Legislature(2021 - 2022)BARNES 124

05/13/2022 09:00 AM House LABOR & COMMERCE

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Please Note Time Change --
+ SB 132 CONTROLLED SUB. DATA: EXEMPT VETERINARIAN TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
+= SB 190 REGULATORY COMMISSION AK/REFUSE UTILITIES TELECONFERENCED
Moved HCS CSSB 190(L&C) Out of Committee
        SB 132-CONTROLLED SUB. DATA: EXEMPT VETERINARIAN                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:15:12 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  SPOHNHOLZ announced  that the  final order  of business                                                               
would be  SENATE BILL 132,  "An Act exempting  veterinarians from                                                               
the  requirements   of  the  controlled   substance  prescription                                                               
database."  [Before the committee was HCS SB 132(HSS).]                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:15:38 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  ROGER  HOLLAND,  Alaska   State  Legislature,  as  prime                                                               
sponsor, introduced SB 132.   The most important item, he stated,                                                               
is  that  veterinarians  are  not  trained  in  the  1996  Health                                                               
Insurance Portability and Accountability  Act (HIPAA), and one of                                                               
the  requirements  of  participating  in  the  Prescription  Drug                                                               
Monitoring Program (PDMP) is that  they must query and review the                                                               
personal information of  pet owners.  This is  a financial burden                                                               
for  veterinarians, he  continued, and  it's something  the state                                                               
should not  be requiring  them to  do.   Further, he  opined that                                                               
it's something they should not be allowed to do.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:16:26 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NIKKI   ROSE,  Staff,   Senator  Roger   Holland,  Alaska   State                                                               
Legislature, on  behalf of Senator  Holland, prime sponsor  of SB
132,  provided  the  sectional  analysis for  HCS  SB  132  (HSS)                                                               
[included in  the committee packet],  titled "CS for  Senate Bill                                                               
132  Controlled  Substance  Data  Exemption  for  Veterinarians,"                                                               
which read  as follows [original  punctuation provided  with some                                                               
formatting changes]:                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 1                                                                                                                     
     AS 17.30.200(k) is amended by                                                                                              
     Remove "Dispensing, prescribing, or administering".                                                                        
     Adds  "dispensing,  prescribing, or  administering"  to                                                                    
     section (A)                                                                                                                
     Adds  "dispensing, prescribing,  or administering"  and                                                                    
     adds "or" to section (B)                                                                                                   
     Adds a new subsection to AS 17.30.200 (k)                                                                                  
          (C) "prescribing a controlled substance if the                                                                        
     practitioner is a veterinarian                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 2                                                                                                                     
     AS 17.30.200(t) is amended to read:                                                                                        
     (1) the  practitioner is a veterinarian  licensed under                                                                    
     AS  08.98  who  is   dispensing  a  prescription  of  a                                                                    
     controlled  substance in  a quantity  intended to  last                                                                    
     for not more than three days  or who did not dispense a                                                                    
     controlled   substance  during   the  daily   reporting                                                                    
     period; or                                                                                                                 
     (2) a  controlled substance  is (A)  [(1)] administered                                                                    
     to a  patient at (i)  [(A)] a health care  facility; or                                                                    
     (ii)  [(B)]  a  correctional  facility;  or  (B)  [(2)]                                                                    
     dispensed to a  patient for an outpatient  supply of 24                                                                    
     hours  or  less  at  a  hospital  (i)  [(A)]  inpatient                                                                    
     pharmacy; or (ii)[(B)] emergency department.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 3                                                                                                                     
     AS 17.30.200(u)  is amended by  adding a  new paragraph                                                                    
     to read:                                                                                                                   
     (6) "practitioner" means                                                                                                   
          (A) a physician, dentist, advanced practice                                                                           
     registered      nurse,     optometrist,      scientific                                                                    
     investigator, veterinarian,  or other  person licensed,                                                                    
     registered,  or  otherwise   permitted  to  distribute,                                                                    
     dispense,  conduct  research  with respect  to,  or  to                                                                    
     administer or  use in teaching  or chemical  analysis a                                                                    
     controlled  substance  in  the course  of  professional                                                                    
     practice or research in the state;                                                                                         
          (B) a pharmacy, hospital, or other institution                                                                        
     licensed,   registered,  or   otherwise  permitted   to                                                                    
     distribute,  dispense,  conduct research  with  respect                                                                    
     to,  or to  administer  a controlled  substance in  the                                                                    
     course  of professional  practice  or  research in  the                                                                    
     state.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:19:08 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ  announced the  start of invited  testimony on                                                               
HCS SB 132(HSS).                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:20:21 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MCKAYLA   DICK,   DVM,    Past   President,   Alaska   Veterinary                                                               
Association,  provided invited  testimony  in support  of HCS  SB
132(HSS).   She said veterinarians  across Alaska are  in support                                                               
of exemptions  from the PDMP because  it is a system  that is not                                                               
working for veterinarians when animals  don't have an identifier.                                                               
There are  key issues with  identifiers, she stated,  [Alaska] is                                                               
lacking veterinarians  as well as  technicians who can  help with                                                               
that,  and  a lot  of  money  is  being spent  on  investigations                                                               
throughout that process.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:21:11 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PAM   VENTGEN,   Executive   Director,   Alaska   State   Medical                                                               
Association  (ASMA), provided  invited  testimony expressing  the                                                               
association's  concerns with  HCS  SB 132(HSS).    She said  ASMA                                                               
represents  physicians  across  Alaska  and  has  concerns  about                                                               
veterinarians  being fully  exempt from  the PDMP.   She  related                                                               
that ASMA  does support the amendments  to SB 132.   She said the                                                               
amendment that  would exempt veterinarians  from having  to check                                                               
the  PDMP  when  prescribing,  and  the  amendment  that  exempts                                                               
veterinarians from  logging into  the PDMP  on days  their clinic                                                               
has not dispensed  medications, make the PDMP less  onerous.  The                                                               
PDMP  is cumbersome  for all  practitioners  and physicians,  she                                                               
pointed  out, and  they have  complained  about that.   But,  she                                                               
continued,  Alaska  currently  ranks  highest in  the  nation  in                                                               
overdose  deaths,  so this  is  not  the  time  to back  down  on                                                               
monitoring  of controlled  substances.   While ASMA  supports the                                                               
amendments  that  make [reporting]  a  little  less onerous,  she                                                               
continued,  ASMA doesn't  think veterinarians  should be  totally                                                               
exempt from the PDMP.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:23:25 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RACHEL  BERNGARTT,  DVM,  Chair, Board  of  Veterinary  Examiners                                                               
(BOVE), provided  invited testimony  in support of  SB 132  via a                                                               
PowerPoint  presentation, titled  "Why It  Makes Sense  to Exempt                                                               
Veterinarians  from the  Prescription  Drug Monitoring  Program."                                                               
She noted  that the presentation,  which has not been  updated to                                                               
reflect  the  amendments,  was   prepared  by  the  Alaska  State                                                               
Veterinary Medical  Association (AKVMA) and  that as a  member of                                                               
BOVE she contributed to the presentation.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERNGARTT  turned to the second  slide and said SB  132 began                                                               
as an  act exempting veterinarians  but now she  understands that                                                               
it  is  called  an  act  relating  to  the  controlled  substance                                                               
prescription  database.   She  stated that  both  AKVMA and  BOVE                                                               
support  SB 132.   She  further noted  that the  Alaska Board  of                                                               
Pharmacy supports  SB 132 and supports  full veterinary exemption                                                               
from the PDMP.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERNGARTT  moved to the  third slide and  provided background                                                               
on  the PDMP.   She  said  the PDMP  was established  in 2008  by                                                               
Senate  Bill  196,  but  in response  to  the  increasing  opioid                                                               
epidemic  the PDMP  was  amended in  2017 by  House  Bill 159  to                                                               
include   all  Drug   Enforcement  Administration   (DEA)  permit                                                               
holders, including  veterinarians.  She noted  that neither AKVMA                                                               
nor BOVE  were consulted  regarding this  amendment.   She stated                                                               
that  under [HCS  SB 132(HSS)],  veterinarians who  prescribe but                                                               
script out  the prescriptions  will be  exempt from  querying and                                                               
reporting, and  that burden will  be passed on to  the pharmacist                                                               
to  query and  report.   She further  stated that  under [HCS  SB
132(HSS)],  PDMP  reporting will  be  required  for all  actively                                                               
licensed  practitioners  who  hold  a  federal  DEA  registration                                                               
number  and  who  prescribe, administer,  or  dispense  federally                                                               
scheduled II-IV controlled  substances in Alaska.   So, she said,                                                               
those  veterinarians  who  dispense   in  Alaska  will  still  be                                                               
required to query  and report.  According to the  Alaska Board of                                                               
Pharmacy,  Dr. Berngartt  continued,  about  65 veterinarians  in                                                               
Alaska still  directly dispense  and [HCS  SB 132(HSS)]  will not                                                               
help those  veterinarians.  Given  the shortage  of veterinarians                                                               
and veterinary time, she added,  [that requirement] is a big deal                                                               
for those 65 veterinarians.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERNGARTT proceeded  to the fourth slide and  stated that the                                                               
PDMP  is not  an effective  database for  veterinarians or  their                                                               
patients.   The  PDMP  was established  for  human medicine,  she                                                               
pointed out,  a query is  made on  the individual who  brings the                                                               
animal  to  the veterinarian  and  human  data is  obtained,  not                                                               
animal data.   She said veterinarians  are not trained in  how to                                                               
assess  this human  data that  they are  being mandated  to view.                                                               
Additionally,  she  noted,  veterinarians  are  not  mandated  to                                                               
assess  this  human  data,  they  are mandated  to  view  it  and                                                               
mandated  to report.    So, while  some of  that  burden will  be                                                               
removed,  she  stated,  the  65  veterinarians  who  do  directly                                                               
dispense will still be stuck in that quandary.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:27:54 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERNGARTT displayed the fifth  slide and said the querying of                                                               
human  PDMP  information  is an  invasion  into  an  individual's                                                               
medical  privacy.   She  related  that,  by  and large,  law  has                                                               
determined that  HIPAA regulations  do not apply  specifically to                                                               
the PDMP.  However, she  continued, veterinarians do not have the                                                               
privacy infrastructure  that human medical offices  have, such as                                                               
screen shields  and isolated computers.   While technically HIPAA                                                               
may not  apply to PDMPs,  she said,  there is the  expectation of                                                               
private   human  health   data  by   a  veterinarian's   clients.                                                               
Veterinarians, she  pointed out,  have access  to more  than just                                                               
opiate  information  because  the PDMP  has  visible  information                                                               
about all controlled  substances, including postpartum depression                                                               
medications, sex hormones, Ambien, and Lunesta.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BERNGARTT spoke  to the  sixth  slide.   She specified  that                                                               
veterinarians  are   already  regulated  by  the   DEA  and  must                                                               
participate in  the Suspicious Order  Monitoring System.   When a                                                               
veterinarian  registers with  a veterinary  distribution company,                                                               
she  related,   the  distribution   company  is  going   to  take                                                               
information  about that  veterinarian's prescribing  habits, such                                                               
as how many  animals per year the veterinarian sees  and the type                                                               
of practice, and  the distribution company is  required to report                                                               
any  suspicious ordering  to the  DEA.   This DEA  oversight, she                                                               
said,  is to  control  and prevent  diversion  from the  licensed                                                               
professional to drug dealers and users.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:30:11 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ  inquired about  the date that  the Suspicious                                                               
Order Monitoring System went into place.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BERNGARTT replied  that she  is unsure  but believes  it has                                                               
been  in   place  for  the  entirety   of  her  20  years   as  a                                                               
veterinarian.  She  said she will get back to  the committee with                                                               
an answer.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ remarked that  the timing is important because                                                               
a lot  of systems have been  in place that failed  to prevent the                                                               
opioid epidemic  from happening and  the committee is  mindful of                                                               
keeping Alaskans safe.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BERNGARTT  responded  that  regarding  veterinary  diversion                                                               
where  the human  has  taken the  medication  prescribed for  the                                                               
animal, BOVE and AKVMA have  reached out to emergency physicians,                                                               
other   medical  health   professionals,   and  substance   abuse                                                               
coordinators and have received  information that veterinary drugs                                                               
as a  whole are  not part of  the issue being  seen right  now in                                                               
Alaska with  synthetic fentanyl  and those types  of drugs.   She                                                               
said veterinarians do not carry those drugs.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:32:33 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BERNGARTT continued  her presentation.   She  turned to  the                                                               
seventh slide  and related that  34 other states  have completely                                                               
exempted veterinarians from participating in  the PDMP.  She said                                                               
BOVE is  asking that Alaska  join those  34 states in  what makes                                                               
sense fiscally, privacy-wise, and  resource-wise.  Those 34 other                                                               
states,  she  continued,  have seen  no  increased  reporting  of                                                               
doctor  shopping and  no increased  reporting  of drug  diversion                                                               
from veterinarians.   Had it been a problem in  those states, she                                                               
added, they would have addressed it.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERNGARTT moved  to the eighth slide and  noted that [between                                                               
2016  and 2018]  veterinarians [in  Alaska] prescribed  0.3 to  1                                                               
percent of the total morphine  milligram equivalents (MMEs).  She                                                               
said dentists  prescribe even less  than veterinarians,  so maybe                                                               
dentists should be exempt too.   She then reframed that statement                                                               
to say  that it isn't  about the total  number of MMEs,  of which                                                               
veterinarians prescribe a very small  percentage, but rather that                                                               
the drugs veterinarians  prescribe are not the drugs  that go out                                                               
into  the population  and contribute  to addiction  and overdose.                                                               
Veterinarians,  she  continued,  are  not  dispensing  oxycontin,                                                               
methadone,  or heroin,  which are  the  drugs of  concern in  the                                                               
opioid epidemic.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:35:50 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  SPOHNHOLZ  maintained  that that  was  an  inflammatory                                                               
statement because there are no prescribers who prescribe heroin.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BERNGARTT responded  that her  comments were  to the  things                                                               
that  are contributing  to the  opioid epidemic,  and she  didn't                                                               
mean  to insinuate  that there  were other  prescribers who  were                                                               
prescribing heroin.   She  said she  just wanted  to say  for the                                                               
record that veterinarians are not.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ stated that the  reason for the PDMP was never                                                               
to address illicit  drugs, it was to control  and monitor typical                                                               
controlled  substances that  are  legally  prescribed for  health                                                               
care reasons that  helped drive the opioid epidemic.   Heroin was                                                               
never  incorporated into  the  PDMP, she  continued,  and she  is                                                               
cautious about using inflammatory rhetoric.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:37:02 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERNGARTT resumed her presentation.   She moved to the nineth                                                               
slide and related that the  Board of Veterinary Examiners and the                                                               
profession have had to deal  with the issue of investigative cost                                                               
that  has been  passed on  to veterinarians.   She  said Alaska's                                                               
veterinarians have  the highest  licensing fees in  the US.   The                                                               
PDMP investigations, she pointed  out, haven't shown one instance                                                               
of diversion or nefarious conduct,  they've simply been querying,                                                               
reporting,  and  [addressing]  technical issues.    Veterinarians                                                               
have  testified   before  BOVE,  she  related,   that  they  have                                                               
repeatedly entered this  data but cannot find this  data in their                                                               
own PDMP  screens and  then they received  letters that  they are                                                               
being investigated for improper  querying and improper reporting.                                                               
So, she continued, there is an  issue with how the system handles                                                               
animal  data  because  it  was  designed for  human  data.    Dr.                                                               
Berngartt further related  that there are grants  which cover the                                                               
cost of PDMP staff  to mine the data to figure out  who may be in                                                               
violation.    That information  is  then  passed over  to  PDMP's                                                               
investigations  department which  does  its step,  she said,  and                                                               
that  cost  is  passed  directly   to  the  Board  of  Veterinary                                                               
Examiners.  Currently there is not  a grant that covers the costs                                                               
on both sides,  she advised, although there possibly  may be some                                                               
money coming  down the pipe to  BOVE to help keep  licensing fees                                                               
static.   This  would be  helpful in  relation to  attracting and                                                               
recruiting new veterinarians to the state of Alaska, she added.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BERNGARTT concluded  her presentation  by speaking  from the                                                               
eleventh slide,  "AKVMA URGES A YES  vote on SB 132,"  which read                                                               
[original punctuation provided]:                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     An  Exemption of  Veterinarians  from participating  in                                                                    
     the PDMP:                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Will  allow veterinarians  to provide  the appropriate,                                                                    
     timely,   medical  management   appropriate  for   each                                                                    
     patient.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Will  increase the  efficiency of  the PDMP  system for                                                                    
     its   intended  purpose,   by  allowing   for  accurate                                                                    
     interpretation of data and trends in human medicine.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Will  allow  continued   judicious  use  of  controlled                                                                    
     substances that is already practiced by veterinarians.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Will   eliminate   unnecessary   and   disproportionate                                                                    
     business burdens for veterinarians.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:40:17 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KAUFMAN  surmised  the existing  system  presents                                                               
risk in that  veterinarians and their assistants  are not trained                                                               
or qualified to  look at this private medical data  but are doing                                                               
so because that is how the system is constructed.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERNGARTT  agreed that this is  the case.  She  said the PDMP                                                               
permits veterinarians  to delegate  the PDMP  responsibilities of                                                               
querying and reporting to a  licensed veterinary technician.  She                                                               
advised  that Alaska  has about  430  licensed veterinarians  and                                                               
about  260  licensed  veterinary  technicians, so  not  even  one                                                               
delegate per  veterinarian is physically  possible.   She further                                                               
advised that  most of those  licensed veterinary  technicians are                                                               
congregated  in the  larger metropolitan  areas of  Anchorage and                                                               
Fairbanks, and therefore the actual  ability for veterinarians to                                                               
delegate is low.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  SPOHNHOLZ noted  that [HCS  SB 132(HSS)]  requires only                                                               
the 65 dispensing  veterinarians in Alaska to  participate in the                                                               
PDMP; the remaining 370 veterinarians  who are not dispensing and                                                               
are just prescribing are excluded from participating.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:42:13 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KAUFMAN  offered his  understanding that  there is                                                               
little  evidence that  the veterinary  source of  medicines is  a                                                               
pipeline of  illicit drug  use because  the drugs  prescribed are                                                               
not preferred by those who  are abusing substances.  He therefore                                                               
surmised there is little risk.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERNGARTT agreed.   She said veterinarians  don't utilize and                                                               
therefore don't  prescribe drugs  such as oxycodone  and Vicodin,                                                               
which she understands  are drugs that have  a high-risk potential                                                               
for continued addiction and abuse.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KAUFMAN commented that  he sees little benefit and                                                               
a risk of  medical data exposure for not much  benefit.  He asked                                                               
why the bill  isn't being moved along quickly for  the benefit of                                                               
all concerned.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERNGARTT responded  that there has not  been an identifiable                                                               
benefit for  veterinary participation  in the  PDMP; none  of the                                                               
investigations  generated through  the  PDMP  have identified  an                                                               
instance of veterinary diversion or  drug shopping.  However, she                                                               
continued,  there have  been identified  harms to  the veterinary                                                               
profession  and   veterinary  clientele  through   the  increased                                                               
exposure of private  health data, the time  cost to veterinarians                                                               
to participate  in the  PDMP, and the  investigative costs.   She                                                               
allowed  that  [HCS  SB  132(HSS)]   will  relieve  the  bulk  of                                                               
veterinarians practicing in Alaska of  those duties, but said her                                                               
concern is  the 65 veterinarians  who do dispense and  the burden                                                               
that could be  created to rural and  underserved communities that                                                               
are served by dispensing veterinarians.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:45:22 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SNYDER  noted that three amendments  were added to                                                               
SB 132  in House Health  and Social Services  Standing Committee.                                                               
One of  the amendments, she stated,  provides that non-dispensing                                                               
veterinarians who send prescriptions to  a pharmacist do not have                                                               
to review or  enter data into the PDMP,  leaving 65 veterinarians                                                               
for  which there  is concern.    Another of  the amendments,  she                                                               
continued, does  not require any of  the veterinarians, including                                                               
those  65, to  interact  with  the PDMP  if  the medication  they                                                               
prescribe or  dispense is for  three days or  less.  Most  of the                                                               
investigations to  date, she  further said, have  had to  do with                                                               
the  querying  problems   and  not  having  to   inquire  if  the                                                               
veterinarian has  not prescribed or  dispensed that day,  and the                                                               
amendment for  that will affect all  veterinarians, including the                                                               
65,  and should  reduce investigations  related to  those issues.                                                               
As a  person in the field  of public health, she  said the intent                                                               
was to  find a balance  and middle  ground to navigate  the input                                                               
across the spectrum.   She agreed additional work on  the PDMP is                                                               
necessary  and  that there  have  been  failures in  coordination                                                               
between  the state  and the  veterinarians.   She concurred  that                                                               
there  are concerns  with HIPAA,  but pointed  out that  the full                                                               
statute  includes guidelines  and  penalties  for divulging  that                                                               
health information  and educational materials are  supposed to be                                                               
provided through the state giving oversight on the PDMP.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:48:12 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  NELSON  asked  whether  it is  correct  that  the                                                               
pharmacy association  supported the  broad exemption that  was in                                                               
the original version of SB 132.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BERNGARTT  answered  that's  correct, the  Alaska  Board  of                                                               
Pharmacy voted  to support full  exemption of  veterinarians from                                                               
the PDMP in February 2022.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE NELSON  noted that the pharmacy  association and a                                                               
bunch  of veterinarians  originally  supported SB  132 and  asked                                                               
whether that has changed with the amendments.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BERNGARTT   replied  that  she   personally  hasn't   had  a                                                               
conversation  with the  Alaska Board  of Pharmacy  or its  chair,                                                               
Justin Ruffridge.   She said  she personally feels that  the buck                                                               
is being passed  to the pharmacist for identifying  the person to                                                               
be  queried.   The  problem  of  identifying  who to  query  will                                                               
remain, she  advised, because the  person who brought the  pet to                                                               
the  veterinarian  may  not  be  the  person  who  picks  up  the                                                               
prescription given there may be  multiple household members.  The                                                               
pharmacist will still  have to either query more  than one person                                                               
or pick  one person to  query, she pointed  out.  This  gets into                                                               
issues of  data integrity, she  continued, and what type  of data                                                               
is  really being  collected as  far  as being  meaningful to  the                                                               
human  health  professionals  that  are trained  to  analyze  and                                                               
utilize this data.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:50:13 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JUSTIN  RUFFRIDGE,  PharmD,  Chair,  Alaska  Board  of  Pharmacy,                                                               
responded to  Representative Nelson's  question.  He  stated that                                                               
querying  and looking  at the  PDMP for  veterinary prescriptions                                                               
has been a  large and long-time issue for the  pharmacy board.  A                                                               
big issue, he explained, is that  there is no unilateral way that                                                               
pharmacies  are required  to input  the data  for a  prescription                                                               
from  a veterinarian  for  an animal.   To  solve  the issue,  he                                                               
continued,  regulation   is  currently  being  developed   for  a                                                               
specific  way to  add information  into  the PDMP.   However,  he                                                               
advised, it  will be  linked to  one owner,  so the  problem will                                                               
still  exist  in  the  scenario of  multiple  owners  and  people                                                               
getting prescriptions.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:51:47 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NICHOLAS  PAPACOSTAS,  MD,  President, Alaska  Chapter,  American                                                               
College   of  Emergency   Physicians  (ACEP),   provided  invited                                                               
testimony  on SB  132.   He  thanked the  veterinarians who  have                                                               
worked to use  the PDMP, which he understands has  been very hard                                                               
for  them.    He  said  the  PDMP  has  been  transformative  for                                                               
emergency  physicians  in  being  able   to  see  the  number  of                                                               
prescriptions and  the sources,  and therefore  how a  patient is                                                               
exposed to controlled  substances.  Even though  the total volume                                                               
that could  be prescribed by  veterinarians is currently  low, he                                                               
continued, it  is important to  ensure that the PDMP  is complete                                                               
and  includes  most  drugs   and  prescriptions  from  veterinary                                                               
sources.   Many  of those  who  suffer from  opioid use  disorder                                                               
(OUD) or other  substance use disorders (SUDs),  he related, have                                                               
their first exposure via a  prescription for a legitimate purpose                                                               
or in some cases the prescription of a family member or friend.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR. PAPACOSTAS  stated that overdose  death gets the  most press,                                                               
but more  silent is when a  vulnerable person takes a  tablet of,                                                               
say, hydromorphone, for the first  time recreationally, which can                                                               
potentially  spin  off  a  devastating  substance  use  disorder.                                                               
Hydromorphone is a  very powerful opioid, he said,  and it sounds                                                               
from the veterinary white paper  that it is a commonly prescribed                                                               
veterinary opioid.   Dr. Berngartt referenced  that veterinarians                                                               
are  not   prescribing  medications  that  cause   addiction,  he                                                               
continued, but hydromorphone is a  powerful opioid that people in                                                               
the emergency room who have  opioid use disorder commonly request                                                               
by name.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DR. PAPACOSTAS  pointed out that  the most important  function of                                                               
the PDMP  is to  identify vulnerable patients  and help  them get                                                               
treatment, it  is not  necessarily to  catch people  doing things                                                               
wrong.    He  stated  that  ACEP agrees  the  PDMP  is  currently                                                               
problematic  for   veterinarians.    He  said   ACEP  thinks  the                                                               
amendments proposed  in Section  1 and  Section 2  exempting most                                                               
veterinarians from  checking the  PDMP at  all and  exempting all                                                               
veterinarians from checking the PDMP  if they provide very short-                                                               
term prescriptions  of under three days  of controlled substances                                                               
are  good  intermediate  solutions that  balance  the  regulatory                                                               
burden  on veterinarians  while continuing  to capture  important                                                               
data for patients and public safety.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
DR. PAPACOSTAS noted that ACEP's 3/22/22 letter cites a five-                                                                   
year study between 2014 and 2019  that looked at the states which                                                               
do have  veterinary monitoring in  the PDMP.   He said  the study                                                               
characterized veterinarian  shopping or  doctor shopping  as when                                                               
there are four  or more prescriptions from  different sources for                                                               
one animal,  and during  the study period  the instances  of such                                                               
shopping increased  from 900  at the  start to  2800 at  the end.                                                               
The only reason  this increase is known, he  stressed, is because                                                               
the PDMP  exists and the states  that are tracking the  PDMP with                                                               
veterinary sources are tracking those  sources.  States that have                                                               
exempted veterinarians are flying blind,  he said, and the reason                                                               
they've seen  no uptick is because  they are not watching  to see                                                               
if there has been any uptick in those problems.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR.  PAPACOSTAS related  that the  2022  PDMP legislative  report                                                               
shows  that  the  trend  in  overdose  deaths  from  prescription                                                               
medication  declined between  1999  and 2020,  but  then in  2020                                                               
overdose deaths  involving prescription medication spiked  to 90.                                                               
It has recently come out,  he continued, that overdose deaths are                                                               
increasing year  over year nationally  and especially  in Alaska,                                                               
and therefore  ACEP agrees that now  is not the time  to take the                                                               
eye off what is going on with these medications.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:56:35 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCCARTY,  in relation  to the statement  about the                                                               
states that are  flying blind, inquired about the  DEA across the                                                               
US keeping records about where diversion exists.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
DR. PAPACOSTAS replied  that he thinks diversion is  a very large                                                               
volume of opioids.  He  said he isn't talking about prescriptions                                                               
that are  necessarily vet  shopping that are  going to  affect an                                                               
individual patient suffering from  opioid disorder and going from                                                               
doctor to  doctor or potentially a  veterinarian or veterinarians                                                               
for a controlled  substance.  Diversion is  specifically the DEA,                                                               
he stated,  and the DEA is  interested in people who  are selling                                                               
these prescriptions  for the purpose  of making money, it  is not                                                               
looking  into when  one individual  patient is  exposed to  these                                                               
medications, so they don't achieve the same function.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MCCARTY commented  that he  talks to  the DEA  to                                                               
give  his concerns  about people  who  are doctor  shopping.   He                                                               
stated that Dr. Papacostas's answer  seems to be incongruent with                                                               
other  responsibilities   of  the   DEA,  such  as   doctors  and                                                               
pharmacies doing questionable activities.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
DR.  PAPACOSTAS  responded  that  yes there  is  potentially  the                                                               
responsibility to  report, but followed with  the question, "What                                                               
information are  they using if they  don't have the PDMP  to spot                                                               
patterns that they would want to report to the DEA?"                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
9:58:28 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RUSSELL  JOHANSON, MD,  Board  Member,  Alaska Chapter,  American                                                               
College   of  Emergency   Physicians  (ACEP),   provided  invited                                                               
testimony  on  SB  132.    He stated  he  is  an  emergency  room                                                               
physician with Mat-Su Regional Medical  Center and doesn't know a                                                               
single  emergency  physician in  Alaska  who  disagrees with  the                                                               
position stated by  Dr. Papacostas.  He said  all physicians have                                                               
difficult  conversations  daily with  their  patients  and it  is                                                               
important for physicians to know all their sources of opiates.                                                                  
He related that  he's heard a lot of talk  about it being onerous                                                               
to use the PDMP.  However, in  his opinion, he continued, it is a                                                               
great responsibility  to introduce  drugs that are  quite harmful                                                               
and  can devastate  a community,  and therefore  a little  bit of                                                               
work to make sure it is done safely is not too onerous.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
[HCS SB 132(HSS) was held over.]                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 132 AKVMA White Paper.pdf HHSS 4/19/2022 3:00:00 PM
HL&C 5/13/2022 9:00:00 AM
SHSS 2/3/2022 1:30:00 PM
SB 132
SB 132 Testimony PowerPoint ASVMA 2.1.22.pdf HL&C 5/13/2022 9:00:00 AM
SB 132
SB 132 Letters of Support as of 4.13.22.pdf HHSS 4/26/2022 3:00:00 PM
HL&C 5/13/2022 9:00:00 AM
SB 132
SB 132 Letters of Opposition as of 4.8.22.pdf HHSS 4/26/2022 3:00:00 PM
HL&C 5/13/2022 9:00:00 AM
SB 132
SB 132 Sponsor Statement.pdf HHSS 4/26/2022 3:00:00 PM
HL&C 5/13/2022 9:00:00 AM
SB 132
SB 132 Fiscal Note 2.9.22.PDF HL&C 5/13/2022 9:00:00 AM
SB 132
CS for SB 132 Sectional Analysis 5.11.22.pdf HL&C 5/13/2022 9:00:00 AM
SB 132
SB 190 Amendment #2 - Fields 5.13.22.pdf HL&C 5/13/2022 9:00:00 AM
SB 190
CS for SB 132 Sponsor Statement 5.11.22.pdf HL&C 5/13/2022 9:00:00 AM
SB 132