Ohio Automated Rx Reporting System
(OARRS) Ohio Automated Rx Reporting System
The Ohio Automated Rx Reporting System (OARRS) is Ohio’s state Prescription Drug Monitoring Program and is run by the Ohio State Board of Pharmacy. It was put into place on March 18, 2005. The law is available to read in the Drug Laws of Ohio pages C-50 through C-54. The Ohio State Board of Pharmacy is responsible for collecting and verifying data for prescriptions that fall under Schedule II-V controlled substances as well as carisoprodol and tramadol prescriptions.
Data Submission
The format in which data is submitted to the State Board is highly regulated as well. All data submitted to the OARRS system must be submitted according to the 2005 American Society of Automation in Pharmacy standards (ASAP). The following information shows the accepted mediums that the State Board of Pharmacy accepts for data submission as well as the requirements for each medium.
SFTP
Secure File Transfer Protocol is the preferred method
Required Data
Data Reception
After a data submission is received and updated, a confirmation e-mail will be sent to the pharmacy contact which will confirm the date processed, the number of records received, the number of records with errors and the name of the submitted file. If there were errors in the data submission, a Microsoft Excel document will be attached to the e-mail and will not contain any Protected Health Information (PHI).
Receipt of paper forms will be provided via fax.
Data Rejection
Data may be rejected if it does not meet the requirements laid out by the ASAP 2005 standards. The entity submitting the data will be notified via e-mail. Only the records containing errors will be rejected, not the entire file. For example, if Johnson’s Pharmacy submits a CD with 75 records on it and 12 do not follow the ASAP 2005 standards, OARRS will reject those 12 records, not all 75 on the CD.
Exceptions
If a pharmacy never dispenses any controlled substances, carisoprodol or tramadol prescriptions, that pharmacy can notify the State Board via a signed letter. The State Board will then remove that pharmacy from a list of pharmacies that are expected to report to the OARRS system.
If no controlled substances, carisoprodol or tramadol are dispensed within a 7 day period, a pharmacy must submit a “Zero Report”