Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - (Page 14) AIRBORNE DRUG PARTICLES Up front In Depth Dangerous levels of drug particles may be affecting pharmacy workers ALAINA SCOTT, Senior Editor study by AlburtyLab Inc. claims thousands of pharmacy workers are exposed to particles of airborne drugs. But the study has left some pharmacists and technology manufacturers questioning its methods and the motive of the company funding the study. AlburtyLab and the University of Missouri Mass Spectrometry Facility carried out the study in five retail pharmacies to examine concentration levels, size characteristics, and chemical properties of pill dust generated by McKesson/Parata RDS Dispensing System, which uses air pressure to eject pills into prescription bottles, and ScriptPro SP 200 Robotic Prescription Dispensing System, which uses manual counting. “This study is not really anything different than we’ve been saying for a long time in various ways,” Michael Coughlin, CEO of ScriptPro, said. “Machines that use air pressure have some issues, we believe. We’ve been saying this to the industry since 2003.” The research indicates risk of airborne drug particles when pharmacists use air-pressure dispensing robots to fill prescriptions. The study also found that even pharmacists who manually dispense medications harm themselves by breathing a dangerous level of airborne particles. The study claimed that ScriptPro’s 200 dispensing machines caused no elevated levels of pill dust. ScriptPro LLC funded the study with an undisclosed amount of money, Coughlin said. But the company maintained that there is no conflict of interest because most studies are completed by people with a stake in the results. A Some pharmacists and other researchers have said that ScriptPro’s vested interest in this study skewed the results to show that the only safe way of dispensing medications is to use the funder’s product. Amy H. Snow, a certified industrial powerful drugs, such as cancer drugs, Snow said. Snow said OSHA, which regulates working safety conditions, studies the air breathed by pharmacists in a test of their personal breathing zones. “That is not the way they collected things,” Snow said, speaking of the disputed study. “They took area samples on the equipment.” She said air quality is not assessed through measurement of particles on the equipment used or dust sitting on counters. Instead, the air people are breathing should be monitored. “Pharmacies are inherently dusty places,” Tom Rhodes, executive vice president of Parata Systems, said. “You’ve got to ask yourself, has dust been a problem for pharmacy over the This ScriptPro machine uses gravity to dispense medication. hygienist and former Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) compliance inspector, agrees. “We don’t design the studies,” Coughlin said. “We pick topics that we think are of significance to the industry, and we have funded a number of studies.” The study included a quote from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) referring to the potential for injury to pharmacists and pharmacy technicians from exposure to hazardous drugs. The CDC statement was taken out of context because automated machines should not be dispensing hazardous medications and steps should be in place to handle past 100 years? And the answer is no. Over the past 100 years, we haven’t seen a federal or state lawsuit due to dust exposure.” Rhodes said the study “implicates every pharmacy out there that doesn’t use ScriptPro’s system.” Alburty said the company has been contacted by a wide range of government and corporate clients to design and conduct independent, third-party analysis of complex aerosol issues. Study researchers Alburty and Pamela S. Murowchick of AlburtyLab called for federal health and environmental regulatory agencies to immediately study this issue. So far, no agency has taken up the recommendation. W W W.D R U GTO P I C S .C O M 14 DRUG TOPICS DEC. 15, 2008 COURTESY OF SCRIPTPRO http://WWW.DRUGTOPICS.COM
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 Contents Up Front Up Front In Depth Letters Health-System Edition Cover Story: Controlled Substance Disposal a Growing Problem for Hospitals Pharmacists Hope for Speedy Approvals Deaths from C. Difficile Increasing PharmMD Teams with HealthSpring RX Care Commentary Ohio Hospital Automates Pharmacy The Business Outlook for 2009 OTC The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice New Products Viewpoint Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 (Page Cover1) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 (Page Cover2) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 (Page 1) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Contents (Page 2) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Contents (Page 8) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Contents (Page 9) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Up Front (Page 10) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Up Front (Page 11) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Up Front (Page 12) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Up Front (Page 13) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Up Front In Depth (Page 14) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Up Front In Depth (Page 15) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Letters (Page 16) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Cover Story: Controlled Substance Disposal a Growing Problem for Hospitals (Page H1) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Cover Story: Controlled Substance Disposal a Growing Problem for Hospitals (Page H2) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Cover Story: Controlled Substance Disposal a Growing Problem for Hospitals (Page H3) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Cover Story: Controlled Substance Disposal a Growing Problem for Hospitals (Page H4) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Pharmacists Hope for Speedy Approvals (Page H5) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Deaths from C. Difficile Increasing (Page H6) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Deaths from C. Difficile Increasing (Page H7) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - PharmMD Teams with HealthSpring (Page H8) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - PharmMD Teams with HealthSpring (Page 17) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - RX Care (Page 18) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - RX Care (Page 19) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - RX Care (Page 20) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - RX Care (Page 21) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Commentary (Page 22) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Commentary (Page 23) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Commentary (Page 24) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Ohio Hospital Automates Pharmacy (Page 25) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Ohio Hospital Automates Pharmacy (Page 26) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Ohio Hospital Automates Pharmacy (Page 27) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Ohio Hospital Automates Pharmacy (Page 28) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Ohio Hospital Automates Pharmacy (Page 29) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Business Outlook for 2009 (Page 30) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Business Outlook for 2009 (Page 31) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Business Outlook for 2009 (Page 32) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Business Outlook for 2009 (Page 33) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Business Outlook for 2009 (Page 34) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Business Outlook for 2009 (Page 35) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - OTC (Page 36) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - OTC (Page 37) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - OTC (Page 38) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - OTC (Page 39) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice (Page 40) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice (Page 41) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice (Page 42) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice (Page 43) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice (Page 44) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice (Page 45) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice (Page 46) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice (Page 47) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice (Page 48) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - The Pharmacist's Duty to Warn: Implications for Pharmacy Practice (Page 49) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - New Products (Page 50) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - New Products (Page 51) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - New Products (Page 52) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - New Products (Page 53) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - New Products (Page 54) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - New Products (Page 55) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 56) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page Cover3) Drug Topics - December 12, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page Cover4)
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