Article 1. The Board of Pharmacy.
Chapter 80. Pharmacists and Pharmacies.
Sec. 08.80.003. Practice of pharmacy as a profession.
The practice of pharmacy is declared to be a professional practice affecting the public health, safety, and welfare and is subject to regulation and control in the public interest. It is further declared to be a matter of public interest that only qualified persons be permitted to engage in the practice of pharmacy, and to ensure the quality of drugs and related devices distributed in the state.
Sec. 08.80.005. Statement of purpose.
It is the purpose of this chapter to promote, preserve, and protect the public health, safety, and welfare by and through the effective control and regulation of the practice of pharmacy.
Sec. 08.80.010. Creation and membership of board; officers.
(a) There is created the Board of Pharmacy, composed of seven members, five of whom shall be pharmacists licensed in the state who have been actively engaged in the practice of pharmacy in the state for a period of three years immediately preceding their appointment. One shall be a pharmacy technician licensed in the state for a period of two years immediately preceding appointment. One shall be a person with no direct financial interest in the health care industry. Whenever possible, the board shall include at least one member from each judicial district.
(b) An officer elected by the board serves a term of one year and may not serve more than four consecutive full terms in a specific office.
Sec. 08.80.020. Term of office. [Repealed, § 20 ch 80 SLA 1996. For current provisions, see AS 39.05.053.]
Sec. 08.80.030. Powers and duties of the board.
(a) The board is responsible for the control and regulation of the practice of pharmacy.
(b) In order to fulfill its responsibilities, the board has the powers necessary for implementation and enforcement of this chapter, including the power to
(1) elect a president and secretary from its membership and adopt rules for the conduct of its business;
(2) license by examination or by license transfer the applicants who are qualified to engage in the practice of pharmacy;
(3) assist the department in inspections and investigations for violations of this chapter, or of any other state or federal statute relating to the practice of pharmacy;
(4) adopt regulations to carry out the purposes of this chapter;
(5) establish and enforce compliance with professional standards and rules of conduct for pharmacists engaged in the practice of pharmacy;
(6) determine standards for recognition and approval of degree programs of schools and colleges of pharmacy whose graduates shall be eligible for licensure in this state, including the specification and enforcement of requirements for practical training, including internships;
(7) establish for pharmacists and pharmacies minimum specifications for the physical facilities, technical equipment, personnel, and procedures for the storage, compounding, and dispensing of drugs or related devices, and for the monitoring of drug therapy, including independent monitoring of drug therapy;
(8) enforce the provisions of this chapter relating to the conduct or competence of pharmacists practicing in the state, and the suspension, revocation, or restriction of licenses to engage in the practice of pharmacy;
(9) license and regulate the training, qualifications, and employment of pharmacy interns and pharmacy technicians;
(10) license and regulate the qualifications of entities and individuals engaged in the manufacture or distribution of drugs and related devices;
(11) establish and maintain a controlled substance prescription database as provided in
AS 17.30.200;
(12) establish standards for the independent prescribing and administration of vaccines and related emergency medications under
AS 08.80.168, including the completion of an immunization training program approved by the board and an epinephrine auto-injector training program under
AS 17.22.020(b);
(13) establish standards for the independent prescribing and dispensing by a pharmacist of an opioid overdose drug under
AS 17.20.085, including the completion of an opioid overdose training program approved by the board;
(14) require that a licensed pharmacist who dispenses a schedule II, III, or IV controlled substance under federal law to a person in the state register with the controlled substance prescription database under
AS 17.30.200(n);
(15) establish the qualifications and duties of the executive administrator and delegate authority to the executive administrator that is necessary to conduct board business;
(16) license and inspect the facilities of pharmacies, manufacturers, wholesale drug distributors, third-party logistics providers, and outsourcing facilities located outside the state under
AS 08.80.159;
(17) license Internet-based pharmacies providing services to residents in the state;
(18) adopt regulations pertaining to retired pharmacist status.
(c) The board shall post and maintain a link to the United States Food and Drug Administration's list of all currently approved interchangeable biological products on the board's Internet website.
(d) The minimum specifications for facilities, equipment, personnel, and procedures for the compounding, storage, and dispensing of drugs established under (b)(7) of this section must be consistent with the requirements of secs. 201 — 208, P.L. 113-54 (Drug Supply Chain Security Act).
Sec. 08.80.040. Duties of the board. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Sec. 08.80.045. Nonprescription drugs and devices.
(a) Except as provided in (b) of this section the board may not regulate the sale of patent or nonprescription drugs that are prepackaged for use by the consumer, are in their original, unbroken packaging, and are labeled in accordance with requirements of the federal government.
(b) The board may regulate the sale and distribution of patent or nonprescription drugs under
AS 44.62.250 when the regulation is required by an emergency to protect the public health and safety.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in a regulation under (b) of this section, a pharmacist may prescribe, dispense, and administer nonprescription drugs or devices.
Sec. 08.80.050. Applicability of Administrative Procedure Act.
The board shall comply with
AS 44.62 (Administrative Procedure Act).
Sec. 08.80.060. Meetings of the board.
The board shall meet at least three times each year at the call of the president for the transaction of business properly before it. The president shall also call the board into session when requested in writing by at least two members. Meetings may be held telephonically.
Sec. 08.80.070. Quorum.
Four members constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. However, when the board meets for the purpose of examining applications for licensure, three members of the board constitute a quorum.
Sec. 08.80.080. Expenses of members.
Members of the board are entitled to reimbursement for actual travel expenses incidental to the discharge of their duties and, while in the performance of their duties, are entitled to the per diem expenses allowed by law.
Sec. 08.80.090. Disposition of fees. [Repealed, § 54 ch 37 SLA 1985.]
Sec. 08.80.100. Board secretary as certifying officer. [Repealed, § 3 ch 59 SLA 1966.]
Sec. 08.80.105. Removal of board members.
A member of the board may be removed from office by the governor for cause.
Article 2. Licensing and Registration.
Sec. 08.80.110. Qualifications for licensure by examination.
An applicant for licensure as a pharmacist shall
(1) be fluent in the reading, writing, and speaking of the English language;
(2) be a graduate of a college in a degree program approved by the board;
(3) pass an examination or examinations given by the board or acceptable to the board under the score transfer process administered by the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy;
(4) have completed internship training or another program that has been approved by the board or demonstrated to the board's satisfaction that the applicant has experience in the practice of pharmacy that meets or exceeds the minimum internship requirements of the board.
Sec. 08.80.115. Registration of pregraduate and postgraduate intern pharmacist. [Repealed, § 40 ch 177 SLA 1978.]
Sec. 08.80.116. Internship and other training programs.
(a) An applicant for licensure by examination shall obtain practical experience in the practice of pharmacy concurrent with or after college attendance, or both, under terms and conditions the board shall determine.
(b) The board shall establish licensure requirements for interns and standards for internship or other training programs that are necessary to qualify an applicant for the licensure examination and shall also determine the qualifications of preceptors used in practical experience programs.
Sec. 08.80.117. Malpractice insurance. [Repealed, § 7 ch 94 SLA 1980; § 21 ch 166 SLA 1980.]
Sec. 08.80.120. Grading and content of examination.
The examination or examinations shall be prepared to measure the competence of the applicant to engage in the practice of pharmacy. The board may employ, cooperate, and contract with an organization or consultant in the preparation and grading of an examination, but shall retain sole discretion and responsibility for determining which applicants have successfully passed the examinations.
Sec. 08.80.130. Reexamination. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Sec. 08.80.140. License by credentials. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Sec. 08.80.145. Reciprocity; license transfer.
If another jurisdiction allows licensure in that jurisdiction of a pharmacist licensed in this state under conditions similar to those in this section, the board may license as a pharmacist in this state a person licensed as a pharmacist in the other jurisdiction if the person
(1) submits a written application to the board on a form required by the board;
(2) is at least 18 years of age;
(3) possesses at the time of the request for licensure as a pharmacist in this state the qualifications necessary to be eligible for licensure in this state;
(4) has engaged in the practice of pharmacy for at least one year immediately before applying for a license under this section;
(5) presents proof satisfactory to the board that the person is currently licensed as a pharmacist in the other jurisdiction and does not currently have a pharmacist license suspended, revoked, or otherwise restricted except for failure to apply for renewal or failure to obtain the required continuing education credits;
(6) has passed an examination approved by the board that tests the person's knowledge of Alaska laws relating to pharmacies and pharmacists and the regulations adopted under those laws; and
(7) pays all required fees.
Sec. 08.80.147. Renewal of licensure.
If a pharmacist fails to apply for renewal of a license within five years from the expiration of the license, the person must pass an examination for license renewal, except that a person who has continually practiced pharmacy in another state under a license issued by the authority of that state may renew an expired license in this state upon fulfillment of the requirements that may be established by the board.
Sec. 08.80.150. Temporary license.
The board shall adopt regulations regarding the issuance of a temporary license to practice pharmacy.
Sec. 08.80.155. Emergency permit.
The board shall adopt regulations regarding the issuance of an emergency permit to practice under this chapter.
Sec. 08.80.157. Licensing of facilities.
(a) A facility engaged in the practice of pharmacy or in the manufacture, production, or wholesale distribution of drugs or devices, and a pharmacy where drugs or devices are dispensed, shall be licensed by the board, and shall renew the license at intervals determined by the board. If operations are conducted at more than one location, each location shall be licensed by the board.
(b) The board may by regulation determine the licensure classifications of facilities and establish minimum standards for the facilities.
(c) The board shall establish by regulation the criteria that a facility must meet to qualify for licensure in each classification. The board may issue licenses with varying restrictions to facilities when the board considers it necessary to protect the public interest.
(d) The board may deny or refuse to renew a license if it determines that the granting or renewing of the license would not be in the public interest.
(e) Licenses issued by the board are not transferable or assignable.
(f) The board shall specify by regulation the minimum standards for responsibility of a facility or pharmacy that has employees or personnel engaged in the practice of pharmacy or engaged in the manufacture, wholesale distribution, production, or use of drugs or devices in the conduct of its business.
(g) A licensed facility shall report to the board
(1) permanent closing;
(2) change of ownership; management, location, or pharmacist-in-charge of a pharmacy;
(3) theft or loss of drugs or devices as defined by regulations of the board;
(4) conviction of an employee of violation of a state or federal drug law;
(5) disasters, accidents, theft, destruction, or loss relating to records required to be maintained by state or federal law;
(6) occurrences of significant adverse drug reactions as defined by regulations of the board;
(7) other matters and occurrences the board may require by regulation.
(h) The board may suspend, revoke, deny, or refuse to renew the license of a facility or pharmacy on the following grounds:
(1) the finding by the board of violations of a federal, state, or local law relating to the practice of pharmacy, drug samples, wholesale or retail drug or device distribution, or distribution of controlled substances;
(2) a felony conviction under federal, state, or local law of an owner of the facility or pharmacy or of an employee of the facility or pharmacy;
(3) the furnishing of false or fraudulent material in an application made in connection with drug or device manufacturing or distribution;
(4) suspension or revocation by federal, state, or local government of a license currently or previously held by the applicant for the manufacture or distribution of drugs or devices, including controlled substances;
(5) obtaining remuneration by fraud, misrepresentation, or deception;
(6) dealing with drugs or devices that are known or should have been known to be stolen drugs or devices;
(7) dispensing or distributing drugs or devices directly to patients by a wholesale drug distributor other than a pharmacy unless
(A) the drug or device is a dialysate, drug composed solely of fluids, electrolytes, and sugars, or device that is
(i) necessary to perform home dialysis;
(ii) approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration, as required by federal law; and
(iii) delivered in its original, sealed, and labeled packaging only upon the receipt of a physician's order;
(B) the wholesale drug distributor
(i) delivers the dialysate drug or device directly to a patient with end-stage renal disease, or to the patient's designee, for the patient's self-administration of dialysis therapy;
(ii) uses a barcode scanning and verification system confirming that the dialysate drug or device selected to fill the patient-specific order matches the information on the patient-specific label; and
(iii) has additional secondary accuracy and delivery checks in place; and
(C) a licensed pharmacist serves as a consultant to the wholesale drug distributor to
(i) conduct a retrospective audit of 10 percent of the dialysate drug and device orders provided directly to patients processed by the wholesale drug distributor every month; and
(ii) perform assessments at least twice monthly to ensure quality of product storage, handling, and distribution by the wholesale drug distributor and to ensure product expiration dates are later than three months after the date of assessment;
(8) violation of this chapter or a regulation adopted under this chapter.
(i) The board's regulations under (b) — (d) and (f) of this section may not establish more stringent licensing requirements for the facilities governed by
AS 08.80.390 than are set out in
AS 08.80.390.
(j) This section does not apply to the offices of physicians, osteopaths, podiatrists, physician assistants, advanced nurse practitioners, dentists, veterinarians, dispensing opticians, or optometrists.
(k) This section applies to pharmacies, manufacturers, wholesale drug distributors, third-party logistics providers, and outsourcing facilities located outside the state under
AS 08.80.159.
Sec. 08.80.158. Registration of pharmacies located outside of state.
Sec. 08.80.159. Licensing and inspection of facilities outside of state.
(a) Before shipping, mailing, distributing, or delivering a prescription drug to a person in the state or advertising in the state, a pharmacy, manufacturer, wholesale drug distributor, third-party logistics provider, or an outsourcing facility that is located outside the state shall
(1) obtain a license under
AS 08.80.157;
(2) appoint an agent on whom process can be served in the state; and
(3) authorize inspection of the facility by a designee of the board under (c) of this section.
(b) In addition to the requirements of (a) of this section, an outsourcing facility shall
(1) register as an outsourcing facility with the United States Food and Drug Administration; and
(2) comply with the requirements of 21 U.S.C. 353b (Drug Quality and Security Act).
(c) Upon application by a pharmacy, manufacturer, wholesale drug distributor, third-party logistics provider, or an outsourcing facility for a license under this section, the board may
(1) require an inspection of the applicant's facility located outside the state; and
(2) approve a designee to conduct the inspection.
(d) The board shall adopt regulations necessary to implement this section.
Sec. 08.80.160. Fees.
The Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development shall set fees under
AS 08.01.065 for the following:
(1) examination;
(2) reexamination;
(3) investigation for licensing by license transfer;
(4) pharmacist license;
(5) temporary license;
(6) pharmacy technician license;
(7) pharmacy intern license;
(8) emergency permit;
(9) license amendment or replacement;
(10) licensure of a facility classified under
AS 08.80.157(b).
Sec. 08.80.165. Continuing education requirements.
The board shall establish requirements for continuing education in pharmacy that must be satisfied before a license issued under this chapter may be renewed.
Sec. 08.80.168. Prescription and administration of vaccines and related emergency medications.
(a) A pharmacist may independently prescribe and administer a vaccine and related emergency medication if the pharmacist has completed an immunization training program approved by the board and otherwise complies with the standards established by the board under
AS 08.80.030(b).
(b) A pharmacist may independently prescribe and administer an opioid overdose drug if the pharmacist has completed an opioid overdose drug training program approved by the board and otherwise complies with the standards established by the board under
AS 08.80.030(b).
(c) A pharmacy technician working under the immediate supervision of a pharmacist who meets the requirements of (a) of this section may administer a vaccine or related emergency medication if the pharmacy technician is authorized by the board to do so.
(d) A pharmacist may independently administer epinephrine to a patient or prescribe epinephrine auto-injectors to a person who has completed a training program approved by the board under
AS 17.22.020(b).
(e) In this section,
(1) “opioid overdose drug” has the meaning given in
AS 17.20.085;
(2) “related emergency medication” includes an epinephrine injection or other medication for the treatment of a severe allergic reaction to a vaccine.
Secs. 08.80.170 — 08.80.210. Fees. [Repealed, § 7 ch 24 SLA 1968.]
Sec. 08.80.220. Prescription department required for issuance of license. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Sec. 08.80.230. Sanitary conditions required for issuance of license. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Sec. 08.80.240. Form and display of registration certificate and license. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Secs. 08.80.250 — 08.80.260. Renewal of lapsed registration; ground for refusing or revoking a license. [Repealed, § 21 ch 166 SLA 1980.]
Sec. 08.80.261. Disciplinary sanctions.
(a) The board may deny a license to an applicant or, after a hearing, impose a disciplinary sanction authorized under
AS 08.01.075 on a person licensed under this chapter when the board finds that the applicant or licensee, as applicable,
(1) secured or attempted to secure a license through deceit, fraud, or intentional misrepresentation;
(2) engaged in deceit, fraud, or intentional misrepresentation in the course of providing professional services or engaging in professional activities;
(3) advertised professional services in a false or misleading manner;
(4) has been convicted of a felony or has been convicted of another crime that affects the applicant's or licensee's ability to practice competently and safely;
(5) intentionally or negligently engaged in or permitted the performance of patient care by persons under the applicant's or licensee's supervision that does not conform to minimum professional standards regardless of whether actual injury to the patient occurred;
(6) failed to comply with this chapter, with a regulation adopted under this chapter, or with an order of the board;
(7) is incapable of engaging in the practice of pharmacy with reasonable skill, competence, and safety for the public because of
(A) professional incompetence;
(B) failure to keep informed of or use current professional theories or practices;
(C) addiction or severe dependency on alcohol or a drug that impairs the applicant's or licensee's ability to practice safely;
(D) physical or mental disability; or
(E) other factors determined by the board;
(8) engaged in conduct involving moral turpitude or gross immorality;
(9) made a controlled substance available to a person except upon prescription issued by a person licensed to prescribe controlled substances;
(10) was convicted of selling federal legend drugs without the prescription of a person licensed to prescribe federal legend drugs;
(11) violated state or federal laws or regulations pertaining to drugs or pharmacies;
(12) failed to report relevant information to the board about a pharmacist or pharmacy intern that the applicant or licensee knew or suspected was incapable of engaging in the practice of pharmacy with reasonable skill, competence, and safety to the public;
(13) aided another person to engage in the practice of pharmacy or to use the title of “pharmacist” or “pharmacy intern” without a license; or
(14) engaged in unprofessional conduct, as defined in regulations of the board.
(b) The board may place under seal all drugs that are owned by or in the possession, custody, or control of a licensee at the time a license is suspended or revoked or at the time the board refuses to renew a license. Except for perishable items, the drugs may not be disposed of until the licensee has exhausted administrative and judicial remedies relating to the licensing action. Perishable items may be sold upon order of the court with the proceeds to be deposited with the court. The board shall notify the Department of Health about drugs placed under seal under this subsection.
Sec. 08.80.265. Limits or conditions on license; discipline. [Repealed, § 21 ch 166 SLA 1980.]
Sec. 08.80.266. Disciplinary sanctions. [Repealed, § 49 ch 94 SLA 1987. For current law, see AS 08.01.075.]
Sec. 08.80.268. Executive administrator of the board.
(a) The board shall employ an executive administrator to carry out the duties established under (b) of this section. The executive administrator is the principal executive officer of the board. The executive administrator is in the partially exempt service under
AS 39.25.120 and is entitled to receive a monthly salary equal to a step in range 23 on the salary schedule set out in
AS 39.27.011(a). If the executive administrator has a pharmacist license, the executive administrator is entitled to a monthly salary based on the salary classification for pharmacists.
(b) The executive administrator shall
(1) perform duties associated with the licensing and regulation of licensees under this chapter as prescribed by the board; and
(2) serve as a liaison to the legislative and executive branches of state government, the media, and other state pharmacy boards.
Article 3. Duties of Licensed Pharmacists.
Secs. 08.80.280 , 08.80.290. Goods sold; affixing labels. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Sec. 08.80.294. Information about equivalent generic drugs and interchangeable biological products.
(a) In addition to other information that may be required under state or federal laws or regulations, a pharmacist, when dispensing a brand-name prescription drug order that is
(1) not a biological product, shall include the generic drug name that is an equivalent drug product for the drug dispensed;
(2) a biological product, shall include the dispensed product's
(A) proprietary name, if available; or
(B) proper name.
(b) The generic drug name or proprietary or proper biological product name required under (a) of this section shall be placed directly on the container's label near the brand name.
(c) In this section,
(1) “proper name” means a name that reflects scientific characteristics of the product such as chemical structure and pharmacological properties;
(2) “proprietary name” means a name that is trademarked and registered for private use.
Sec. 08.80.295. Substitution of equivalent drug products or interchangeable biological products.
(a) Unless the prescription indicates that it is to be dispensed only as written, the pharmacist may, with the consent of the patient, substitute an equivalent drug product or interchangeable biological product.
(b) A pharmacist who substitutes an equivalent drug product or interchangeable biological product in compliance with this section and applicable regulations incurs no greater liability in filling the prescription than would be incurred in filling the prescription by dispensing the prescribed name brand product.
(c) Except as provided in (d) of this section, if an interchangeable biological product exists for a biological product prescribed to a patient, the dispensing pharmacist or the pharmacist's designee shall communicate to the prescribing practitioner information regarding the biological product provided to the patient, including the name and manufacturer of the biological product. The communication must be provided within three business days after dispensing the biological product as follows:
(1) by making an entry that is electronically accessible to the prescribing practitioner through
(A) an interoperable electronic medical records system;
(B) an electronic prescribing technology;
(C) a pharmacy benefit management system; or
(D) a pharmacy record; or
(2) if the pharmacist or the pharmacist's designee is unable to make an entry through one of the means provided under (1) of this subsection, by facsimile transmission, telephone communication, electronic mail transmission, or transmission by other prevailing means, to the prescribing practitioner.
(d) The dispensing pharmacist or the pharmacist's designee is not required to communicate information under (c) of this section if the dispensed biological product is a refill of a prescription and is the same as the biological product that was dispensed on the previous filling of the prescription.
(e) Entry into an electronic records system as described under (c)(1) of this section is presumed to provide notice to the prescribing practitioner.
(f) A pharmacist shall maintain a record of a dispensed biological product for a minimum of two years after the date of the dispensing.
(g) In this section, “designee” means an agent or employee of the dispensing pharmacist whom the dispensing pharmacist has authorized to communicate the information required under (c) of this section.
Sec. 08.80.297. Prescription prices available to consumer.
(a) A pharmacist or person acting at the direction of a pharmacist shall disclose the price of filling any prescription when requested by the consumer.
(b) No contract or agreement may prohibit a pharmacy, pharmacist, or pharmacy benefits manager from informing a patient of a less costly alternative for a prescription drug or medical device or supply, which may include the amount the patient would pay without the use of a health care plan.
(c) A pharmacist or person acting at the direction of a pharmacist shall notify the patient if a known less costly alternative for a prescription drug or medical device or supply is available, which may include the amount the patient would pay without the use of a health care plan.
(d) In this section,
(1) “health care plan” means a policy, contract, benefit, or agreement that provides, delivers, arranges for, pays for, or reimburses any of the costs of health care services under
(A) a health care insurance plan as defined under
AS 21.54.500;
(B) a governmental or employee welfare benefit plan under 29 U.S.C. 1001 — 1191 (Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974);
(C) a plan offered under
AS 39.30.090 or 39.30.091;
(D) a federal governmental plan as defined under
AS 21.54.500;
(E) the Medicaid or Medicare program; or
(F) a self-insured employer benefit plan;
(2) “pharmacy benefits manager” has the meaning given in
AS 21.27.975.
Sec. 08.80.300 Record of prescriptions. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Sec. 08.80.310 Record of sales. [Repealed § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Sec. 08.80.315. Confidentiality of records.
Information maintained by a pharmacist in the patient's records or that is communicated to the patient as part of patient counseling is confidential and may be released only to
(1) the patient or as the patient directs;
(2) a practitioner or pharmacist when, in the pharmacist's professional judgment, release is necessary to protect the patient's health and well-being; and
(3) other persons or governmental agencies authorized by law to receive confidential information.
Sec. 08.80.320. Pharmacist required. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Sec. 08.80.330. Licensed pharmacist appointed as “pharmacist-in-charge”.
(a) Each pharmacy shall have a pharmacist-in-charge. Whenever an applicable law or regulation requires or prohibits action by a pharmacy, responsibility shall be that of the owner and the pharmacist-in-charge, whether the owner is a sole proprietor, partnership, association, corporation, or otherwise. The pharmacist-in-charge shall ensure compliance with all laws and regulations governing the operation of the pharmacy. A licensed pharmacist appointed as pharmacist-in-charge of a pharmacy shall immediately advise the board of that appointment.
(b) A license may not be issued to a pharmacy unless there is a licensed registered pharmacist-in-charge whose name appears on the face of the license.
Sec. 08.80.335. Prescription for an opioid; voluntary request for lesser quantity.
(a) A pharmacist filling a prescription for an opioid that is a schedule II or III controlled substance under federal law may, at the request of the individual for whom the prescription is written, dispense the prescribed opioid in a lesser quantity than prescribed.
(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent substitution of an equivalent drug under
AS 08.80.295.
Sec. 08.80.337. Other patient care services.
(a) A pharmacist may, under a collaborative practice agreement with a written protocol approved by a practitioner, provide patient care services.
(b) A pharmacist may independently provide patient care services for
(1) general health and wellness;
(2) disease prevention; or
(3) a condition that
(A) is minor and generally self limiting;
(B) has a test that is used to guide diagnosis or clinical decision-making and the test is waived under 42 U.S.C. 263a (Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988); or
(C) falls under a statewide standing order from the chief medical officer in the Department of Health.
(c) This section does not authorize a pharmacist to prescribe a prescription drug that the pharmacist is not otherwise authorized to prescribe.
(d) In this section, “patient care services” means medical care services given in exchange for compensation intended to achieve outcomes related to the cure or prevention of a disease, elimination or reduction of a patient's symptoms, or arresting or slowing of a disease process.
Secs. 08.80.340 — 08.80.370. Requirements for handling drugs; general prohibitions. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Article 4. Unlawful Acts.
Sec. 08.80.380. Issuance of shopkeepers permits. [Repealed, § 21 ch 166 SLA 1980. For current law, see AS 08.80.045.]
Sec. 08.80.390. Pharmacists required in hospitals and clinics.
(a) A hospital, clinic, nursing home, infirmary, or related facility that provides outpatient dispensing of drugs for outpatient treatment shall have a licensed pharmacist in charge of the dispensary, except that prescriptions may be compounded and dispensed by or under the supervision of the prescribing physician.
(b) The board shall issue a license to a hospital drug room, nursing home drug room, or related facility that dispenses drugs from bulk supply for inpatient treatment, providing the facility employs a licensed pharmacist on a continual or consultant basis.
Sec. 08.80.400. Other licensees not affected.
This chapter does not affect the practice of medicine by a licensed medical doctor and does not limit a licensed medical doctor, osteopath, podiatrist, physician assistant, advanced practice registered nurse, dentist, veterinarian, dispensing optician, or optometrist in supplying a patient with any medicinal preparation or article within the scope of the person's license.
Sec. 08.80.410. Use of term “pharmacist” prohibited.
A person may not assume or use the title “pharmacist,” or any variation of the title, or hold out to be a pharmacist, without being licensed.
Sec. 08.80.420. Certain advertising prohibited.
(a) A person may not use or exhibit the title “pharmacist,” “assistant pharmacist,” or “druggist,” or the descriptive term “pharmacy,” “drug store,” “drug sundries,” “apothecary,” or other similar title or term containing the word “drug,” in any business premises or in an advertisement through the media of press or publication, or by radio or television, unless the business has a licensed pharmacist in regular and continuous employment.
(b) [Repealed by § 21 ch 166 SLA 1980.]
Sec. 08.80.430. Use of pharmacy symbols prohibited.
A person may not display in a place of business the characteristic pharmacy symbol of “Rx” in any form unless the business has a pharmacist licensed under this chapter.
Sec. 08.80.440. Denial of examination or license. [Repealed, § 28 ch 45 SLA 1996.]
Sec. 08.80.450. Disciplinary action.
The board may consider a complaint based upon the alleged violation of any provision of this chapter and may, by a majority vote of a quorum, dismiss the complaint, reprimand a licensee, or take other punitive action as the nature of the facts warrant. Orders issued by the board shall be in writing, signed by a majority and filed with the secretary of the board. The accused shall receive an authenticated copy of the order.
Sec. 08.80.460. Penalties.
(a) Except for a violation of
AS 08.80.297, a person who violates a provision of this chapter is guilty of a class B misdemeanor.
(b) A person who violates the provisions of
AS 08.80.295 or 08.80.297 may be punished by a civil fine in an amount established by the board in a schedule or schedules establishing the amount of civil fine for a particular violation. The schedule or schedules shall be adopted by the board by regulation. Any civil fine imposed under this section may be appealed in the manner provided for appeals in
AS 44.62 (Administrative Procedure Act).
Article 5. General Provisions.
Sec. 08.80.470. Construction.
Nothing in this chapter amends, modifies, repeals or otherwise changes any provision of
AS 11.71,
AS 17.20 (Alaska Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act), or
AS 17.30.
Sec. 08.80.475. Federal facilities not affected.
This chapter does not apply to the safe storage, preservation, dispensing, or control of drugs in a federally operated hospital or institution.
Sec. 08.80.480. Definitions.
In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires,
(1) “administer” means the direct application of a drug to the body of a patient or research subject by injection, inhalation, ingestion, or other means;
(2) “biological product” means a product that is applicable to the prevention, treatment, or cure of a disease or condition of human beings, and is a virus, therapeutic serum, toxin, antitoxin, vaccine, blood, blood component or derivative, allergenic product, protein other than a chemically synthesized polypeptide, or analogous product, or arsphenamine or derivative of arsphenamine or any other trivalent organic arsenic compound;
(3) “board” means the Board of Pharmacy;
(4) “compounding” means the preparation, mixing, assembling, packaging, or labeling of a drug or device (A) as the result of a practitioner's prescription drug order or initiative based on the relationship of the practitioner, patient, and pharmacist in the course of professional practice or (B) for the purpose of, or as an incident to, research, teaching, or chemical analysis and not for sale or dispensing; “compounding” also includes the preparation of drugs or devices in anticipation of prescription drug orders based on routine, regularly observed prescribing patterns;
(5) “controlled substance” has the meaning given in
AS 11.71.900;
(6) “deliver” or “delivery” means the actual, constructive, or attempted transfer of a drug or device from one person to another, whether or not for consideration;
(7) “device” means an instrument, apparatus, implement, machine, contrivance, implant, or other similar or related article, including a component part or accessory, that is required under federal law to bear the label “Caution: Federal or state law requires dispensing by or on the order of a physician”;
(8) “dispense” or “dispensing” means the preparation and delivery of a drug or device to a patient or patient's agent under a lawful order of a practitioner in a suitable container appropriately labeled for subsequent administration to, or use by, a patient;
(9) “distribute” means the delivery of a drug or device other than by administering or dispensing;
(10) “drug” means an article recognized as a drug in an official compendium, or supplement to an official compendium; an article intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in man or animal; an article other than food, intended to affect the structure or function of the body of man or animal; and an article intended for use as a component of an article specified in this paragraph but does not include devices or their components, parts, or accessories;
(11) “drug regimen review” includes evaluation of the prescription drug order and patient record for
(A) known allergies;
(B) rational therapy-contraindications;
(C) reasonable dose and route of administration;
(D) reasonable directions for use;
(E) duplication of therapy;
(F) drug-drug, drug-food, and drug-disease interactions;
(G) adverse drug reactions; and
(H) proper utilization, including over- or under-utilization, and optimum therapeutic outcomes;
(12) “equivalent drug product” means a drug product that has the same established name, active ingredients, strength or concentration, and route of administration and that is formulated to contain the same amount of active ingredients in the same dosage form and to meet the same compendia or other applicable standards for strength, quality, purity, and identity, but that may differ in characteristics such as shape, scoring configuration, packaging, excipients including colors, flavors, preservatives, and expiration time;
(13) “interchangeable biological product” means a biological product that the United States Food and Drug Administration has determined
(A) meets the standards for interchangeability under 42 U.S.C. 262(k)(4); or
(B) is therapeutically equivalent to another biological product under the most recent edition or supplement of the United States Food and Drug Administration's Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations;
(14) “intern” means an individual who is
(A) currently licensed by this state to engage in the practice of pharmacy while under the personal supervision of a pharmacist and is satisfactorily progressing toward meeting the requirements for licensure as a pharmacist; or
(B) a graduate from a college of pharmacy who is currently licensed by the board for the purpose of obtaining practical experience as a requirement for licensure as a pharmacist;
(15) “labeling” means the process of preparing and affixing a label to a drug container, exclusive, however, of the labeling by a manufacturer, packer, or distributor of a nonprescription drug or commercially packed legend drug or device;
(16) “legend drug” means a prescription drug;
(17) “manufacturing” means the production, preparation, propagation, conversion, or processing of a drug or device, either directly or indirectly, by extraction from a substance of natural origin or independently by means of chemical or biological synthesis, and includes packaging or repackaging of a substance or labeling or relabeling of its container, and the promotion and marketing of drugs or devices; “manufacturing” also includes the preparation and promotion of commercially available products from bulk compounds for resale by pharmacies, practitioners, or other persons;
(18) “nonprescription drug” means a nonnarcotic medicine or drug that may be sold without a prescription and that is prepackaged for use by the consumer and labeled in accordance with the requirements of the statutes and regulations of the state and the federal government;
(19) “outpatient dispensing” means dispensing drugs for administration outside of the hospital pharmacy's control;
(20) “outsourcing facility” means a facility at one geographic location or address that is engaged in the compounding of sterile drugs for a facility at another geographic location;
(21) “owner” means the owner of a place of business for wholesaling, retailing, compounding, or dispensing drugs, medicines, or poisons;
(22) “patient counseling” means the communication by the pharmacist of information, as defined in the regulations of the board, to the patient or care giver in order to improve therapy by ensuring proper use of drugs and devices;
(23) “person” has the meaning given in
AS 01.10.060 and also includes a governmental agency;
(24) “pharmaceutical care” is the provision of drug therapy and other pharmaceutical patient care services intended to achieve outcomes related to the cure or prevention of a disease, elimination or reduction of a patient's symptoms, or arresting or slowing of a disease process as defined in regulations of the board;
(25) “pharmacist” means an individual currently licensed by this state to engage in the practice of pharmacy;
(26) “pharmacist-in-charge” means a pharmacist who accepts responsibility for operation of a pharmacy in a manner that complies with laws and regulations applicable to the practice of pharmacy and the distribution of drugs and who is personally in charge of the pharmacy and the pharmacy's personnel;
(27) “pharmacy” means a place in this state where drugs are dispensed and pharmaceutical care is provided and a place outside of this state that is subject to licensure or registration under
AS 08.80.157(b);
(28) “pharmacy located outside of the state” means a pharmacy that prepares or mixes prescription drugs outside of the state, regardless of the location at which those drugs may be shipped, mailed, or delivered to the consumer;
(29) “pharmacy technician” means a supportive staff member who works under the immediate supervision of a pharmacist;
(30) “practice of pharmacy” means the interpretation, evaluation, and dispensing of prescription drug orders in the patient's best interest; participation in drug and device selection, drug administration, drug regimen reviews, and drug or drug-related research; provision of patient counseling and the provision of those acts or services necessary to provide pharmaceutical care; the independent prescribing, dispensing, and administration of drugs in accordance with
AS 08.80.168; the responsibility for compounding and labeling of drugs and devices except labeling by a manufacturer, repackager, or distributor of nonprescription drugs and commercially packaged legend drugs and devices; proper and safe storage of drugs and devices; and maintenance of proper records for them;
(31) “practitioner” means an individual currently licensed, registered, or otherwise authorized by the jurisdiction in which the individual practices to prescribe and administer drugs in the course of professional practice;
(32) “preceptor” means an individual who is currently licensed by the board, meets the qualifications as a preceptor under the regulations of the board, and participates in the instructional training of pharmacy interns;
(33) “prescription drug” means a drug that, under federal law, before being dispensed or delivered, is required to be labeled with either of the following statements: (A) “Caution: Federal law prohibits dispensing without prescription”; (B) “Caution: Federal law restricts this drug to use by, or on the order of, a licensed veterinarian”; or a drug that is required by an applicable federal or state law or regulation to be dispensed only under a prescription drug order or is restricted to use by practitioners only;
(34) “prescription drug order” means a lawful order of a practitioner for a drug or device for a specific patient;
(35) “significant adverse drug reaction” means a drug-related incident that may result in serious harm, injury, or death to the patient;
(36) “substitute” means to dispense, without the prescriber's expressed authorization,
(A) an equivalent drug product in place of the prescribed drug; or
(B) an interchangeable biological product in place of the prescribed biological product;
(37) “third-party logistics provider” means an entity that provides or coordinates warehousing or other logistics services for a product in interstate commerce on behalf of a manufacturer, wholesale distributor, or dispenser of the product, and that does not take ownership of the product or have responsibility to direct the sale or disposition of the product;
(38) “wholesale” means sale by a manufacturer, wholesale dealer, distributor, or jobber to a person who sells, or intends to sell, directly to the user;
(39) “wholesale drug distributor” means anyone engaged in wholesale distribution of drugs, including manufacturers; repackagers; own-label distributors; private label distributors; jobbers; brokers; warehouses, including manufacturers' and distributors' warehouses; chain drug warehouses; wholesale drug warehouses; independent wholesale drug traders; and retail pharmacies that conduct wholesale distributions.
Sec. 08.80.490. Short title.
This chapter may be known as the Pharmacy Act.