A Higher Standard
The pharmacies that did register told DGR
that they did so to meet the highest quality standards
and free themselves from complex and varied
state laws.
PharMedium, which registered all four of
its sites as outsourcing facilities under the Drug
Quality and Security Act, is attracted to the idea of
syncing its operations to a single federal standard
for quality, President Rich Kruzynski told DGR.
PharMedium’s facilities — located in Texas,
Tennessee, Mississippi and New Jersey — ship
batches of compounded drugs to hospitals across
the country. The sites are not traditional pharmacies
that make drugs per prescription, nor are they largescale
drug manufacturers — falling into the grey
area that prompted FDA calls for further authority.
The company’s state licenses are a good
example of the confusion surrounding mediumsized
compounders. PharMedium is licensed in
20 states as a wholesaler, 14 states as a pharmacy
and 12 as a manufacturer, Kruzynski said.
Now the facilities must meet only the FDA’s
regulations.
New Effort
Meanwhile, state governments are continuing
to push tougher regulations on compounding
pharmacies.
Twenty-seven bills or resolutions have been
filed across 16 states to crack down on compounders
as of October 2013. Of those bills,
nine have become law, according to the National
Conference of State Legislators. The states that
adopted measures are Maryland, Georgia, California,
Minnesota, Utah, Texas, New Hampshire,
Tennessee and Virginia.quoted from and read more here
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