Explained: Refill & Track Prescriptions With The VA

Did you know that the Department of Veterans Affairs offers a prescription refill and tracking service?

The VA Prescription Refill and Tracking tool lets you refill your VA prescriptions, track deliveries, and build lists to help you keep medications organized properly to best manage your health conditions. This tool is provided for eligible veterans and you can sign up with the VA MyHealthEVet portal.

Who Is Eligible For The VA Prescription Refill And Tracking Tool

Veterans are eligible to sign up for and use this tool if they meet all the following conditions:

  • The veteran is enrolled in VA health care, and
  • The veteran is registered as a patient in a VA health facility, and
  • The veteran has a refillable prescription from a VA doctor that is filled at a VA pharmacy and processed by the VA Mail Order Pharmacy.

In order to use the VA Prescription Refill and Tracking Tool, eligible veterans must have or sign up for one of the following online accounts:

  • A verified me account created at VA.gov
  • An Advanced or Premium My HealtheVet account
  • A Premium DS Logon account (used for eBenefits and milConnect)

What You Can Use The Prescription Tool To Do

Qualifying veterans can fill and track most medications, but there are certain exceptions which we will describe below. In most cases, veterans who sign up can use the service to:

  • VA medicines refilled or renewed
  • Wound care supplies
  • Diabetic care supplies
  • Other items available via the VA Mail Order Pharmacy

There are certain exceptions. The VA official site says that in certain cases a VA health care team may decide that certain medications cannot or should not be shipped. This may be handled on a case-by case basis. “In these cases,” the VA official site says, “…you’ll need to pick up your prescription from the VA health facility where you get care.”

Furthermore, some pain medicines (especially narcotics and other controlled substances) may not be refillable except via a new prescription from the VA provider every time you need to refill. This too may be handled on a case-by-case basis.

Other uses for the VA Prescription Refill And Tracking Tool include:

  • Refill your VA prescriptions online
  • Review past and current VA prescriptions
  • Track delivery prescriptions mailed within the past 30 days
  • Get email notifications on when to expect prescription delivery
  • Create lists to keep track of all your medicines, not just VA prescribed medications

What To Do If Your Prescription Does Not Arrive

The VA advises patients to begin by contacting the customer support division of the delivery service responsible for delivering the medication. That contact information and/or phone number is on delivery company’s official website.

If your delivery issue is something the company cannot assist you with, it may be necessary to contact the VA facility where the prescription was obtained-the phone number for the VA Pharmacy is located on the prescription label.

Other Important Information You Should Know

The VA will not mail prescriptions to overseas locations. Prescription mailings are limited to the United States and its territories

Prescriptions mailed to qualifying veterans by the VA “usually arrive” within 3 to 5 days according to VA.gov. For individual shipments you can review them on the website of the delivery service shown in the online Rx Tracker.

You should avoid gaps in your prescriptions by requesting all refills at least 10 days prior to running out of the current prescription.

What To Do If You Mistakenly Receive Another Person’s Prescription Package

Mix-ups sometimes happen and you may get a delivery that was not intended for you. If you receive someone else’s prescription order, the VA requests that you DO NOT attempt to open the contents of any package not addressed to you.

“If the mailing label is for someone else, return the package to the delivery service. If it has your name on the package but it is not your prescription, contact the VA facility that issued the prescription,” according to the VA official site.

What To Do If You Need To Stop A Delivery

In cases where you need to stop a prescription from being sent, contact the VA facility that issued the prescription as soon as possible. This is especially important for those who may need to travel for long periods, those who may be changing addresses, etc.

What To Do If You No Longer Need The Prescription

If you have a condition that has improved and no longer requires the prescriptions you have been taking delivery of, contact the VA as soon as possible to make arrangements. It is very important to know that the VA Pharmacy Service doesn’t accept returned medications-including opioids and other controlled substances.

To safely dispose of medication you no longer need, follow the following steps:

  • Dispose of all prescriptions in their original container. If there is a situation where these substances accidentally get ingested by someone else, this can assist in a poison control situation.
  • Before disposing of your medication, be sure to completely obscure your name and prescription number on the label with a permanent marker or by other means to protect your private information.
  • The VA official site advises patients to add water pills to dissolve them. You can also mix pills or liquid drugs with inedible material (potting soil, kitty litter, etc.)
  • Place the medicine bottle in a container you cannot see through. Tape it securely shut. Place this container in the ordinary trash bin and not in a recycle bin.

In most cases, do not flush unneeded medications down the toilet or pour them down the drain.

Why? The VA advises, “Drugs flushed down drains can harm the water supply that we drink, and wildlife. Dispose of drugs the right way to prevent someone taking them by accident, or through an illegal sale. Protect children and pets from harm caused by accidental ingestion.”

That being said, there is advice from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) which states that flushing certain “potent pain medications: may be necessary. The FDA official site states that “a small number of medicines “ may be especially harmful “and, in some cases, fatal with just one dose if they are used by someone other than the person for whom the medicine was prescribed.”

You may feel uncomfortable with, or have an objection to, flushing medications. In such cases you can search in your local community for prescription “take-back” programs. According to Pharmacist.com, “city or county governments’ household trash and recycling services and community pharmacists are good sources of information for locating medicine take-back programs.”

You can also find links to national prescription drug take-back events from the official site of the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA).

Explained: My HealtheVet

My HealtheVet is an online Personal Health Record that was developed by the VA to help veterans manage their health information, and to utilize some of the VA’s services online. The goal of this site is to change the way health care is delivered to veterans by providing all of their health care information in one place. The program is web-based, and veterans must register in order to access the multiple features of the site, including over 18 million pages of health information designed to help educate veterans on different health topics.

What does My HealtheVet provide?

My HealtheVet gives veterans resources and information to improve their overall health and wellness. The site helps veterans manage their health in several ways:

  • By allowing veterans to view, download, and print their personal health information and military service information
  • By allowing veterans to record and store important health and military history information
  • By providing access to VA health care and information twenty-four hours a day

Once veterans have uploaded their health information, they can share it with health care providers, family members, or caregivers safely and securely through My HealtheVet. The site is designed to encourage collaboration between physicians and patients and provides essential health record information in an online environment.

Types of accounts

There are many different services that can be accessed through My HealtheVet, but what veterans can utilize depends on the type of account selected when they sign up.

There are three types of My HealtheVet accounts: Basic, Advanced, and Premium.

Any individual who registers on the site begins with a Basic Account. This type of account provides limited access to My HealtheVet features and does not allow veterans to see their personal health information that is in DoD or VA systems.

Those with a Basic account can:

  • Create a personal health journal that includes information about allergies, health history, medications, and more
  • Record information about health insurance, health care providers, and emergency contacts
  • Track personal health measurements like cholesterol, blood pressure, heart rate, weight, temperature, and blood sugar level
  • Print an ID card with personal health information
  • Set personal health goals and identify obstacles to overcome in order to reach those goals

An Advanced account is only available to VA patients and veterans, and provides a higher level of access to features on My HealtheVet. In addition to the features included with a basic account, an advanced account allows users to:

  • View certain information in their VA and DoD records
  • Refill prescriptions online

A Premium account is also only available to veterans and VA patients, and requires users to go through an authentication process. This process verifies a veteran’s identity, either online or in person, and requires My HealtheVet information like social security number, gender, and date of birth to be linked to VA/DoD records. Once a user’s identity has been authenticated, they can access features such as:

  • Lab results from the VA
  • VA Admissions and Discharges
  • Future VA appointments, as well as those from the past two years
  • Immunizations received from the VA
  • VA pathology reports
  • VA Wellness Reminders

Premium account holders can also access various mobile apps to help make using My HealtheVet even more convenient. These include:

  • PTSD Coach, which allows veterans to take a self-assessment and access tools to help manage PTSD
  • VA Video Connect, which allows veterans to connect with their health care team from any mobile or web-based device
  • MOVE! Coach, which lets veterans set and track goals on exercise, diet and weight loss
  • Stay Quit Coach, which offers resources to help veterans quit smoking and provides tools to help deal with urges to smoke
  • Mindfulness Coach, which provides information and exercises to practice mindfulness

Features

In addition to the features that are available through different types of My HealtheVet accounts, veterans can also access services to help them manage their health and medical care. These include:

  • HealtheLiving Assessment: Veterans can answer questions about their medical history and health choices, and receive a personalized summary that includes current health status, risks of developing major diseases, and a list of healthy changes that they can make now to improve their current and future health.
  • Pharmacy: Veterans can refill prescriptions, keep track of their medications, and get information about the status of their mailed medications.
  • VA Appointments: My HealtheVet allows veterans to view upcoming appointments, request, schedule, or cancel appointments, and join video appointments with a physician. Veterans can also schedule their own appointments for primary care or mental health, and add non-VA appointments to a Health Calendar on the site.
  • Secure messaging: Veterans can receive updates on their health, ask for a refill of their medication, and communicate with their health care providers online. Secure messaging allows veterans to ask non-emergency and non-urgent health questions, update their health team on their condition, and manage VA appointments. Veterans can use this tool to communicate with providers who have chosen to participate in secure messaging. This feature is only available to veterans who have a Premium account.

Veterans can also use My HealtheVet to organize their medical records, and share them with health care providers within and outside of the VA. This can be done through two main systems, the Blue Button and the VA Health Summary.

Using the Blue Button, veterans can:

  • Customize and download a report of their health information to share with both VA and non-VA providers
  • Print a summary of their health records to bring to medical appointments
  • Send health information to providers through secure messaging
  • Build a Personal Health Record (PHR) by entering their self-tracked health data

Veterans can also utilize the VA Health Summary, if they have a Premium account. The Health Summary:

  • Is considered a Continuity of Care Document (CCD)
  • Allows health information to be shared electronically from one health care system to another

Through each of these features, My HealtheVet works to make accessing health information easy and convenient for veterans, and to help them take charge of their health care and stay connected with their health care team.