Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

British Columbia

College could force doctors to use PharmaNet after study reveals most ignore it

Only 30 per cent of doctors using PharmaNet system to check the drug history of patients, and the B.C. College of Physicians says that must change.

B.C. physicians told to start using PharmaNet database after study reveals most ignore it

Only 30 per cent of B.C. doctors are using the PharmaNet drug tracking system despite a spike in opioid overdoses.

The body that governs physicians in B.C. says a policy is in the works that willforce doctors to start checking patient drug history before writing a prescription.

The move comes on the heels of anew study thatrevealed less than 30 per cent of doctors actually use thePharmaNet drug tracking system.

The issue is particularly urgent now that more people in B.C. are dying ofopioid overdoses than in alcohol and drug related carcrashes every year.

"Our profession is responsible for writing a lot of the prescriptions that underliethese tragic overdose deaths," saidDr.AilveMcNestry, deputy registrar with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of B.C."We have to take responsibility for that."

McNestry says the new policy is currently being drafted and could be in place by 2016.

The study was conducted by thethe Urban Health Research Initiative and the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS.PharmaNet is a province-wide network that tracks all prescription drugsdispensed at B.C. pharmacies.

McNestrybelieves there are several factors leading to theto thelow PharmaNetuseby doctors, but that none constitute a justifiable reason for skipping the search.

"'I have to get patient consent to access PharmaNet, there is a monthly fee, then I actually have to look at it, and that takes time," said McNestry, outlining some of the doctor complaints. "None of these things add up to a single valid excuse for not accessing PharmaNet."


With files from Dan Burritt