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Home > Prescriptions
Prescription
Information
Prescription Refill Procedures
Veterans have three
options when ordering prescriptions refills:
- by phone using the Prescription Refill Line,
- by mail using the mailing
label enclosed with your prescription to submit
refill slips to the appropriate Pharmacy at the
Baltimore or Perry
Point VA Medical Centers, or
- through the
MyHealtheVet web site.
You must order
your refill at least 2 weeks before your medicine
runs out to receive it on time. Routine
medication refills may be ordered as soon as you
receive your medication in the mail. Remember,
most medications are mailed from out of state.
Click on the links below for more information:
How to Use the Telephone Prescription Refill System
Prescription Refills by Mail
To Speak to to a Pharmacist
How to Reduce Your Pharmacy Co-Payments
Tips for Safe Medication Usage
How
to Use the Telephone Prescription Refill System
There
are a number of benefits to using the telephone
Prescription Refill Line:
- You will receive
your prescription faster,
- You can call the Prescription Refill Line 24
hours a day, 7 days a week, and
- You will not have to pay postage on your refill
requests.
To use the automated telephone refill
system, you will need:
- A touch-tone phone
- Your full 9 digit Social Security number
- The prescription number
from the prescription label on your bottle
or from the refill slip. Always
use the MOST RECENT prescription number
- All refills ordered by phone are mailed directly to your home
address.
To request a REFILL or to CHECK on your
prescription status, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,
follow these easy steps!
Step 1 - Call the Prescription
Refill Line at 1-800-463-6295, extension 7395.
Step 2 - Enter your full 9 digit Social Security
number followed by the “#” (pound) sign.
Step 3 - Press 2 for Pharmacy Information.
Step 4 - Press 1 for to order a prescription
refill. Press 2 to check prescription status
Step 5 - Enter your prescription refill number
followed by the “#” (pound)
sign
To find out if your prescription has already been processed:
Step 1
- Call the Prescription Refill Line at 1-800-463-6295,
extension 7395.
Step 2 – Enter your 9 digit Social Security number followed by the “#” (pound)
sign.
Step 3 – Press 2 for Pharmacy Information.
Step 4 – Press 2 for status of a prescription
Step 5 - Enter your prescription number followed by the “#” (pound)
sign.
Please note:
- Prescriptions ordered over the phone will be
mailed to your home address.
- The VA Maryland Health Care System will
not accept verbal refill requests.
- If you do not have a touch-tone phone or
cannot order refills over the phone, you
may continue to mail in your refill request using
the enclosed mailing label.
Refill by Mail
If you obtain an initial prescription from the
VA Maryland Health Care System and are eligible
for refills, you will be issued a refill request
and a return mailing label. Simply fill
out your request and return it by mail with the
enclosed mailing label. Your mailing label will
be addressed to one of our two outpatient
pharmacies in the VA Maryland Health Care System:
Pharmacy Service
Baltimore VA Medical Center
10 North Greene Street
Baltimore, MD 21201 |
Pharmacy Service
PO Box 1014
Perry Point VA Medical Center
Perry Point, MD 21902
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If you are required to pay a
co-payment for your prescriptions, you will be
sent a bill by mail. Please allow 14 days for processing
if you mail in your prescription.
To Speak to a Pharmacist
To speak to a pharmacist, Monday through Friday
from 8:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m., call the Baltimore
VA Medical Center at (410) 605-7107, or the Perry
Point VA Medical Center at (410) 642-1741.
Note:
Outpatient Pharmacy hours are Monday through Friday,
from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
How to Reduce Your Pharmacy
Co-Payments
Here are some tips to help ensure you
do not receive medications you no longer need or
to make sure you have a sufficient quantity.
At
your next primary care appointment:
- Have your provider review all your active medication
orders to make sure you still need each medication.
- Ask your primary care provider to cancel any medications you
no longer need.
- If you are being treated for
a service-connected condition, be sure your primary
care provider flags the prescription. This will
prevent you from being charged in error.
- When
you are prescribed a new medication, ask the
pharmacist
to enter an order for a 30-day supply so if
your dosage or the medication has to be changed, you will not be
charged
for a
large quantity of medication you will not be
able to use.
Finally, remember the following:
- Be sure to take your medication exactly as instructed
by your provider.
This helps prevent the need for extra refills.
When prescribed an antibiotic (such as for an
infection), be sure to take the medication for
the length of time prescribed. This helps prevent a recurrence
of the infection and eliminates the need
for a second prescription and another bill.
Tips for Safe Medication Usage
To take your medicine correctly, follow
these tips:
- Keep your doctor informed.
Fill a brown bag with every medication
(prescription and nonprescription) you’re on and take it to
your doctor’s
visits.
- Create a medicine calendar.
Enlist your doctor’s help
to make up a calendar detailing exactly what
medication you should be taking and when.
Ask about the possibility of consolidating drug-taking.
- Pay careful attention
to side effects.
Speak to your doctor about any discomfort you
may be experiencing. He or she may adjust your
dosage or change your prescription.
- Follow your doctor’s
orders precisely.
There’s a reason why
your doctor may have told you to take your medication
with food or after a meal, so follow his or her instructions.
- Establish
a pill-taking routine.
Take them at the same time each day to ensure the
effect in your body is constant. If possible,
link pill-taking with other daily activities like walking
the dog, brushing your teeth or
eating a meal.
- Don’t stop taking a drug because you feel better.
Antihypertensives, for example, control rather
than cure high blood pressure and must be taken
regularly.
- Don’t automatically double up on a dose if you skipped
one.
Ask your doctor or pharmacist what you should
do.
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