May 2022 Florida Pharmacy Today

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Executive Insight MICHAEL JACKSON, BPHARM, RETIRED EVP & CEO, FLORIDA PHARMACY ASSOCIATION TJ MORTON, FPA GENERAL COUNSEL

Parental Bill of Rights What Does This Have to Do with Pharmacists?

J

ust recently, I had the honor of presenting a legislative update program to the members of the Alachua County Association of Pharmacists in Gainesville. This was their first in-person meeting post-pandemic and I sense that all who were present relished the ability to come together again. It is a scenario that I am seeing much of these days; but this is not the subject of my commentary in Florida Pharmacy Today this month. If you have been scanning through our policy updates (see FPA Latest News – October 11, 2021) or attending our regulatory and law conferences, you may be aware of legislation that was approved by the Governor in 2021 entitled Parents’ Bill of Rights. HB241 had no less than 26 co-sponsors in the Florida House of Representatives. The bill acknowledges the constitutional principles in place that parents, who have children in their care, have certain liberties to protect the privacy of their offspring. This ranges from choices related to education and/or health care. What is interesting and what we have shared with our members is that HB241 created F.S. 1014.06 under Parental Bill of Rights. This new statute is not within the pharmacy practice act (F.S. 465) or the general health profession laws (F.S. 456); rather, it is in a new section. Under this new statute, you will find this language: “Except as otherwise provided by law, a health care practitioner, as defined in s.456.001, or an individual employed by such health care practitioner may not provide or solicit or arrange to provide health care services or prescribe medicinal drugs to a minor child without first obtaining

written parental consent.” If you look under F.S. 456.001, you will discover that pharmacists are listed as one of the many “health care practitioners” under Florida laws. So, what does this have to do with pharmacists? Well, the simple answer is before you provide a pharmacy service such as dispensing or consulting to a minor, you must have written consent from the parent of the child. Failure to get that consent means that you may be committing a misdemeanor. It gets more interesting as we dive deeper into this issue. The Board of Pharmacy has revised its disciplinary guidelines to address this issue. Rule 64B16-30.001 has been changed (effective 3/13/2022) to create a licensure penalty for failure to comply with parental consent requirements of F.S. 1016.06. The minimum penalty is a reprimand and a $250 fine with a maximum penalty of a 1 year probation and a fine of $500. For repeat offenders, the penalty could go as high as a revocation of the license. So, who is considered a minor? Our general counsel, T. J. Morton, points to F.S. 1.01(13) as defining a minor as anyone who has not reached the age of 18; so anyone who is 17 or under will be the subject of the need to get consent. Some of our members were interested in how HIPAA privacy standards permit getting consent from someone who is not a patient. According to HHS, which is responsible for interpreting and enforcing HIPAA, HIPAA allows a parent to access his or her minor child’s medical records. However, there are 3 limited exceptions to this: ■ When the consent of the parent is not required under state law. Un-

Michael Jackson, B.Pharm, CPh FPA CEO (Ret)

TJ Morton

MAY 2022

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