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Pharmacy benefit firms to push electronic prescriptions
InfoWorld (Feb 23, 2001)
By Julekha Dash, Computerworld
IN AN EFFORT to get doctors to prescribe more medicine
electronically, three leading PBM (pharmacy benefit managers)
have announced plans to pour $60 million into creation of an
electronic exchange that links physicians, pharmacies, PBMs,
and health plans. Merck-Medco Managed Caren in Franklin
Lakes, N.J.; Express Scripts, in St. Louis; and AdvancePCS,
in Irving, Texas, will form RxHub.

The members expect it to be up and running by the end of this
year or early next year. Jon Halbert, vice chairman of e-business
and technology at AdvancePCS, said the trio hopes to have
25,000 physicians signed up by the end of next year.

The PBMs are "collaborating in improving the overall efficiency
of prescription" writing, said Stephen Cohan,
senior vice president of business development at Merck-Medco.

The companies hope to reduce the number of medical mistakes
that are the result of prescription-writing errors. Members cited
an Institute of Medicine report that indicated that prescription
errors kill as many as 7,000 Americans a year and cost the health
care industry more than $77 billion a year.

Through the exchange, physicians would be able to use
electronic prescribing software on handheld devices or
a physician management system to link directly to pharmacies,
PBMs, and health plans.

Cohan said the exchange would attract physicians by offering
them real-time access to patient benefit information.

Reducing medical errors has been the subject of wide
discussion in the health care industry since the Institute
of Medicine released a study in December 1999 that said medical
errors cause as many as 98,000 deaths a year.

Other companies have taken similar initiatives.

Last month, General Motors announced a three-year effort to
offer handhelds to physicians who treat its employees and
companies, including GM and Dow Chemical, will encourage
hospitals to use certain technologies in an effort to improve
patient safety standards.

http://www.infoworld.com/articles/hn/xml/01/02/23/010223hnphamacy.xml?p=br&s=5

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