PAPER RESISTS TAMPERING PAPER RESISTS TAMPERING Tamper-resistant prescription pads come in many shapes and sizes but share similar characteristics: • Forms can't be counterfeited

• Paper can't be copied

• Writing can't be erased or modified

For the first year of the new rule, states can settle for one type of protection. Thereafter, all three must be met. Digg



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Facebook WASHINGTON  An obscure provision slipped into a $120 billion Iraq spending bill in May threatens to leave some poor and disabled Medicaid recipients without prescription drugs in October. In a case of unintended consequences, Congress inserted a rule cracking down on Medicaid fraud that requires that all non-electronic prescriptions for Medicaid patients be written on tamper-resistant paper. The rule was devised as a way to raise nearly $150 million over five years for public hospitals, the amount that Medicaid fraud costs the federal government. It has been criticized as too much, too soon by pharmacists, doctors, patient advocacy groups and state Medicaid officials. They say doctors could leave Medicaid, pharmacists could lose money and patients could be denied drugs. "Nobody really knew where this came from," says Jamila Edwards of the California Primary Care Association. "The patient's going to be in the middle thinking, 'How come I didn't get my medication?' " Today, the state Medicaid directors and more than 100 organizations will send a letter to congressional leaders asking for a one-year delay to the rule, according to Martha Roherty, director of the National Association of State Medicaid Directors. Under the rule, if a patient has a prescription on the wrong type of paper, pharmacists can fill it while seeking the prescriber's confirmation by phone, fax, e-mail or tamper-proof paper within three days. Jeffrey Kelman of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services says that should protect patients from being denied needed drugs. Also, the rule should help prevent overdoses and other problems caused by fraudulent prescriptions, he says. Medicaid serves more than 50 million people. Doctors, pharmacists and patient advocates say the new federal rule can't be implemented by Oct. 1. They warn that pharmacists could be forced to return Medicaid payments if they fill prescriptions improperly, and patients could be denied medications if the prescriptions aren't written on tamper-resistant pads. "In our state, very few doctors use these kinds of pads," says Doug Porter, the Medicaid director in Washington. "I think some people will be denied service, and that will be a very bad situation." Must-pass legislation such as May's spending bill for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan usually attracts unrelated amendments. In this case, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., won a one-year delay on a federal rule that would limit payments to public hospitals. Under Democrats' budget rules, it had to be paid for, and the Medicaid fraud crackdown was chosen. Twelve states already require the use of tamper-resistant pads in some instances, including for heavy-duty narcotics such as morphine and OxyContin. New York requires it for all prescriptions. Share this story: Digg del.icio.us Newsvine Reddit Facebook Conversation guidelines: USA TODAY welcomes your thoughts, stories and information related to this article. Please stay on topic and be respectful of others. Keep the conversation appropriate for interested readers across the map.