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Call Kurtis: Pharmacists Concerned Employer Pressure Leads to Prescription Errors

SACRAMENTO (CBS13) — Anyone who has waited in a drug store for a prescription knows a pharmacy counter can be a busy place.

"It's a high-pace, high-stress environment," a former CVS pharmacy technician told CBS Boston Station WBZ-TV.

She did not want to be identified, but she believes that stress leads to mistakes.

"Somebody gets the wrong strength of medication, somebody gets the wrong number of pills," she said.

CBS13 has learned the California Board of Pharmacy has fined pharmacies a thousand times in the past two years for prescription errors.

Types of mistakes that happen include an allergy drug being given to a patient instead of a high blood pressure medication. In another case, a patient got something for acid reflux instead of an anti-depressant, and an arthritis drug was given to someone who needed a medicine for seizures.

The pharmacy technician believes a growing trend in pharmacies is behind all that stress and the errors. It is called performance metrics, a system used to measure how many prescriptions a pharmacist fills and how fast. It also counts flu shots and phone calls pharmacists make to patients urging them to fill prescriptions. If the pharmacist falls behind, she says, they'll hear about. "You didn't make all of your 50 phone calls. I want you to write an action plan to tell me how tomorrow you are going to get all of your prescriptions filled, get your phone calls made plus give out x number of flu shots," she said describing what pharmacists she worked with were told.

CVS says if metrics contributed to mistakes they would change the system. They insist it does not.

In a written statement the company said: "The health and safety of our customers is our number one priority and we have comprehensive policies and procedures in place to ensure prescription safety."

A survey of nearly 700 pharmacists conducted by the institute for safe medication practices found that more than 83 percent believed performance metrics contributed to dispensing errors.

Pharmacists are starting to speak out against metrics. Susan Holden is the president of the Massachusetts Association of Pharmacists. She worked under a metrics system at a different drug store chain. "It was very nerve-wracking, very stressful, sometimes tearful," she recalled.

Holden now works as a hospital pharmacist and she says metrics puts too much stress on pharmacists. "Ultimately, I was afraid of harming a patient," she said.

"We're concerned anytime pharmacists can be put in a position where the public could be jeopardized," said Virginia Herold with the California Board of Pharmacy.

Her agency regulates pharmacists. She doesn't think it's her agency's place to get in between employers and employees on how many prescriptions are filled.

"We advise don't go faster than it's safe to do so," Herold said.

Susan Holden believes if something doesn't change, the problem could get worse. "The worst case scenario, it could be a very dangerous prescription error. I think anybody could draw a conclusion about what could happen," she said.

The National Association of Boards of Pharmacy is urging states to restrict the use of metrics that are proven to compromise safety. Herold says the issue will be discussed at an upcoming meeting.

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