CTHRepealedLegislation
National Health (Pharmaceutical Benefits) Regulations 1960
21Supply of pharmaceutical benefit on first presentation of prescription
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#### 21 Supply of pharmaceutical benefit on first presentation of prescription
(1A) This regulation does not apply in relation to the supply of a pharmaceutical benefit on the basis of a medication chart prescription.
> Note: See regulation 21A.
(1) An approved pharmacist or an approved medical practitioner must not supply a pharmaceutical benefit to a person on the first presentation of a prescription for the supply of that benefit to the person, unless:
(a) subject to regulations 22, 26 and 26A, the prescription is:
(i) written in accordance with these Regulations; and
(ii) given to the pharmacist or practitioner; and
(aa) the date of supply of the benefit is on or before the first anniversary of the date on which the prescription was written; and
(b) the pharmacist or practitioner writes on the prescription (including, for a paper‑based prescription, both the original and the duplicate):
(i) the pharmacist’s or practitioner’s name and approval number under regulation 8A; and
(ii) a number that identifies the prescription.
(2) An approved hospital authority must not supply a pharmaceutical benefit to a person on the first presentation of a prescription for the supply of that benefit to that person, unless:
(a) subject to regulations 22, 26 and 26A, the prescription is:
(i) written in accordance with these Regulations; and
(ii) given to the pharmacist or practitioner; and
(aa) the date of supply of the benefit is on or before the first anniversary of the date on which the prescription was written; and
(b) the prescription (including, for a paper‑based prescription, both the original and the duplicate) is marked, for the hospital authority, with:
(i) the hospital authority’s name and approval number under regulation 8A; and
(ii) a number that identifies the prescription.
(3) In this regulation, a reference to the first presentation of a prescription is taken to mean, in relation to an electronic prescription, the first occasion when the prescription is accessed by an approved pharmacist or an approved medical practitioner for the purpose of supplying a pharmaceutical benefit to the person for whom the prescription was written.