A prescription drug (also prescription medication or prescription medicine) is a pharmaceutical drug that legally requires a medical prescription to be dispensed. In contrast, over-the-counter drugs can be obtained without a prescription. The reason for this difference in substance control is the potential scope of misuse, from drug abuse to practicing medicine without a license and without sufficient education. Different jurisdictions have different definitions of what constitutes a prescription drug.
"Rx" (℞) is often used as a short form for prescription drug in North America - a contraction of the Latin word "recipe" (an imperative form of "recipere") meaning "take". Prescription drugs are often dispensed together with a monograph (in Europe, a Patient Information Leaflet or PIL) that gives detailed information about the drug.
The use of prescription drugs has been increasing since the 1960s.
Regulation
Australia
In Australia, the Standard for the Uniform Scheduling of Medicines and Poisons (SUSMP) governs the manufacture and supply of drugs with several categories:
- Schedule 1 – Defunct
- Schedule 2 – Pharmacy Medicine
- Schedule 3 – Pharmacist-Only Medicine
- Schedule 4 – Prescription-Only Medicine/Prescription Animal Remedy
- Schedule 5 – Caution
- Schedule 6 – Poison
- Schedule 7 – Dangerous Poison
- Schedule 8 – Controlled Drug (Possession without authority illegal)
- Schedule 9 – Prohibited Substance
- Unscheduled Substances
Like in the UK, the patient visits a health practitioner, (doctor, nurse, dentist, pediatrist, etc.,), who may prescribe the drug.
Many prescriptions issued by health practitioners in Australia are covered by the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme,
a scheme that provides subsidised prescription drugs to residents of
Australia to ensure that all Australians have affordable and reliable
access to a wide range of necessary medicines. When purchasing a drug
under the PBS, the consumer pays no more than the patient co-payment
contribution, which, as of January 1, 2019, is A$40.30
for general patients. Those covered by government entitlements
(low-income earners, welfare recipients, Health Care Card holders, etc.)
and or under the Repatriation Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme
(RPBS) have a reduced co-payment, which is $6.50 in 2019. The
co-payments are compulsory and can be discounted by pharmacies up to a
maximum of A$1.00 at cost to the pharmacy.
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, the Medicines Act 1968 and the Prescription Only Medicines (Human Use) Order 1997
contain regulations that cover the supply of sale, use, prescribing and
production of medicines. There are three categories of medicine:
- Prescription-only medicines (POM), which may be dispensed (sold in the case of a private prescription) by a pharmacist if they are prescribed by a prescriber
- Pharmacy medicines (P), which may be sold by a pharmacist without a prescription
- General sales list (GSL) medicines, which may be sold without a prescription in any shop
The possession of a prescription-only medicine without a prescription is legal unless it is covered by the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971.
A patient visits a medical practitioner or dentist, who may prescribe drugs and certain other medical items, such as blood glucose-testing equipment for diabetics.
Also, qualified and experienced nurses and pharmacists may be
independent prescribers. Both may prescribe all POMs (including
controlled drugs), but may not prescribe Schedule 1 controlled drugs,
and 3 listed controlled drugs for the treatment of addiction; which is
similar to doctors, who require a special license from the Home Office
to prescribe schedule 1 drugs. Schedule 1 drugs have little or no
medical benefit, hence their limitations on prescribing. District nurses and health visitors
have had limited prescribing rights since the mid-1990s; until then,
prescriptions for dressings and simple medicines had to be signed by a
doctor. Once issued, a prescription is taken by the patient to a
pharmacy, which dispenses the medicine.
Most prescriptions are NHS prescriptions, subject to a standard charge that is unrelated to what is dispensed. The NHS prescription fee was increased to £9.00 per item in England on 1 April 2019; prescriptions are free of charge if prescribed and dispensed in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland,
and for some patients in England, such as inpatients, children, those
over 60s or with certain medical conditions, and claimants of certain
benefits. The pharmacy charges the NHS the actual cost of the medicine, which may vary from a few pence to hundreds of pounds.
A patient can consolidate prescription charges by using a prescription
payment certificate (informally a "season ticket"), effectively capping
costs at £29.10 per quarter or £104.00 per year.
Outside the NHS, private prescriptions are issued by private medical practitioner and sometimes under the NHS for medicines that are not covered by the NHS. A patient pays the pharmacy the normal price for medicine prescribed outside the NHS.
Survey results published by Ipsos MORI
in 2008 found that around 800,000 people in England were not collecting
prescriptions or getting them dispensed because of the cost, the same
as in 2001.
United States
In the United States, the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
defines what substances require a prescription for them to be dispensed
by a pharmacy. The federal government authorizes physicians (of any
specialty), physician assistants, nurse practitioners and other advanced practice nurses, veterinarians, dentists, and optometrists to prescribe any controlled substance. They are then issued unique Drug Enforcement Act numbers; many other mental and physical health technicians, including basic-level registered nurses, medical assistants,
emergency medical technicians, most psychologists, and social workers,
for example, do not have the authority to prescribe any controlled
substance.
The Controlled Substances Act (CSA) was enacted into law by the US Congress
of the United States in 1970. It is the federal drug law that regulates
manufacture, importation, possession, use, and distribution of certain
substances. The legislation classes substances into five schedules, with
varying qualifications for each schedule.
The safety and the effectiveness of prescription drugs in the US are regulated by the 1987 Prescription Drug Marketing Act (PDMA). The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is charged with implementing the law.
Misuse or abuse of prescription drugs can lead to adverse drug events, including those due to dangerous drug interactions.
The package insert for a prescription drug contains information
about the intended effect of the drug and how it works in the body. It
also contains information about side effects, how a patient should take
the drug, and cautions for its use, including warnings about allergies.
As a general rule, over-the-counter drugs
(OTC) are used to treat a condition that does not need care from a
healthcare professional if have been proven to meet higher safety
standards for self-medication by patients. Often, a lower strength of a
drug will be approved for OTC use, but higher strengths require a
prescription to be obtained; a notable case is ibuprofen, which has been widely available as an OTC pain killer
since the mid-1980s, but it is available by prescription in doses up to
four times the OTC dose for severe pain that is not adequately
controlled by the OTC strength.
Herbal preparations, amino acids, vitamins, minerals, and other food supplements are regulated by the FDA as dietary supplements. Because specific health claims cannot be made, the consumer must make informed decisions when purchasing such products.
By law, American pharmacies operated by "membership clubs" such as Costco and Sam's Club
must allow non-members to use their pharmacy services and may not
charge more for these services than they charge as their members.
Physicians may legally prescribe drugs for uses other than those specified in the FDA approval, known as off-label use. Drug companies, however, are prohibited from marketing their drugs for off-label uses.
Large US retailers that operate pharmacies and pharmacy chains
use inexpensive generic drugs as a way to attract customers into stores.
Several chains, including Walmart, Kroger (including subsidiaries such
as Dillons), Target, and others, offer $4 monthly prescriptions on
select generic drugs as a customer draw.
Publix Supermarkets, which has pharmacies in many of their stores,
offers free prescriptions on a few older but still effective medications
to their customers. The maximum supply is for 30 days.
Some prescription drugs are commonly abused, particularly those marketed as analgesics, including fentanyl (Duragesic), hydrocodone (Vicodin), oxycodone (OxyContin), oxymorphone (Opana), propoxyphene (Darvon), hydromorphone (Dilaudid), meperidine (Demerol), and diphenoxylate (Lomotil).
Some prescription painkillers have been found to be addictive,
and unintentional poisoning deaths in the United States have skyrocketed
since the 1990s according to the National Safety Council. Prescriber education guidelines as well as patient education, prescription drug monitoring programs and regulation of pain clinics are regulatory tactics which have been used to curtail opioid use and misuse.
Expiration date
The
expiration date, required in several countries, specifies the date up
to which the manufacturer guarantees the full potency and safety of a
drug. In the United States, expiration dates are determined by
regulations established by the FDA. The FDA advises consumers not to use products after their expiration dates.
A study conducted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
covered over 100 drugs, prescription and over-the-counter. The results
showed that about 85% of them were safe and effective as far as 15 years
past their expiration date. Joel Davis, a former FDA expiration-date compliance chief, said that with a handful of exceptions—notably nitroglycerin, insulin, some liquid antibiotics; outdated tetracyclines can cause Fanconi syndrome—most expired drugs are probably effective.
The American Medical Association (AMA) issued a report and statement on Pharmaceutical Expiration Dates. The Harvard Medical School
Family Health Guide notes that, with rare exceptions, "it's true the
effectiveness of a drug may decrease over time, but much of the original
potency still remains even a decade after the expiration date".
The expiration date is the final day that the manufacturer
guarantees the full potency and safety of a medication. Drug expiration
dates exist on most medication labels, including prescription,
over-the-counter (OTC) and dietary (herbal) supplements. U.S.
pharmaceutical manufacturers are required by law to place expiration
dates on prescription products prior to marketing. For legal and
liability reasons, manufacturers will not make recommendations about the
stability of drugs past the original expiration date.
Cost
Prices for prescription drugs vary widely around the world. Prescription costs for biosimilar and generic drugs are usually less than brand names, but the cost is different from one pharmacy to another.
Prescription drug prices including generic prices are rising
faster than the average rate of inflation. To subsidize prescription
drug costs, some patients have decided to buy medicine online.
Generics undergo strict scrutiny to meet the equal efficacy,
safety, dosage, strength, stability, and quality of brand name drugs.
Generics are developed after the brand name has already been
established, and so generic drug approval in many aspects has a
shortened approval process because it replicates the brand name drug.
Brand name drugs cost more due to time, money, and resources that
drug companies invest in in order to repeat research clinical trials
that the FDA requires for the drug to remain in the market.
Because drug companies have to invest more in research costs to do
this, brand name drug prices are much higher when sold to consumers.
When the patent expires for a brand name drug, generic versions
of that drug are produced by other companies and are sold for lower
price. By switching to generic prescription drugs, patients can save
significant amounts of money: e.g. one study by the FDA showed an example with more than 50% savings of a patient's overall costs of their prescription drugs.
Drug cost containment strategies in the US
In
the United States there are many resources available to patients to
lower the costs of medication. These include copayments, coinsurance and
deductibles. The Medicaid Drug Rebate Program is another example.
Generic drug program lowers amount of money patient has to pay
when picking up their prescription at the pharmacy and as their name
implies they only cover generic drugs.
Co-pay assistance programs are program to help patient lower
costs of specialty medications: i.e. medications that are on restricted
formulary, limited distribution, and with no generics available. These
medications can include drugs for HIV, hepatitis C, and multiple
sclerosis. Patient Assistance Program Center (RxAssist)
has a list of foundations that provide co-pay assistance programs. It
is important to note that co-pay assistance programs are for the
under-insured patients. Patients without insurance are not eligible for
this resource, however they may be eligible for patient assistance
programs.
Patient assistance programs are funded by the manufacturer of the
medication. Patients can often apply to these programs through the
manufacturer's website. This type of assistance program is one of the
few options for the uninsured patient.
The out of pocket costs for patients enrolled in co-pay
assistance or patient assistance programs are $0. It is a major resource
to help lower costs of medications – however, many providers and
patients are not aware of the resources.
Environment
Traces of prescription drugs — including antibiotics, anti-convulsants, mood stabilizers and sex hormones — have been detected in drinking water.
Pharmaceutically active compounds (PhACs) discarded from human therapy
and their metabolites have been found to not be completely eliminated by
sewage treatment plants and have been found at low concentrations in
surface waters downstream from those plants.
The continuous discarding of incompletely treated water may interact
with other environmental chemicals and lead to uncertain ecological
effects. Due to most pharmaceuticals being highly soluble, fish and other aquatic organisms are susceptible to their effects. The long term effects of pharmaceuticals in the environment may affect survival and reproduction of such organisms.
However, levels of medical drug waste in the water is at a low enough
level that it is not a direct concern to human health. However,
processes, such as biomagnification, are potential concerns in impacting human health.
On the other hand, there is clear evidence of harm to aquatic
animals and fauna. Recent advancements in technology have allowed
scientists to detect smaller, trace quantities of pharmaceuticals in the
ng/ml range.
Despite being found such low concentrations, female hormonal
contraceptives have been documented to cause feminizing effects on males
of vertebrate species, such as fish, frogs and crocodiles. A promising model has been developed to further study the effects on the aquatic environment. The biological read across model combines the concepts of mechanism of action (MoA) and adverse outcomes pathway (AOP).
In other words, the species being studied needs to have similar
mechanisms by which the pharmaceutical acts on the species and reach
similar concentrations that would be enough to cause an effect in
humans. Studying these relations may give us more quantifiable information on the effects of pharmaceuticals in the environment.
Currently, research is being done on various methods of reducing chemical waste in the environment. In addition, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) established guidelines in 2007 to inform consumers should dispose of prescription drugs.
When medications do not include specific disposal instructions,
patients should not flush medications in the toilet, but instead use
medication take-back programs. This aims to reduce the amount of
pharmaceutical waste that gets into sewage and landfills.
If no take-back programs are available, prescription drugs can be
discarded in household trash after they are crushed and/or dissolved and
then mixed in a separate container or sealable bag with undesirable
substances like cat litter or other unappealing material (to discourage
consumption).