
Frame from "House Finance, 4/20/26, 1:30pm" · Source
House Finance hears divided testimony on pharmacist prescribing bill
The House Finance Committee heard sharply divided public testimony Monday on HB 195, which would expand pharmacist authority to provide patient care services. Supporters said the change would improve healthcare access across Alaska, particularly for routine conditions and chronic disease management. Opponents argued the bill could allow pharmacists to dispense abortion medications or psychiatric drugs.
The bill would clarify and expand pharmacists' ability to provide patient care services, including independent prescriptive authority and direct patient care, according to sponsor Rep. Genevieve Mena. It would enable pharmacists to test and treat common conditions such as flu, strep throat, and urinary tract infections. A key component is ensuring community pharmacists can enter into collaborative practice agreements with physicians. These are protocol-driven partnerships that allow pharmacists to initiate and manage medication therapy under defined protocols.
Pharmacists in Alaska already work under collaborative agreements in some clinical settings, managing chronic conditions and prescribing medications. The bill would formalize and expand those arrangements.
"Pharmacists are on the front lines as the most accessible healthcare providers out there, and we are the medication experts," said Amy Young, an Anchorage pharmacist with 30 years of experience. "We are well equipped to do this."
Barry Christianson, owner of Island Pharmacy in Ketchikan, said his community has seen its primary care physicians drop from 10 full-time doctors in 1988 to just one today. "Pharmacists can help fill the gap where needed," he said.
But several testifiers urged the committee to amend the bill to explicitly prohibit abortion-inducing drugs. Therese Siren, calling in opposition, said the State Medical Board opposes the bill and argued it would allow abortion pill prescriptions.
Representative Bynum said he had spoken with the acting attorney general's office about the issue. He told the committee the acting attorney general indicated someone from that office would be available to comment on their legal opinions at the next hearing. Multiple supporters referenced legal guidance stating pharmacists cannot perform abortions under current law.
Representative Allard questioned whether the bill's language could allow pharmacists to provide services not explicitly prohibited through collaborative practice agreements. She asked whether the committee should add language specifically excluding abortion medications.
Brandy Signe-Martin, executive director of the Alaska Pharmacy Association, said advocates had accepted similar amendments in the Senate companion bill but noted concerns about unintended consequences. "There are a lot of different medications that could potentially cause the loss of a pregnancy," she said. She added that pharmacists do not perform the types of procedures involved in abortion care, which she said is outside their scope of practice.
This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed by editors before publishing. Every claim can be verified against the original transcript. If you spot an error, let us know.
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