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2. Objectives. List the most common findings from OIG and SOARS reviewsIdentify the new areas of focus for OIG and SOARS in 2010 Use self assessment tools to identify areas of vulnerabilityUnderstand hazardous waste regulationsDiscuss pharmacy waste handling systems that comply with EPA requirem
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1. 1 Preparing for External Reviews in Pharmacy and Handling Hazardous DrugsSession 163 George Knight
John Lowe
2. 2 Objectives List the most common findings from OIG and SOARS reviews
Identify the new areas of focus for OIG and SOARS in 2010
Use self assessment tools to identify areas of vulnerability
Understand hazardous waste regulations
Discuss pharmacy waste handling systems that comply with EPA requirements
3. 3 External and Internal Review Programs Office of Inspector General Combined Assessment Program (OIG CAP)
System-wide Ongoing Assessment & Review Strategy (SOARS)
Joint Commission
Government Accountability Office
Drug Enforcement Agency
4. 4 OIG CAP PURPOSE Evaluate how well VA’s are providing access to quality care
Determine if management controls are in place to minimize vulnerability to fraud, waste and abuse
Provide fraud and integrity awareness training to VA staff
5. 5 OIG Organization Office of Investigations
Office of Audits and Evaluations
Office of Healthcare Inspections
Contract Review Office
Support
522 employees
6. 6 Current OIG CAP Topics Suicide prevention
Contracted/agency registered nurses
Quality management
Environment of care
Coordination of care
Medication management
7. 7 Current OIG CAP Topics Emergency/urgent care operations
Survey of health care experiences of patients
Physician privileges
Community Based Outpatient Clinics
Site specific information gathering
Compliance with performance measures
Onsite inspections
Contract review
8. 8 TRADITIONAL OIG CAP FOCUS AREAS IN PHARMACY Purchase cards
Physical security
Inventory management (returns, stock levels)
Controlled substances
9. 9 OIG Highlights March 2010 Postal employee arrested for diverting more than 2000 tablets of VA medications from the mail
VAMC employee arrested for taking 1300 oxycodone tablets from outgoing mail packages in VA mailroom
VAMC nurse arrested for diverting hydromorphone and Percocet, giving patients only a portion of the drugs prescribed
10. 10 OIG Summary ReportApril – September 2009 Inventory controls inadequate for non-controlled drugs in CMOP
Accountability lacking for non-controlled drug inventory in VA facilities
VA pharmacist stole $850,000 worth of non-controlled drugs
Pharmacy technician entered refills for patients, changed address and mailed controlled substances to his residence
11. 11 OIG Summary ReportApril – September 2009 VA nurse diverted controls from Pyxis and failed to proper document waste procedure
VA nurse removed hydromorphone from syringes and replaced with saline
Nursing instructor misrepresented herself to pharmacy, obtained access to Acudose and diverted hydromorphone
12. 12 OIG Audit of VA CMOP Inventory Accountability 2009 Inadequate wall to wall inventories
Inadequate tracking of dispensing by software
Significant differences between actual and projected on hand inventory
Inadequate control of inventory balance adjustments
Lack of control for drugs held for return
Inadequate separation of duties over critical system functions
Inadequate Econolink system access controls (everyone used the same password)
13. 13 OIG Audit of VA CMOP Inventory Accountability 2009 VHA Response
Wall to wall inventories completed quarterly
Each CMOP Director certified compliance with policy for returned drugs
Developed a statement of work to rewrite software to ensure complete tracking of inventory
Developed management policy to review inventory adjustments monthly
Established procedures to restrict one person from ordering, receiving and adjusting inventory
Generic password for Econolink was disabled
14. 14 OIG Audit of VHA Management of Non-Controlled Drugs 2009 Findings (Review of 31 facilities)
Drug dispensing not accurately and consistently recorded (transfer and returns to stock)
State home dispensing
Automatic Replenishment/Ward Stock
Label reprint function used inappropriately to dispense drugs
Drugs returned to stock not accurately captured
Lack of policy to monitor high risk non-controlled drugs
Wall to wall inventory data not used to improve accountability
15. 15 OIG Audit of VHA Management of Non-Controlled Drugs 2009 VHA Response
VHA will identify high risk drugs to monitor
PBM will re-emphasize the importance of tracking all dispensing activity and survey results
PBM will remind staff that drugs that leave pharmacy cannot be returned to stock
Inventory balances must be adjusted for drugs that don’t leave pharmacy and are returned to stock
Access to label reprint will be limited
PBM will develop standardized electronic formats for inventory and hold managers accountable for accuracy
16. 16 Current Focus Areas for OIG CAP Polypharmacy in nursing home and mental health
30 day medication reviews in nursing homes
Environment of care in pharmacy
USP Chapter 797 compliance
Medication management
17. 17 Medication Management Use of erythropoiesis stimulating agents in chronic kidney disease
After hours coverage for non-24 hour pharmacies
Flu vaccine in Community Living Centers
18. 18 Remaining OIG CAP Reviews for FY 2010 Louisville 9/13/2010
Canandaigua 9/13/2010
West Palm Beach 9/20/2010
19. 19 How to Prepare Review data requested
Use OIG survey guides if available
Use SOARS tools for self assessments
Conduct mock surveys in addition to table top reviews
Review OIGCAP reports on website
20. 20 SOARS System-wide Ongoing Assessment and Review Strategy
21. 21 Background Chartered by the NLB (National Leadership Board) at the Secretary’s Request in 2003 (voluntary visits)
Became a more permanent tool in 2004 and later mandatory for all facilities in 2006
Now complete 50-55 site visits a year using permanent team leaders and up to 250 trained consultants from VACO, VISNs and medical centers
Complete exit presentations using a Baldrige type scoring system and follow-up with a formal report with recommendations
22. 22 KEY PRINCIPLES Use Baldrige methods of looking at Approach, Deployment and Results for key systems
Work to resolve areas of repeat citations
Consult not inspect- work with the staff to help them understand the intent of standards
Affirm strengths and spread learning (through visits and through consultant experiences)
Teach to continually complete risk assessments
Involve leadership in all aspects of the visit
23. 23 ONGOING INITIATIVES Bi-monthly education sessions for the field facilities, SOARS Multi-segment films, strong practice dissemination
Maintain “state of the art” assessment guides
Continually updated trend reports for facilities, VISNs and program offices on the SOARS website
Monthly reports to the Under Secretary’s Coordination Committee for Quality and Safety (USCCQS) with top findings
Bi-monthly “heads up” report to the NDs for top issues to address
Change site visit report formats to simpler display with much more timely delivery
24. 24 SOARS Areas of Emphasis in Pharmacy Controlled Substances
Pharmacy Tour
General security based on VA Handbook 0730
Vault security and access
Inventory management (including high cost-high risk drugs)
Emergency drug cache
Environment of care (refrigerator monitoring)
Compliance with USP 797
25. 25 SOARS Areas of Emphasis in Pharmacy Anticoagulation (may include patient tracer)
Handling pharmaceutical waste
National patient safety goals
26. 26 Common Findings in Pharmacy and Medication Management Access to automated dispensing equipment (Pyxis, OmniCell) not terminated when employees leave
Pharmacy physical security not meeting requirements
National patient safety goals not fully implemented
Eye wash stations not tested and staff unable to demonstrate use
Controlled substance inspections not completed according to requirements
27. 27 Common Findings in Pharmacy and Medication Management Management of look alike/sound alike medications and other high risk drugs (anticoagulants) not consistent
Lack of effectiveness of medication reconciliation in all areas
Labeling and dating of multi-dose vials not consistently completed
28. 28 Preparation for SOARS Use assessment guides
Pre-reviews with internal facility and VISN teams
Use SOARS as practice session for Joint Commission
Contact SOARS pharmacists with questions in advance (approximately 35 pharmacists trained as SOARS consultants)
29. 29 SOARS Website Assessment guides
Training films
List of strong practices
Upcoming visit schedule
Trends report
http://soars.vssc.med.va.gov/Pages/default.aspx
30. 30 Handling Hazardous DrugsVA eHealth University 2010Caesars Palace, Las Vegas, NV August 9-12George Knight, RPhVISN 2 Network Pharmacy Executive/PBM Manager
31. 31 Hazardous Waste training for healthcare workers?? What’s Up? The EPA considers some chemicals, including some drugs, to be hazardous waste when discarded.
Having addressed the manufacturing industry, the EPA is now focusing on the Health Care System as the next largest contributing factor to environmental contamination.
32. 32 Why Focus on Pharmaceuticals? They are being found in the environment and in our public water works
Regulatory emphasis by all levels of the EPA(Environmental Protection Agency) local, state and federal
Standards require compliance with regulations; Joint Commission, Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF)……
VA Directive 2003-030 Management of Hazardous Chemicals
Why the focus on Pharmaceuticals?
Hospitals have been placed on the Federal EPA’s “hit list” because they are viewed as major polluters. For years the industry has gone with little scrutiny. Now with endocrine disruptors and other pharmaceuticals being found in drinking water, regulatory agencies are taking a closer look at the medical industry specifically, hospitals.
These regulations are not new. They have been around since the 1980’s. However, they have never really been enforced at hospitals. With the focus on enforcement also comes new interpretations as applied to healthcare and new regulations.
Where Have Waste Drugs Gone in the Past?
Primarily hospitals were concerned with rendering drugs unrecoverable
They would make slurries and sewer them, burn them in hospital incinerators, landfill them.
Today they are:
Sewered, treated as hazardous waste, burned as non-hazardous waste at a permitted facility, and treated as medical waste.
Why the focus on Pharmaceuticals?
Hospitals have been placed on the Federal EPA’s “hit list” because they are viewed as major polluters. For years the industry has gone with little scrutiny. Now with endocrine disruptors and other pharmaceuticals being found in drinking water, regulatory agencies are taking a closer look at the medical industry specifically, hospitals.
These regulations are not new. They have been around since the 1980’s. However, they have never really been enforced at hospitals. With the focus on enforcement also comes new interpretations as applied to healthcare and new regulations.
Where Have Waste Drugs Gone in the Past?
Primarily hospitals were concerned with rendering drugs unrecoverable
They would make slurries and sewer them, burn them in hospital incinerators, landfill them.
Today they are:
Sewered, treated as hazardous waste, burned as non-hazardous waste at a permitted facility, and treated as medical waste.
33. 33 Potential Problems Increased Occurrence of Cancer
Unusual Physiological Processes (Reproductive Impairment)
Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria
Augmented Toxicity of Chemical Mixtures
34. 34 Not just a fish story….
35. 35 Not just a fish story… In a major northeastern waterway, a 3 foot long northern pike was caught. Not remarkable until we are told that from the gills back, behind the grossly enlarged head, the fish had two complete bodies.
36. 36 Pharmaceutical Waste Generation IV Preparation
General compounding
Spills/breakage
Partially used vials/syringes
Discontinued/unused
Unused repacks (unit dose)
Patient’s personal medications
Outdated pharmaceuticals
37. 37 Hazardous Waste Regulations Require Proper Identification
Segregation & Storage
Manifesting and Transporting
Proper Disposal,
i.e. Incineration at a federally permitted incinerationsSite
38. 38 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) RCRA regulates the disposal of solid wastes enforced by the EPA and the States
Defines hazardous waste and procedures for handling and disposal of wastes
Most States have a hazardous waste program approved by the EPA
39. 39 EPA Universal Waste Rule Proposed addition of hazardous pharmaceutical waste to the Universal Waste Rule
Streamlined Management
Encourage disposal of non-hazardous pharmaceuticals as Universal Waste
Facilitate collection of personal medications from the public
Michigan and Florida have done this at the State level
40. 40 Categories of RCRA Hazardous Wastes: P-Listed Acutely hazardous
Sole active ingredient - unused
Empty – only if triple rinsed
Rinse solution is hazardous, or ….
Manage un-rinsed containers as hazardous (vials, IV tubing)
41. 41 Examples of P-Listed Wastes Arsenic Trioxide (chemotherapy)
Epinephrine (excluded if in used syringe; may be discarded as regulated medical waste) ** not EPI salts ** except MN
Nicotine (patch backing but not wrappers)
Warfarin > 0.3% (all Rx dosages)
Nitroglycerin (excluded federally and some states if in final dosage form)
Phentermine (1 of 2 Controlled Substances)
42. 42 Categories of RCRA Hazardous Wastes: U-Listed Toxic - not as disastrous as P
Sole active ingredient - unused
Empty containers
All contents have been removed through normal means and < 3% by weight remains = not hazardous
Residues removed from containers must be managed as hazardous waste
43. 43 Examples of U-Listed Wastes Chloral Hydrate (2nd CS)
Chlorambucil
Lindane
Warfarin < 0.3% (all Rx dosages exceed this percentage)
Saccharin
44. 44 Categories of RCRA Hazardous Wastes: Characteristic (D-Listed) Pharmaceutical, chemical formulations not on P-List or U-List, which exhibit one or more of the following characteristics:
Ignitability (nitroglycerin inj.)
Toxicity (M-cresol or thimerosol as preservative; fluvax; reserpine)
Corrosivity
Reactivity
45. 45 Examples of D-Listed or Characteristic Wastes Used or Unused, but only when present in concentrations at or above the indicated RCRA regulatory level:
Chloroform – 6.0 mg/L
Mercury – 0.2 mg/L; contains thimerosol and fails this threshold
Silver – 5.0 mg/L; silver nitrate applicators
Selenium – 1.0 mg/L; Selsun Blue
46. 46 When is an Outdated Drug Waste? At the time and place the decision is made to discard it
If a Reverse Distributor is used and the decision to discard is made there – we are still the generator of the waste.
We can ship creditable outdates to a reverse distributor as product. All non-credit materials must be handled as hazardous waste on-site, once we know they are not creditable. Keep a list.
47. 47 Uncreditable Items: Keep a list Ivax Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Albuterol aerosol
American Reagent Labs, Inc.
Alcohol, dehydrated
Purdue Frederick
Betadine solution
HUMCO
Collodion, flexible
48. 48 Pharmacy/Ward Procedures P-Listed: Use black container
U-Listed: Use black container
D-Listed: Use black container
Unlisted: Use red container
Regulated medical waste
Incinerated vs. sterilized
Un-creditable pharmacy returns
Partials, sweep-ups
49. 49 Labeling & Education Black dot labeling; U-Listed & Characteristic (D-Listed)
Caution Label; Special disposal required P-Listed + containers
Med cart containers
Listing by location
Develop a comprehensive Facility and departmental SOP
50. 50 Formulary List Cyclophosphamide Injection * U-listed
Black dot label
Toxic [U058]
Dexamethasone Injection * Characteristic
Black dot label
Flammable [D001]
Warfarin Sodium * P-listed - Conc. >0.3%
Caution Label
Toxic [P001]
51. 51 Chemotherapy Waste (U-Listed) Two waste streams for this waste are required
Trace Waste (Yellow chemo containers in Pharmacy)
EMPTY vials, syringes, IV bags
Soft waste: gowns, gloves, goggles, tubing and wipes
UNLESS overtly contaminated
Container holding any amount of free liquid
Overtly contaminated garments
Spill cleanup kits
52. 52 Chemotherapy Waste (U-Listed)
Bulk Waste
(black chemo containers)
EMPTY vials, syringes, IV bags. A container holding any amount of free liquid, overtly contaminated garments and spill cleanup kits.
Only style used on the nursing units
53. 53 Satellite Accumulation Good Idea to label as Satellite Accumulation
Must have the words “hazardous waste”
Must have a clear description of the waste
Date not required
54. 54 Storage Labeling Requirements The words “Hazardous Waste” must be on the container.
Clear description of the waste type must be neatly printed on the label.
Accumulation start date for 90 or 180 day areas.
55. 55 Generator Status Large quantity generator
> 2.2 lbs. “P”
> 2200 lbs./mo. non-acute
Small quantity generator
< 2.2 lbs. “P”
< 2200 lbs./mo. non-acute
56. 56 Additional Points Incompatible wastes must be properly segregated.
Weekly inspections are required to be documented for all long term hazardous waste storage areas (90 or 180 day areas).
57. 57 Additional Points Must have spill response equipment & containment equipment in the area
Secondary containment is required to prevent uncontrolled spills
Training requirements for long term storage areas
Within 6 months
Annual requirement
"Cradle-to-grave“ responsibility
58. 58 Consequences of Non-Compliance Compliance inspections
Fines / Penalties / Imprisonment
License revocation
Criminal citations / Civil actions
Corrective orders
08/18/2009 Department of Veterans Affairs Eastern Kansas Health Care System - civil penalty $51,501 & VA must also spend at least $482,069 on a management project.
There are serious repercussions to violations of the Hazardous Waste Regulations. Some states have even succeeded in getting criminal convictions against polluters (i.e. individuals within a company or institution)
The handling of hazardous waste must be taken seriously. Not only because fines can be levied but also because we need to live in the same environment that is being polluted. Simply put it is the right thing to do.
If you have questions please feel free to contact the Safety Department at ext. 2017.There are serious repercussions to violations of the Hazardous Waste Regulations. Some states have even succeeded in getting criminal convictions against polluters (i.e. individuals within a company or institution)
The handling of hazardous waste must be taken seriously. Not only because fines can be levied but also because we need to live in the same environment that is being polluted. Simply put it is the right thing to do.
If you have questions please feel free to contact the Safety Department at ext. 2017.
59. 59 Managing Our Waste Streams Regular Trash Packaging
Empty Bottles
Paper
Plastic
Recycle where possible
Sewer System Non-Haz IVs
NaCl, D5W
60. Managing Our Waste Streams Hazardous Waste P-listed & containers
U-listed
Characteristic waste
(D-listed)
Requires proper segregation, labeling & storage
Chemo Waste Trace chemo
Should be sent to a medical incinerator
Bulk chemo
Follows the requirements of the hazardous waste stream
61. 61 Questions, comments, concerns? Be sure to evaluate your area
Do you have waste that has not been evaluated (cleaning rags, other chemicals, equipment that automatically dumps into the sewer system)?
Do you have ample/proper spill kits?
Do you have proper postings?
Emergency contacts, spill plans, exit routes….