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  • 标题:'Shortfilling' costs taxpayers millions
  • 作者:AMY GREEN AP
  • 期刊名称:The Topeka Capital-Journal
  • 印刷版ISSN:1067-1994
  • 出版年度:1999
  • 卷号:Nov 12, 1999
  • 出版社:Morris Multimedia, Inc.

'Shortfilling' costs taxpayers millions

AMY GREEN AP

By AMY GREEN

The Associated Press

NASHVILLE, Tenn. --- Taxpayers are getting shortchanged by a common practice in pharmacies: Druggists underfill some prescriptions when they run short on medicines, but still bill government insurance programs for the full amount.

Authorities say the practice, called "shortfilling," costs taxpayers tens of millions of dollars a year because it is usually done with Medicaid patients and others who use federal health programs.

Two of the nation's largest drug store chains have recently settled legal claims over shortfilling. The Justice Department says other cases are pending against additional drug stores but won't elaborate, saying the lawsuits have been sealed.

"We believe the practice is widespread, but I can't give you the specifics of the extent of what we're looking at now," spokeswoman Chris Watney said. "It's a problem that could happen at any pharmacy."

When a pharmacist "shortfills" a prescription, the customer is usually encouraged to return later for the rest of their medication, federal authorities say.

Many people fail to return, but some pharmacies still charge government health programs for the full prescription.

Kendall Lynch, director of the Tennessee Board of Pharmacy, said the computer systems many pharmacies use to bill government health programs cannot pro-rate shortfilled prescriptions.

The nation's largest drug store chain, Walgreen Co., agreed in September to pay $7.6 million and revamp its computer system to track and appropriately bill for partially filled prescriptions. The move resolved claims with 25 states and Puerto Rico.

Florida and Tennessee filed similar claims as part of a federal suit against Eckerd Corp., the drug chain owned by J.C. Penney. Tennessee settled its portion of the suit last month for $200,000.

The lawsuits against Eckerd and Walgreen were originally brought in 1995 by a whistle-blower, Louis Mueller, an Eckerd pharmacist in Clearwater, Fla., who watched others shortfilling prescriptions.

The Justice Department began investigating in 1996 and joined the lawsuits in 1998.

The Deerfield, Ill.-based Walgreen was accused of shortfilling 4 million prescriptions and overcharging government health care programs $21 million.

The lawsuit against Largo, Fla.-based Eckerd, the nation's fourth- largest chain, charges it shortfilled 180,000 prescriptions and overcharged $11 million.

Copyright 1999
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.

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