New Brunswick

Long-awaited drug-monitoring program starts in N.B. pharmacies

The New Brunswick Pharmacists' Association supports the new prescription-monitoring program that will begin rolling out in the province by the end of the year, but CEO Paul Blanchard warns it won't be a "magic cure" for the problem of prescription drug abuse.

People picking up prescription drugs will need provincial health-card number or federal equivalent

The New Brunswick Pharmacists' Association has been asking for an electronic drug-monitoring program for more than a decade. (iStock)

New Brunswick's new prescription-monitoring system meant to cut back on drug abuse is now live, the provincial government announced Monday.

The system gives each New Brunswicker a single, up-to-date electronic health record that includes their medication history.

"This system is a key component of the One Patient, One Record vision and will help health-care professionals make better decisions for their patients' care," provincial Health Minister Victor Boudreau said in a statement. 

The government's announcement said that over the next year the program will include alerts "to help prescribers and pharmacists identify potential issues such as so-called 'double-doctoring,' prescriptions being filled at multiple pharmacies, and high quantities of monitored drugs."

People picking up prescription drugs will need a provincial health-card number or federal equivalent.

The government says the electronic health record is a secure and private, and personal health information is protected under the Personal Health Information Privacy and Access Act.