Guest guest Posted November 17, 2010 Report Share Posted November 17, 2010 Steve’s signature is scanned into our EMR and it puts that signature on the rx’s that are faxed out of the system to the pharmacies. Starting this year, the pharmacies have been rejecting those rx’s, stating that they need an “original” signature. Typically, they fax it to us, we print it out, Steve signs it, and we scan it and fax it back. Mind you, the signature is his original signature and cannot be generated except under his user id/password. This is NOT consistent among pharmacies. And they will still take a verbal, which makes no sense to me whatsoever. It is a royal pain. I don’t know about the iPad thing, but that would be worth looking into since we’re looking at migrating to an off-site server (ASP) and using an iPad when the tablet breaks down. Pratt Office Manager Oak Tree Internal Medicine P.C www.prattmd.info From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2010 9:32 AM To: Subject: Sign a prescription and then FAX I am hoping one of my very smart colleagues can help me out here. For a bunch of prescriptions (schedule III think ) you had to have the provider SIGN the script before it was faxed to a pharmacy. For the last two years, despite having an EMR for many of those scripts (ambien, lyrica, vicodin) we had the extra pain of having to PRINT those RXs so I could sign them, then have a staff person fax them to the right pharmacy. This is painful and often things get lost of the faxes don't always go through. I was under the impression that we just had a better EMR that could incorporate my signature or way for me to sign on the computer it could be auto-faxed through the system to the pharmacy (or through an e-scribe). But in my own experiments I know hear that it was the DEA that insists that everything get printed and signed for the schedule III. There are some nifty programs for ipad which can do scripts and let you sign them on the screen--and then fax them over the internet 3g or wifi-- (Can you sign stuff online in practice fusion?)-- would that be ok or is it STILL a violation since I did not physically print and sign it? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2010 Report Share Posted November 17, 2010 iPad not so useful because you can't print from it (yet), o/w I'd get one Steve’s signature is scanned into our EMR and it puts that signature on the rx’s that are faxed out of the system to the pharmacies. Starting this year, the pharmacies have been rejecting those rx’s, stating that they need an “original” signature. Typically, they fax it to us, we print it out, Steve signs it, and we scan it and fax it back. Mind you, the signature is his original signature and cannot be generated except under his user id/password. This is NOT consistent among pharmacies. And they will still take a verbal, which makes no sense to me whatsoever. It is a royal pain. I don’t know about the iPad thing, but that would be worth looking into since we’re looking at migrating to an off-site server (ASP) and using an iPad when the tablet breaks down. Pratt Office Manager Oak Tree Internal Medicine P.C www.prattmd.info From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2010 9:32 AMTo: Subject: Sign a prescription and then FAX I am hoping one of my very smart colleagues can help me out here. For a bunch of prescriptions (schedule III think ) you had to have the provider SIGN the script before it was faxed to a pharmacy. For the last two years, despite having an EMR for many of those scripts (ambien, lyrica, vicodin) we had the extra pain of having to PRINT those RXs so I could sign them, then have a staff person fax them to the right pharmacy. This is painful and often things get lost of the faxes don't always go through. I was under the impression that we just had a better EMR that could incorporate my signature or way for me to sign on the computer it could be auto-faxed through the system to the pharmacy (or through an e-scribe). But in my own experiments I know hear that it was the DEA that insists that everything get printed and signed for the schedule III. There are some nifty programs for ipad which can do scripts and let you sign them on the screen--and then fax them over the internet 3g or wifi-- (Can you sign stuff online in practice fusion?)-- would that be ok or is it STILL a violation since I did not physically print and sign it? -- M.D.www.elainemd.comOffice: Go in the directions of your dreams and live the life you've imagined. This email transmission may contain protected and privileged, highly confidential medical, Personal and Health Information (PHI) and/or legal information. The information is intended only for the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended recipient of this material, you may not use, publish, discuss, disseminate or otherwise distribute it. If you are not the intended recipient, or if you have received this transmission in error, please notify the sender immediately and confidentially destroy the information that email in error. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2010 Report Share Posted November 17, 2010 If you use dropbox you can, now don't ask me how... iPad not so useful because you can't print from it (yet), o/w I'd get one Steve’s signature is scanned into our EMR and it puts that signature on the rx’s that are faxed out of the system to the pharmacies. Starting this year, the pharmacies have been rejecting those rx’s, stating that they need an “original” signature. Typically, they fax it to us, we print it out, Steve signs it, and we scan it and fax it back. Mind you, the signature is his original signature and cannot be generated except under his user id/password. This is NOT consistent among pharmacies. And they will still take a verbal, which makes no sense to me whatsoever. It is a royal pain. I don’t know about the iPad thing, but that would be worth looking into since we’re looking at migrating to an off-site server (ASP) and using an iPad when the tablet breaks down. Pratt Office Manager Oak Tree Internal Medicine P.C www.prattmd.info From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2010 9:32 AMTo: Subject: Sign a prescription and then FAX I am hoping one of my very smart colleagues can help me out here. For a bunch of prescriptions (schedule III think ) you had to have the provider SIGN the script before it was faxed to a pharmacy. For the last two years, despite having an EMR for many of those scripts (ambien, lyrica, vicodin) we had the extra pain of having to PRINT those RXs so I could sign them, then have a staff person fax them to the right pharmacy. This is painful and often things get lost of the faxes don't always go through. I was under the impression that we just had a better EMR that could incorporate my signature or way for me to sign on the computer it could be auto-faxed through the system to the pharmacy (or through an e-scribe). But in my own experiments I know hear that it was the DEA that insists that everything get printed and signed for the schedule III. There are some nifty programs for ipad which can do scripts and let you sign them on the screen--and then fax them over the internet 3g or wifi-- (Can you sign stuff online in practice fusion?)-- would that be ok or is it STILL a violation since I did not physically print and sign it? -- M.D.www.elainemd.comOffice: Go in the directions of your dreams and live the life you've imagined. This email transmission may contain protected and privileged, highly confidential medical, Personal and Health Information (PHI) and/or legal information. The information is intended only for the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended recipient of this material, you may not use, publish, discuss, disseminate or otherwise distribute it. If you are not the intended recipient, or if you have received this transmission in error, please notify the sender immediately and confidentially destroy the information that email in error. -- Sangeetha Murthy M.D7830 mont Mesa Blvd #287San Diego, CA 92111www.mypcponline.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2010 Report Share Posted November 17, 2010 My understanding is that the “new” iPad (this is according to Steve) has network printing capabilities. My understanding is that if we have an ASP (server off-site), the iPad is connecting to the off-site server, and telling the server to print to our network printer, thus printing from the iPad indirectly. Maybe my understanding of this is wrong, though, since we’re not actually using the iPad in our office yet (it’s still a pipe dream!) Pratt Office Manager Oak Tree Internal Medicine P.C www.prattmd.info From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2010 9:49 AM To: Subject: Re: Sign a prescription and then FAX iPad not so useful because you can't print from it (yet), o/w I'd get one On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 9:47 AM, Pratt wrote: Steve’s signature is scanned into our EMR and it puts that signature on the rx’s that are faxed out of the system to the pharmacies. Starting this year, the pharmacies have been rejecting those rx’s, stating that they need an “original” signature. Typically, they fax it to us, we print it out, Steve signs it, and we scan it and fax it back. Mind you, the signature is his original signature and cannot be generated except under his user id/password. This is NOT consistent among pharmacies. And they will still take a verbal, which makes no sense to me whatsoever. It is a royal pain. I don’t know about the iPad thing, but that would be worth looking into since we’re looking at migrating to an off-site server (ASP) and using an iPad when the tablet breaks down. Pratt Office Manager Oak Tree Internal Medicine P.C www.prattmd.info From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2010 9:32 AM To: Subject: Sign a prescription and then FAX I am hoping one of my very smart colleagues can help me out here. For a bunch of prescriptions (schedule III think ) you had to have the provider SIGN the script before it was faxed to a pharmacy. For the last two years, despite having an EMR for many of those scripts (ambien, lyrica, vicodin) we had the extra pain of having to PRINT those RXs so I could sign them, then have a staff person fax them to the right pharmacy. This is painful and often things get lost of the faxes don't always go through. I was under the impression that we just had a better EMR that could incorporate my signature or way for me to sign on the computer it could be auto-faxed through the system to the pharmacy (or through an e-scribe). But in my own experiments I know hear that it was the DEA that insists that everything get printed and signed for the schedule III. There are some nifty programs for ipad which can do scripts and let you sign them on the screen--and then fax them over the internet 3g or wifi-- (Can you sign stuff online in practice fusion?)-- would that be ok or is it STILL a violation since I did not physically print and sign it? -- M.D. www.elainemd.com Office: Go in the directions of your dreams and live the life you've imagined. This email transmission may contain protected and privileged, highly confidential medical, Personal and Health Information (PHI) and/or legal information. The information is intended only for the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended recipient of this material, you may not use, publish, discuss, disseminate or otherwise distribute it. If you are not the intended recipient, or if you have received this transmission in error, please notify the sender immediately and confidentially destroy the information that email in error. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2010 Report Share Posted November 17, 2010 All of my scripts are turned into PDFs prior to faxing with the signature embedded in it.If the pharmacy requires a wet signature, we create the PDF without the signature, load it into a PDF editor, sign it, save it back as PDF and then fax it .. all paperless but time consuming with the extra steps. My understanding is that the “new” iPad (this is according to Steve) has network printing capabilities. My understanding is that if we have an ASP (server off-site), the iPad is connecting to the off-site server, and telling the server to print to our network printer, thus printing from the iPad indirectly. Maybe my understanding of this is wrong, though, since we’re not actually using the iPad in our office yet (it’s still a pipe dream!) Pratt Office Manager Oak Tree Internal Medicine P.C www.prattmd.info From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2010 9:49 AM To: Subject: Re: Sign a prescription and then FAX iPad not so useful because you can't print from it (yet), o/w I'd get one On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 9:47 AM, Pratt wrote: Steve’s signature is scanned into our EMR and it puts that signature on the rx’s that are faxed out of the system to the pharmacies. Starting this year, the pharmacies have been rejecting those rx’s, stating that they need an “original” signature. Typically, they fax it to us, we print it out, Steve signs it, and we scan it and fax it back. Mind you, the signature is his original signature and cannot be generated except under his user id/password. This is NOT consistent among pharmacies. And they will still take a verbal, which makes no sense to me whatsoever. It is a royal pain. I don’t know about the iPad thing, but that would be worth looking into since we’re looking at migrating to an off-site server (ASP) and using an iPad when the tablet breaks down. Pratt Office Manager Oak Tree Internal Medicine P.C www.prattmd.info From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2010 9:32 AM To: Subject: Sign a prescription and then FAX I am hoping one of my very smart colleagues can help me out here. For a bunch of prescriptions (schedule III think ) you had to have the provider SIGN the script before it was faxed to a pharmacy. For the last two years, despite having an EMR for many of those scripts (ambien, lyrica, vicodin) we had the extra pain of having to PRINT those RXs so I could sign them, then have a staff person fax them to the right pharmacy. This is painful and often things get lost of the faxes don't always go through. I was under the impression that we just had a better EMR that could incorporate my signature or way for me to sign on the computer it could be auto-faxed through the system to the pharmacy (or through an e-scribe). But in my own experiments I know hear that it was the DEA that insists that everything get printed and signed for the schedule III. There are some nifty programs for ipad which can do scripts and let you sign them on the screen--and then fax them over the internet 3g or wifi-- (Can you sign stuff online in practice fusion?)-- would that be ok or is it STILL a violation since I did not physically print and sign it? -- M.D. www.elainemd.com Office: Go in the directions of your dreams and live the life you've imagined. This email transmission may contain protected and privileged, highly confidential medical, Personal and Health Information (PHI) and/or legal information. The information is intended only for the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended recipient of this material, you may not use, publish, discuss, disseminate or otherwise distribute it. If you are not the intended recipient, or if you have received this transmission in error, please notify the sender immediately and confidentially destroy the information that email in error. -- Graham Chiuhttp://www.compkarori.co.nz:8090/Synapse - the use from anywhere EMR. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2010 Report Share Posted November 17, 2010 What I've done - still not convenient - is fax the Rx'd for controlled substances that can be called in - ie Valium -- then call the pharmacy voicemail and leave a short message - Fax for Patient X is called in for X, Y, Z meds. I usually don't go through the whole dosing, etc, just verbally confirm the fax is real. The local pharmacies seem to accept this as a " verbal " message and then take all the detailed info off the fax. Not ideal, but works OK. Locke, MD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2010 Report Share Posted November 18, 2010 I have a contract with patients on controlled substances -- they need to come in every 3 months for med check/refills. Yes it is a very boring appointment for most stable patients, but almost every med check appointment has an " oh by the way. " And the visit is usually covered by insurance, unlike the psychiatrist appointments (not saying that is right -- I would love it if all my benzo patients went to a psychiatrist). Controlled substance refills used to be the bane of my prescribing existence, and now I look forward to seeing those patients, discussing usage, risks/benefits/habituation, and alternative treatments. It is an education piece for at least 2 years -- I still have to email some and remind them... And yes, some folks don't want to come in every 3 months, and they have gone to " hamster wheel " clinics that do not have time to see them, so they get the refill -- but I don't do it... part of my transition to becoming a " non-work-a-holic " is saying NO to some non-compensated chores... a Garrido, ARNP www.villagefamilyclinic.com > > > > > I am hoping one of my very smart colleagues can help me out here. > > > > For a bunch of prescriptions (schedule III think ) you had to have > the provider SIGN the script before it was faxed to a pharmacy. For the > last two years, despite having an EMR for many of those scripts (ambien, > lyrica, vicodin) we had the extra pain of having to PRINT those RXs so I > could sign them, then have a staff person fax them to the right pharmacy. > This is painful and often things get lost of the faxes don't always go > through. > > I was under the impression that we just had a better EMR that could > incorporate my signature or way for me to sign on the computer it could be > auto-faxed through the system to the pharmacy (or through an e-scribe). But > in my own experiments I know hear that it was the DEA that insists that > everything get printed and signed for the schedule III. > > There are some nifty programs for ipad which can do scripts and let you sign > them on the screen--and then fax them over the internet 3g or wifi-- (Can > you sign stuff online in practice fusion?)-- would that be ok or is it STILL > a violation since I did not physically print and sign it? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2010 Report Share Posted November 18, 2010 If your prescriptions come to you in electronic form, you can use Snagit to screen capture the Rx image, use your mouse or electonic pen to check the refills, etc, and sign, and fax back to pharmacy directly from Snagit (print it to your fax modem.) I am hoping one of my very smart colleagues can help me out here. For a bunch of prescriptions (schedule III think ) you had to have the provider SIGN the script before it was faxed to a pharmacy. For the last two years, despite having an EMR for many of those scripts (ambien, lyrica, vicodin) we had the extra pain of having to PRINT those RXs so I could sign them, then have a staff person fax them to the right pharmacy. This is painful and often things get lost of the faxes don't always go through. I was under the impression that we just had a better EMR that could incorporate my signature or way for me to sign on the computer it could be auto-faxed through the system to the pharmacy (or through an e-scribe). But in my own experiments I know hear that it was the DEA that insists that everything get printed and signed for the schedule III. There are some nifty programs for ipad which can do scripts and let you sign them on the screen--and then fax them over the internet 3g or wifi-- (Can you sign stuff online in practice fusion?)-- would that be ok or is it STILL a violation since I did not physically print and sign it? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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