Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) Public Use Data
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Washington’s PMP was created (RCW 70.225 (2007)) to improve patient care and to stop prescription drug misuse by collecting dispensing records for Schedule II, III, IV and V drugs, and by making the information available to medical providers and pharmacists as a patient care tool. Program rules, WAC 246-470, took effect August 27, 2011. The program started data collection from all dispensers October 7, 2011. Under RCW 70.225.040(5)(a), the department is authorized to publish public data after removing information that could be used directly or indirectly to identify individual patients, requestors, dispensers, prescribers, and persons who received prescriptions from dispensers. The data available here are de-identified, and exclude patient, prescriber, and dispenser related information in alignment with program rules WAC 246-470-080. No requestor information is available here. Prescriptions excluded from PMP include those dispensed outside of WA State, those prescribed for less than or equal to 24 hours, those administered or given to a patient in the hospital, and those dispensed from a Department of Corrections pharmacy (unless an offender is released with a prescription), an Opioid Treatment Program, and some federally operated pharmacies (Indian Health Services and Veterans Affairs report voluntarily since 2015). Further information on collection and management of PMP data at DOH can be found at www.doh.wa.gov/pmp/data.
CPMS - Customer Profile Management System
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The Customer Profile Management System (CPMS) is the repository of biometric & background check data for USCIS. CPMS provides the capability to store and reuse biometric images and biographic information about applicants, and initiates background check requests about those applicants. CPMS records biometric and biographic data collected by other USCIS systems, and then uses a combination of biometric and biographic identifiers to determine an applicant’s identity in CPMS. CPMS performs biometric vetting to determine which biometrics can be reused based on that identity, and verifies the identity of qualified applicants by sending newly captured fingerprints to DHS-IDENT for verification against previously captured fingerprint images. Once an identity is verified, CPMS requests background checks from FBI and, depending on the form type, DoD or a foreign partner country. Knowledge of both biometric identification and biographic identifiers at each stage of the process provides a person-centric view of applicants’ interactions with USCIS throughout the immigration process. CPMS provides USCIS along with ICE and CBP the capability to search for biometric and biographic information on immigrant applicants. Based on encounters at an Application Service Center (ASC), other locations around the globe and from benefit cards issued by USCIS systems, CPMS contains over 64 million identities, of which 27 million are derived from benefit cards, 4 million are derived from encounters without fingerprints, and the remainder are derived from encounters with full biometric data collection. Encounters with biometric matches are reported to IDENT to be shared among DHS components.