Senator Markey Queries Pharmacies on Prescription Drug
Labeling to Aid the Blind and Visually-Impaired Wednesday, January 7, 2015
Commends CVS for new “talking” prescription labels
– Senator Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) today sent letters
to a dozen pharmacies requesting information on their efforts to make
prescription drug label information accessible to patients who are blind,
visually-impaired or elderly with deteriorating vision. There are at least 20.6
million Americans who experience vision loss preventing them from reading
important prescription drug label information independently. In his letters,
Senator Markey asks the twelve pharmacies what steps they have taken to adopt
or implement best practices for blind or visually-impaired individuals,
including providing information in braille or large print, offering audible
devices to deliver information, and any costs for making drug labeling
information available. Earlier this week, CVS announced it is now offering its
mail service customers talking prescription labels through its “ScripTalk”
system, as well as braille and large print labels for free its customers who
are blind or visually-impaired.
“Pharmacies are important partners in empowering our
visually impaired citizens to take full control of their health,” said Senator
Markey. “Putting health and prescription drug information into the hands and
ears of patients who are blind or visually-impaired is critical to ensuring
safety and promoting independence.
“I commend CVS for providing options for those who are
visually impaired, and I encourage all pharmacies to adopt policies,
technologies and services that are readily available and will help promote and
protect the health of all customers.”
A copy of the letters to the pharmacies can be found
HERE. Senator Markey sent letters to CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Wal-Mart,
Express Scripts, Target, Safeway, Kroger, UnitedHealth Group, Sears/Kmart,
Costco, and Medicine Shoppe International.
In 2012, Senator Markey’s “Prescription Drug Labeling
Promotion Act” was passed as part of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
Safety and Innovation Act, ensuring that the blind and visually-impaired have
safe and independent access to the information on prescription drug labels. The
law established a working group of pharmacists, patient advocates, and federal
regulators that issued recommendations of best practices for pharmacies to
ensure that people who are blind or visually-impaired have access to
prescription drug labeling. The law also instructs the Government
Accountability Office to analyze the degree to which pharmacists are adhering
to the law and whether there continues to be a lack of access to prescription
drug labeling for the blind and visually-impaired.
Eric Bridges
American Council of the Blind
Director of External Relations and Policy
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