Posts Tagged ‘Florida Pedigree Law’
The Built-in Protections Of The U.S. Pharma Supply Chain
Last week we learned that 11 people were charged with the record-breaking $75 Million drug heist from the Eli Lilly warehouse in Enfield, Connecticut back in March of 2010 (see the excellent article by Jay Weaver in the Miami Herald, including a copy of one of the multiple indictments). Importantly, all of the stolen drugs from the Lilly warehouse were apparently recovered before they could be re-introduced into the legitimate supply chain. But this investigation and the charges go well beyond the infamous Lilly warehouse theft. They include other pharmaceutical, liquor, cigarette and cell phone cargo thefts around the country, allegedly perpetrated by members of the same criminal organization. Cracking this organization could end up disrupting the most prolific source of cargo theft in the United States over the last five years.
Congratulations are due to the law enforcement organizations who contributed to the investigation and to bringing the charges. They include DEA, ATF, FBI, U.S. Attorney of Florida, Miami-Dade Police Department, Florida Highway Patrol, U.S. Attorney of Illinois and U.S. Attorney of New Jersey.
This episode highlights one of the things I call the built-in protections of the U.S. pharmaceutical supply chain—the things that, combined, result in the U.S. having the safest supply chain in the world. In this case, it is strong and cooperative law enforcement organizations. While far from perfect, would you trade our system of justice, including law enforcement, with that of any other country in the world? I don’t think you would (unless you’re one of the Villa brothers or their associates!).
But what are the other components that result in the safest drug supply chain in the world? It’s certainly doesn’t occur by accident, so what are the built-in protections? Read the rest of this entry »
What If RxTEC Isn’t Adopted?
I did not participate in the development of the Pharmaceutical Traceability Enhancement Code (RxTEC), a proposed Congressional bill that was created by the industry lobbying group known as the Pharmaceutical Distribution Security Alliance (PDSA). In fact, while I was aware that a group had been formed last year I wasn’t aware that they were working on drafting an actual proposed bill until their discussion draft (dated February 27, 2012) appeared on the internet about 10 days ago. I first saw it on Ed Silverman’s Pharmalot blog.
I also saw a presentation by one of the members of the PDSA last week that touched on the RxTEC proposal. It was characterized as a “stepping-stone” to full traceability in the U.S. supply chain someday down the road. In other words, the PDSA apparently means that their RxTEC proposal isn’t the final destination but it is only the first step toward that ideal. At least, that’s how I interpreted that “stepping-stone” comment.
PLATEAUS OF SECURITY
Now this is a concept that is familiar to me. In fact, as an idea stripped of all of the RxTEC-specific details, it is identical to the idea beneath the approach I proposed in a pair of RxTrace essays last May and June called “Plateaus of Pharma Supply Chain Security” and “SNI’s Are Not Enough In a Plateau-Based Supply Chain Security Approach”.
This single underlying idea originates, on both accounts, from the fact that the amount of illegitimate activities within the U.S. supply chain is really quite small compared with the rest of the world (see my essay, “Illegitimate Drugs In The U.S. Supply Chain: Needle In A Haystack”), and to reduce it further will take Read the rest of this entry »
The Surprise Consequence of the California Pedigree Law
The California pedigree law will have a surprising influence on how the pharmaceutical supply chain operates in another state. I’ll get to that in a minute, but first, the law will change some things about the way the supply chain operates in all states. Prescription drug manufacturers who want to continue offering their products to patients within California after 2015-2016 must add unique serial numbers to each drug package and start an electronic drug pedigree.
California is the only state that requires both of those things but most manufacturers are forced to treat the California state law as if it applies nationwide. That’s because most drug manufacturers sell through distributors in the United States and so they have no way of knowing which drug package will end up being shipped into California and which ones will not. Voila! Pharma manufacturers end up having to serialize and create a pedigree for every single package that enters the U.S. supply chain.
This almost certain outcome will likely affect the full nationwide supply chain in a couple of interesting ways.
AFTER 2015: ALL DRUGS IN THE U.S. SUPPLY CHAIN ARE SERIALIZED AND PEDIGREED BY THE MANUFACTURER
That will be a big change, even outside of California. Here are some of the things I think we will see happen: Read the rest of this entry »
Should Regulations Dictate Technology?
In the U.S. pharmaceutical supply chain this question becomes, should regulators—state legislatures, state Boards of Pharmacies, Congress or the FDA—mandate specific technology for serialization, ePedigree and other regulations? This question arises whenever a new regulation is considered by any of these bodies or agencies. It’s an important question now that the FDA is considering standards for ePedigree, Track & Trace and related things and I think there are some natural conclusions that can be drawn from past examples that lead to a potential answer. Let’s review the history first.
EXAMPLE: EXISTING ePEDIGREE LAWS
The language of the U.S. Prescription Drug Marketing Act (PDMA) specified the kind of data that must be in a compliant pedigree but it did not identify any particular technology to carry that information. Of course, compared with today, what kind of technology was available back in 1987 when the PDMA was first introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives? Is it a paper pedigree? Can it be electronic? What is the format? Can GS1’s Drug Pedigree Messaging Standard (DPMS) be used to comply? Read the rest of this entry »
Why GS1 EPCIS Alone Won’t Work For California Pedigree, Part 2
There are more than one reasons why you shouldn’t expect to use GS1’s EPCIS by itself to comply with the California pedigree law. Part 1 of this series showed that the traditional distributed network of EPCIS repositories in the U.S. pharma supply chain doesn’t work. But that analysis assumed the use of the “vanilla” EPCIS standard, without the use of any “extensions”. That’s not really the way GS1 intended EPCIS to be used. In this and future essays of this series I will explore some of the approaches that make full use of the extensibility that is built into the standard.
In this Part of the series I want to take a closer look at the work of the Network Centric ePedigree work group of the GS1 Healthcare Traceability group. I am one of the leaders of that group along with Dr. Mark Harrison of the Cambridge University AutoId Lab, Dr. Ken Traub, Independent Consultant, and Gena Morgan of GS1, along with strong contributions from Janice Kite of GS1 and Dr. Dale Moberg of Axway. The larger group consists of people who work for companies in the pharmaceutical supply chain, GS1, and solution providers from around the globe, although I think the majority are from the U.S.
The NCeP group published a very interesting recording of a presentation that explains the details of their work. It is called “NCeP – Technical Analysis Sub-Group, Event Based Pedigree”. The purpose of this recording is to help people outside of the close-knit NCeP group to learn about the pedigree models developed there, evaluate them and provide feedback to the group about which model(s) should be Read the rest of this entry »
Electronic Message Security and More on Certifications
Digital electronic messages can be transmitted from one party to another using a wide range of communications technologies. Today, businesses that make use of the internet to transmit their business messages to and from their trading partners make use of standards-based Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) message formatting.
EDI messages are typically transmitted point-to-point, from one business to one other business. There are a large number of EDI message types defined but in the pharmaceutical supply chain the most common messages are purchase orders, purchase order acknowledgments, invoices and advance shipment notices (ASN’s). (While I have the chance, I’d like to point out that ASN’s are not pedigrees for multiple reasons that I will not cover in this essay.)
In the U.S. pharma supply chain AS2 is the most common communications protocol in use for EDI message exchange. AS2 provides generalized message security to ensure that the messages cannot be understood or tampered with by unauthorized parties during movement from sender to recipient. According to Wikipedia, these are achieved through the use of digital certificates and encryption. Messages can optionally be digitally signed by the sender to provide non-repudiation within the AS2 payload context.
Electronic pedigrees as defined by the states of Florida and California are messages that contain fairly complex legal documentation which describe the chain of custody or ownership of a given package of drugs, but they also contain several types of legally required certifications. Read the rest of this entry »
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