Mthr has been on 8 or 10 drugs over the last 18 months, some for a long time, others for just a few weeks. They are repackaged by the pharmacy for dispensing at a particular time by the memory care home. All I see are the bills.
In the last 12 months, I have found 4 errors on the bills. Accounting Dept talks to me and assures me that the right drugs have been sent, but that the pharmacist "forgot" to enter it into the system, and they won't even charge me for what they left off the bill!
Well, today I opened the bill and found that they are now sending her benadryl. The doc prescribed this for two months until her saw her on 9.27 and took her off. He was concerned that she would be confused and fall more easily, so of course I don't want her on that any more. I called and left a message on the machine, and will call the home tomorrow.
What recourse do I have, if any? I believe this is the only pharmacy the Memory Care home allows to fill patient prescriptions. Is there any way to make the pharmacy pay attention to detail so they don't make 4 errors in the new year? Ideas?
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The pharmacist at the independent pharmacy left a message that they did not have a discontinue order from the Dr in Sept thus the benadryl was a continuation. If they did not have a dc order, I don't see why I was not billed for the drug in Oct, Nov, Dec. unless this was another "billing error" as cya'd for by the accounting dept. ARGH!
I have had another iron in the fire (or three) with my teens and have not been able to reach the MD's office this week to find out if they do or do not have the order to discontinue in the record. I'm gonna be unhappy if someone forgot to write it down on either side!
I am definitely changing pharmacies to a big box that offers the repackaging. I'm so disgusted with the pharmacy. Since my husband is friends with at least one of the 4 pharmacists who work there, I have tried to be pleasant but very firm. I suppose moving the account will speak more loudly.
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My wife discovered that she could get the same generic prescriptions from our grocery store pharmacy for a huge savings. She cancelled the mail-order supplies and set up the grocery store pharmacy for ninety day supplies, which was a savings in itself. She decided to pay cash for the lesser expensive meds, which pushed the donut hole much farther into the year.
I know that not all meds are available through Walmart or your local pharmacy, but if there are those that are, you can save money using that approach. You will have to get the meds from the pharmacy yourself and deliver them to the nurse at the facility, but I don't think that they can refuse to allow you to use this method of getting medications.
When drugs are administered by a facility to limit the chance of error they are dispensed in single doses. This of course costs much more money and entails the use of a special drug cart. As with any services there is plenty of room for exploitation. Certainly talk to the facility administrators and try to rectify any mistakes. If the mistakes are actually in dispensing the wrong medications the pharmacy should be reported to the licensing authority. Deliberately wrongful billing when the patient has not actually received the medication is fraud.