kevmicsmi
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Palm Beach woman sues Walgreens over insulting comments on prescription
Unbelievable. Why do people think it is worth money if they get their feelings hurt?:bonk: :bonk: :bonk: :bonk:
By Missy Stoddard
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Posted March 8 2006
"I was devastated, humiliated and embarrassed," Karp said. "I honestly couldn't speak. I was trembling."
Karp filed suit Tuesday against Illinois-based Walgreen Co., accusing the nationwide retail chain of defamation, negligent supervision and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
Walgreens is investigating, according to company spokeswoman Carol Hively, who said that computers are accessible to pharmacists and pharmacy technicians.
"The Drug Utilization Review (DUR) includes a notes field intended for the pharmacist to use to enter reminders and patient requests," Hively said. "We want to ensure that our pharmacy employees are acting in a proper and professional manner so we are looking into this matter."
The notes field is intended for internal use as a private reminder for the pharmacist, Hively said.
For Karp, seeing the printout underscored her long-held fears of being labeled for taking medication to stabilize her moods.
In August, she moved full time from Connecticut to the town of Palm Beach. When she was younger, Karp said she self-medicated her angst with alcohol and drugs. She enjoyed eight years of sobriety before relapsing and is nearing the two-year mark of again being sober, she said. Now, she is struggling to sleep and consumed with worry.
"I'm thinking they're thinking here comes psycho, that they're laughing at me as I come in the store," she said. "I had enough trouble picking these [medications] up in the first place."
At the Walgreens pharmacies Karp patronized in Connecticut, she said that on more than one occasion she asked store employees to be discreet when discussing her medications. Many times, she said, employees would loudly call Karp's name and make reference to her medications. It would make Karp cringe.
"A person has the right to have whatever medications they're taking to be private," she said. "I'm so private that I never talk about my medications and now they're telling me that I'm psycho, crazy."
While preparing for a trip to Los Angeles, Karp on Feb. 27 had a friend go to the Walgreens on Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard and Australian Avenue to pick up the Ambien. Attached to the printout with the drug information was the Drug Utilization Review, containing the comments.
Karp's friend immediately contacted Walgreens and left a voicemail on an 800 number. Someone from Walgreens called back first thing the next morning and "apologized profusely," noting that the comments never should have been written. Karp's lawyer, Cathy Lively, said she made more than a dozen phone calls to Walgreens, all to no avail. She said she received "a very generic `We'll investigate.'"
Since the notes have been in the computer since at least September 2004, the date of the first entry, it's anyone's guess how many Walgreens employees may have read them, Lively said.
The company Web site says there are 5,122 stores nationwide, with 673 in Florida. The site boasts that Walgreens new computer system for filling prescriptions links all stores into a single network.
Lively said the notes would not be an issue if the entry contained something helpful, such as the patient requests not to call out her name.
"But to put the demeaning terms crazy and psycho is not a patient preference and is not going to help a staff person provide a service," she said.
Leslie Weiner, a West Palm Beach licensed clinical social worker, says the words crazy and psycho are not diagnostic terms. Rather, they are "slang and very judgmental," she said, and could be extremely distressing for a patient.
Countless other Walgreens customers could unknowingly be in the same situation as Karp, according to Lively.
"There a lot of medications with stigmas and sensitivities," she said. "A man taking Viagra, what are they going to be labeled? Do you want slanderous, derogatory comments put in the system?
"My client is not psychotic and not insane or incompetent, but the inference is there. If everybody treated for depression is deemed crazy and psycho, there are real problems," Lively said.
Unbelievable. Why do people think it is worth money if they get their feelings hurt?:bonk: :bonk: :bonk: :bonk: