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MEDICINES, POISONS AND THERAPEUTIC GOODS AMENDMENT REGULATION 2010 (NO 5) (NO 45 OF 2010)
THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR
THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
MEDICINES, POISONS AND
THERAPEUTIC GOODS AMENDMENT
REGULATION 2010 (NO 5)
SL2010-45
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Minister for Health
Medicines, Poisons and Therapeutic Goods Amendment
Regulation 2010 (No 5)
The Medicines, Poisons and Therapeutic Goods Act 2008 (the
Act) consolidated four Acts and their regulations regarding ACT law on
medicines, poisons and prohibited substances; by repealing and replacing the
Poisons and Drugs Act 1978, the Poisons Act 1933, the
Public Health (Prohibited Drugs) Act 1957, and significantly
amending the Drugs of Dependence Act 1989.
The Act gave
effect to reforms required by the National Competition Policy Review of Drugs,
Poisons and Controlled Substances Legislation (Galbally Review), and served to
provide a more unified and workable scheme. In doing so, the Act adopts the
Standard for the Uniform Scheduling of Drugs and Poisons (the SUSDP), developed
by the National Drugs and Poisons Schedule Committee established under the
Therapeutic Goods Act 1989 (Cwlth).
The objective of the Act,
as recommended by the Galbally Review, is to promote and protect public health
and safety by minimising medicinal misadventure with and diversion of regulated
substances, accidental or deliberate poisonings and the manufacture of regulated
substances that are subject to abuse. The Act also has the purpose of ensuring
that consumers of prescription and non-prescription medicines have adequate
information to allow them to use medicines safely and effectively.
The
Act establishes an authorisation and licensing framework for medicines and
poisons, as well as grounds and powers for disciplinary action to be taken
against authorised and licensed persons. The Act also controls the way in which
medicines and poisons are dealt with through a range of offences, imposing a
range of potential penalties, including the imposition of terms of imprisonment
where appropriate. Enforcement of the offences is achieved through a
comprehensive range of inspection and seizure powers, including the capacity to
take and analyse samples.
The Medicines, Poisons and Therapeutic Goods Regulation
The
Medicines, Poisons and Therapeutic Goods Regulation (the MPTG Regulation)
provides the detail for the regulatory framework established by the Act. The
MPTG Regulation contains the more substantive detail, specific requirements, or
conditions for a range of activities and obligations contained within the Act.
Some provisions of the MPTG Regulation prescribe additional information required
for licences or authorisations, whereas other provisions impose statutory
licence conditions. There are also provisions of the MPTG Regulation specifying
requirements for activities such as labelling or packaging.
This Regulation
The Act and the MPTG Regulation were developed to
maintain, as much as possible, the status quo for health professionals in the
ACT in the performance of their duties. On that basis, what a health
professional, including midwives, could and could not do prior to the
commencement of the Act was intended to be the same following the commencement
of the Act.
In the 2009 Federal Budget the Commonwealth Government
announced reforms that would give patients access to the Pharmaceutical Benefits
Scheme (PBS) subsidies for services provided by midwives. To give full
effect to these reforms amendments to State and Territory legislation to give
midwives prescribing rights is necessary. In order for midwives to have the
authorisation to prescribe medicines in the ACT amendments to the MPTG
Regulation is necessary, which is the purpose of this Regulation.
Clauses
Clause 1 – Name of regulation
This section sets out the
name of the Regulation as the Medicines, Poisons and Therapeutic Goods
Amendment Regulation 2010 (No 5).
Clause 2 – Commencement
Pursuant to this provision, the
Regulation is to commence on the day after notification on the ACT Legislation
Register.
Clause 3 - Legislation amended
This section expressly states
that the legislation amended is the Medicines, Poisons and Therapeutic Goods
Regulation 2008.
Clause 4 – Section 30 (1)(c)(i)
Under
section 30 of the MPTG Regulation, persons mentioned in column 2 of
Schedule 1 of the MPTG Regulation may be authorised to prescribe a
medicine. Prescribing a medicine is authorised if prescribing of the medicine
is amongst the authorised dealings for the person listed in column 3 of
Schedule 1 in relation to that person, and the prescribing is consistent
with any listed restriction in column 3 of Schedule 1.
Additionally, where the prescription is a self-prescription,
section 30(1)(c) currently states that the person must not be a trainee
dentist or intern doctor. This clause amends that provision, adding trainee
nurse practitioners and persons training to be an eligible midwife. This is
consistent with the intention of the subsection, which is to expressly prevent
those in training, be it dentists, doctors or midwives, from prescribing
medications for themselves.
Clause 5 – New section 41 (1)(ia)
The MPTG
Regulation requires that all prescriptions include the particulars listed in
section 41(1). This provision inserts into section 41(1) and new
paragraph ia. This additional paragraph applies if the prescriber is an
eligible midwife. Consequently, if the prescriber is an eligible midwife the
prescription must include the words ‘for midwifery use only’.
Clause 6 – New
section 123 (ba)
Division 4.2.2 of the MPTG Regulation
governs the dispensing of medicines. As only a pharmacist may dispense
medicines the requirements imposed by this Division only concern
pharmacists.
The Division instructs how medicines are to be dispensed, as
well as the authorisation conditions that apply to the dispensing of medicines.
Section 123 imposes requirements that must be met in regard to the
labelling of dispensed medicines. This provision inserts an additional
paragraph into section 123; paragraph (ba). This additional paragraph
applies if the prescriber is an eligible midwife. Consequently, if the
prescriber is an eligible midwife the label on the dispensed medicine must state
‘for midwifery use only’.
Clause 7 – New section 161 (ia)
The supply of
medicines, such as ‘sample packs’, during consultations is regulated
by Division 4.2.6 of the MPTG Regulation. Like medicines dispensed under
section 123, a medicine supplied pursuant to section 161 must have a
label, and that label must include certain prescribed information. This
provision inserts an additional paragraph into section 161;
paragraph (ia). This additional paragraph applies if the prescriber is an
eligible midwife. Consequently, if the prescriber is an eligible midwife the
label on the supplied medicine must state ‘for midwifery use only’.
Clause 8 - Section 360 (2)(a)(i)
Section 360 of
the MPTG Regulation enables a person that is authorised to prescribed medicines
to self-administer medicines in certain circumstances.
The provision
permits a prescriber to self administer a restricted medicine, provided that the
restricted medicine has been prescribed or supplied by another person who is
authorised to prescribe. There are two exceptions. Under
subsection (2)(a)(ii) the person that prescribed the restricted medicine
cannot be related to or employed by the person that is
self-administering.
The other exception, in subsection (2)(a)(i), is
where the prescriber is a trainee dentist or intern doctor. This subsection is
amended by clause 8 to also include trainee nurse practitioners and persons
training to be an eligible midwife. As with clause 4, this is consistent
with the intention of the subsection.
Clause 9 – Section 510(a), except
notes
Section 510 of the MPTG Regulation sets out who is, for the
purposes of Chapter 11, a prescribed person. Included at paragraph (a) are
certain health professionals such as doctors, dentists and podiatrists. The
effect of clause 9 is to add nurse practitioners and eligible midwives to
that list of health professionals in paragraph (a) of section 510.
It is important to observe that the notes attached to
section 510(a) are not affected, and therefore remain unaltered.
Clause 10 – New
section 861 (4)
Section 861 of the MPTG Regulation
operates to enable the Chief Health Officer to issue a permit to a public
employee enabling that person to lawfully deal with a regulated substance or
regulated therapeutic good, provided the dealing is in accordance with the
permit. Such permits may identify the public employee by name, or by position
held. The section also sets out the required contents of such a permit for it
to be valid.
The Legislation Act 2001 defines who is a public
employee. In the majority of cases a public employee is a public servant.
However, a public employee also includes a person employed by a territory
instrumentality, a statutory office-holder, or a person employed by a statutory
office-holder. Accordingly, it is through this provision that certain public
servants are lawfully able to handle a regulated substance through the course of
their employment.
This clause adds a fourth subsection to
section 861. This new addition provides that in section 861 a
reference to a public employee includes a policy officer. This amendment
removes any doubt that the Chief Health Officer can give an authorisation to a
police officer to deal with a regulated substance or regulated therapeutic good,
just as the Chief Health Officer can for a public health officer or any other
public employee.
Clause 11 - Schedule 1, part 1.5, new
item 2
Schedule 1 of the MPTG Regulation sets out the
authorisations for medicines held by each type of health-related occupation.
This includes midwives, who are listed in Part 1.5 of the Schedule.
Part 1.5 consists of a table with three columns; item, person
authorised, and authorisation. At present there is only a single item,
item 1, giving authorisations to a midwife.
The effect of this
amendment is to add a second item, which gives authorisations to an eligible
midwife. What constitutes an eligible midwife is defined by the
National Health Act 1953 (Cwlth).
Clause 12 - Schedule 3, part 3.2, item 4
The
focus of Schedule 3 of the MPTG Regulation is standing approvals for
designated Appendix D medicines. The Schedule consists of two Parts.
Part 3.1 of the Schedule defines the four different approval conditions
that are then placed upon certain specialist doctors by Part 3.2.
Appendix D medicines are listed in the Standard for the Uniform Scheduling
of Drugs and Poisons (the SUSDP).
This clause amends item 4 of
Part 3.2. The amendment adds to the medicines in column 3 ambrisentan
for human use and sitaxentan for human use, with conditions 1 and 3
assigned. Lenalidomide for human use is also added, but is subject to
conditions 1 and 2.
Clause 13 – Dictionary, new definitions
This provision
inserts into the dictionary of the MPTG Regulation definitions of authorised
midwife and eligible midwife, which are to have the meanings assigned
to them by the National Health Act 1953 (Cwlth).
A definition
of pharmaceuticals benefits scheme is also inserted. This definition
states that the pharmaceuticals benefits scheme is the scheme established
under Part 7 of the National Health Act 1953 (Cwlth) for the
supply of pharmaceutical benefits.