Today’s correspondent says:

As a [Tasmanian] paramedic I have been advised that medications or drugs cannot be left with a patient for later use. Examples might be Ventolin (S3) for a person with mild asthma who has used a metered-dose inhaler supplied by the paramedic, but who does not require transport to hospital. In this case, the patient may have run out of their own medication and the paramedic may be considering leaving the MDI with the patient until such time as they can secure their own supply at a pharmacy.

Under the Poison’s Act 1971 an ambulance officer, a paramedic, or an interstate ambulance officer is able to administer a substance [drug] (i) at the direction of a medical practitioner; or (ii) in accordance with the Field Protocols applying…

Does any part of the Act or Regulations prohibit or prevent the supply of a medication by an ambulance officer or a paramedic for self-administration at a later time, such as when the paramedic is no longer present? 

S47A(3) notes that ““administer” includes making available for self-administration”. Does such self-administration have a time limit attached?

Section 26 of the Poisons Act 1971 (Tas) deals with the ‘Sale and supply of potent substances and hazardous and medicinal poisons’.  Potent substances are schedule 3 medications, hazardous poisons are listed in schedule 1 and medicinal poisons are listed in schedule 2.  A person must not sell or supply to another person a schedule 1, 2 or 3 drug unless authorised. Restricted substances are those listed in schedule 4 and again it is an offence to possess, sell or supply schedule 4 drugs (s 36) unless authorised.

A ’volunteer ambulance officer, an ambulance officer, a paramedic or an interstate ambulance officer’ acting:

(i) at the direction of a medical practitioner; or

(ii) in accordance with the Field Protocols applying with respect to the administration of scheduled substances as approved by the Commissioner of Ambulance Services from time to time.

may administer a schedule 2, 3 or 4 drug (s 38(1)(h)). A similar exemption applies for the administration of a narcotic (schedule 8) substances (s 47(1)(dd)).

What does it mean to administer a drug? Section 38(1)(c) refers to the ‘the supply of a restricted substance by a registered nurse …’.  The authority for a paramedic (s 38(1)(h)) however, only refers to ‘administration’, not supply. The terms ‘administer’ and ‘administration’ are not defined in the Act or the regulations nor are they defined in the Poisons Standard or the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989 (Cth).  The definition of ‘supply’ in the Poisons Act includes to ‘administer a substance, whether orally, subcutaneously, or by any other means’ (s 3).  So one can infer that an authority to supply includes administer, but an authority to administer does not include the broader concept of supply.

Section 47A of the Act says that the regulations may allow for others to administer S2, 3, 4 or 8 drugs. For the purposes of that section the term ‘administer’ ‘includes making available for self-administration’ (s 47A(3)).  Regulations have been made under s 47A to allow paramedics (and others) to administer vaccines (Poisons Regulation 2018 (Tas) r 54(a)) and for dental assistants to administer sodium fluoride varnish (r 54B). 

What follows is I don’t think one can infer that the use of the term ‘administer’ to include ‘making available for self-administration’ applies except when regulations have been made under s 47A – and that is not the case with respect to a paramedic’s drug authority.  Paramedics have the authority to administer various drugs (ss 38(1)(h) and 47(1)(dd)) but in those sections ‘administer’ is something less than ‘supply’ and the best definition is that it is an authority to ‘administer a substance, whether orally, subcutaneously, or by any other means’.

If the authority to ‘administer’ included an authority to ‘available for self-administration’ then it would mean that a paramedic could leave a patient with, say, Ventolin (schedule 3) but also morphine (a schedule 8 drug) given the same language is used in both s 38(1)((h) and s 47(1)(dd).  I do not think anyone would suggest paramedics are authorised to leave morphine for future self-administration though that may be quite a reasonable step for extended or community care paramedics.

Finally I note that the authority of paramedics to deal with drugs is to act ‘in accordance with the Field Protocols applying with respect to the administration of scheduled substances’.  Those field protocols do not appear to be publicly available (although Ambulance Tasmania’s Clinical Practice Guidelines are -see https://www.health.tas.gov.au/hospitals/ambulance/ambulance-information-health-professionals/ambulance-tasmania-clinical-practice-guidelines-cpg). It may be that the Field Protocols have something to say on this subject but I am not able to access them.

Conclusion

Although it may be a good idea for paramedics to ‘supply  …  a medication … for self-administration at a later time, such as when the paramedic is no longer present’ I do not think that is authorised under the Poisons Act 1971 (Tas).  It would be permissible if the paramedics were acting under a regulation made to further s 47A of the Act, but that is not the basis for a paramedic’s authority to administer a drug. In sort paramedics have authority to ‘administer’ a drug but not ‘supply’ it.

This blog is a general discussion of legal principles only.  It is not legal advice. Do not rely on the information here to make decisions regarding your legal position or to make decisions that affect your legal rights or responsibilities. For advice on your particular circumstances always consult an admitted legal practitioner in your state or territory.