prescriptions for
these drugs.
"When an Illinois woman walks into a drug store that
sells contraceptives in this state with a valid birth control
prescription, she has every right to be able to walk out with her
medicine," said Dean Martinez, Acting Secretary, IDFPR. "We will
continue to actively pursue any complaints our department receives
about violations of rules protecting women's access to medication
their doctors prescribe for them."
In a complaint filed against an Osco Pharmacy in St. Charles, IDFPR
alleges that the pharmacy had the drug in stock but refused to fill
the prescription. This incident occurred on July 6, 2005.
In the second complaint, IDFPR alleges that a
Walgreens pharmacist on duty told a nurse
practitioner that he would not fill the prescription
until he spoke with the doctor who wrote the
prescription. The doctor called back, but was told
that the pharmacist was off duty. The doctor asked
the pharmacist now on duty to fill the prescription.
The pharmacist refused. This occurred on June 27,
2005.
In the third instance, IDFPR alleges two counts of
failure to dispense contraceptives, based on the
Pharmacy Practice Act, and two counts of
unprofessional conduct. On March 8, a pharmacist in a Walgreens
Pharmacy located in West Peoria refused to fill a prescription,
although the pharmacy had the prescription in stock. The doctor then
called in an alternative prescription and the pharmacist also
refused to fill it.
In each of the complaints detailed above, the
respondent pharmacies will have the right to respond at a hearing
before any disciplinary action is taken.
An Illinois retail pharmacy has the responsibility to
fill prescriptions for all FDA approved drugs if they are in stock and, based on professional
pharmaceutical judgment, are not contraindicated for a medical
reason. The new rule more clearly spells out specific procedures to
be used when drug stores are presented with a prescription for birth
control pills.
The rule clearly defines the responsibilities of
licensed retail pharmacies in Illinois to fill all
FDA approved birth control prescriptions without
delay if the drugs are in stock and a legal
prescription has been presented. If the drugs
requested are not in stock, the pharmacy must do one of the
following: 1) provide a medically acceptable alternative drug as
approved by the prescriber, or, 2) at the request of the patient, a)
order the drug from their supplier, b) transfer the prescription to
a different drug store or c) return the prescription to the patient.