TYPES OF PHARMACY
AREAS OF THE PHARMACY
REGULATIONS ANS AGENCIES
MISC. 1
MISC. 2
PARTS OF RX 1
PARTS OF RX 2
NDC NUMBERS
100

AKA: ambulatory or community pharmacy

Retail Pharmacy

100

prescriptions are dropped off, refills are requested, and all patient information is verified

Drop Off Counter

100

has authority to suspend or revoke license of pharmacist or pharmacy technician at any time

SBOP (State Board of Pharmacy)

100

do not require a prescription for purchase

OTC medications

100

59-86 degrees Fahrenheit

Room Temperature

100

required for all prescriptions that are for controlled drugs

DEA numbers

100

dispense as written; no generic drug can be substituted

DAW

100

3rd group of NDC numbers

package size

200

a company that operates four or more pharmacies: CVS, Walgreens, Walmart

Chain Pharmacy

200

where new prescriptions are entered and insurance billing and claims are processed

Computer Workstation

200

regulates the control of legal and illegal narcotics

Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA)

200

cannot be received by a CPhT

Phone-In Prescriptions

200

36-46 degrees Fahrenheit

Refrigeration Temperature

200

the date that the prescription was written

Date prescribed

200

section of prescription that indicates if a patient can have generic or less expensive equivalent of the medication being dispensed

Product Selection Permitted (DAW)

200

1st group of NDC numbers

manufacturer

300

owned by an individual; the owner buys the name of the pharmacy

Franchise Pharmacy

300

mandated by SBOP to be posted in pharmacy area at all times

Licenses, Registrations, and Certifications

300

prescriber must use a tamper-resistant prescription pad

CMS requirement for Medicare/Medicaid prescriptions

300

pharmacist may supply up to 72 hours of a medication for a refill when is needs to be approved by a physician

 72 hours

300

-13 to -14 degrees Fahrenheit

Freezer Temperature

300

directions for use of a prescription

SIG

300

10 elements; prescriber info, Pt name and address, Date prescribed, drug name and strength, dose and quantity, route, sig/directions, # of refills, product selection, prescriber's signature

Basic Elements of a Prescription

300

2nd group of NDC numbers

drug, strength, and dosage form

400

AKA neighborhood pharmacy: independent and privately owned

Neighborhood Pharmacy

400

Provides medication, devices and aids that do not require a prescription

Front End

400

Risk evaluation and mitigation strategies- required risk management plans that use risk-minimization strategies that are beyond the professional labeling to make sure that the benefits of certain medication outweigh their risks

REMS

400

process of electronically transmitting a prescription to the insurance company for approval and payment

adjudication

400

must be kept in locked storage at all times per DEA regulations

C-I and C-II prescriptions

400

must be present for a prescription to be valid; probably forged if written in BLUE ink

Prescriber signature

400

There must be a paper trail for the DEA and SBOP

Transfer of prescriptions

400

most frequently forged or altered prescriptions

C-II and C-III

500

affiliated with a health care system such as a hospital, clinic, or other ambulatory care facility

Outpatient Pharmacy

500

Elements to assure safe use- required medical interventions or actions that health care professionals need to execute prior prescribing or dispensing medications to a patient

ETASU

500

75% of medication must be used prior to insurance companies and pharmacies refilling a med

Refills

500

an affect an unborn baby

Teratogenic Effects

500

MD, PA, DDS, and CNP

Authorized Prescribers

500

substitute allowed, but patient wants brand name

DAW 2

600

substitution not allowed; has to be how prescriber wrote it

DAW 1

600

no product selection indicated; patient can have brand or generic

DAW 0