| Chapter 180 |
| 2016 -- S 2823 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED Enacted 06/28/2016 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO FOOD AND DRUGS -- UNIFORM CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES ACT--REGULATION OF MANUFACTURING, DISTRIBUTING, PRESCRIBING, ADMINISTERING, AND DISPENSING CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES |
| Introduced By: Senators Archambault, Lombardi, Lynch Prata, McCaffrey, and Metts |
| Date Introduced: March 23, 2016 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Sections 21-28-3.02, 21-28-3.18, 21-28-3.20 and 21-28-3.32 of the General |
| Laws in Chapter 21-28 entitled "Uniform Controlled Substances Act" are hereby amended to read |
| as follows: |
| 21-28-3.02. Registration requirements. -- (a) Every person who manufactures, |
| distributes, prescribes, administers, or dispenses any controlled substance within this state, or who |
| proposes to engage in the manufacture, distribution, prescribing, administering, or dispensing of |
| any controlled substance within this state, must obtain annually a registration issued by the |
| director of health in accordance with his or her rules. |
| (b) Persons registered by the director of health under this chapter to manufacture, |
| distribute, prescribe, administer, dispense, or conduct research with those substances may do so to |
| the extent authorized by their registration and in conformity with the other provisions of this |
| chapter. |
| (c) As a condition of the initial registration or renewal of the practitioner's authority to |
| prescribe controlled substances, all such practitioners shall be automatically registered with the |
| prescription-drug-monitoring database maintained by the department of health. |
| (d) By January 1, 2017, the director of health shall develop regulations for appropriate |
| training in best prescribing practices needed for license renewal. |
| 21-28-3.18. Prescriptions. -- (a) An apothecary in good faith may sell and dispense |
| controlled substances in schedule II, III, IV, and V to any person upon a valid prescription by a |
| practitioner licensed by law to prescribe or administer those substances, dated and signed by the |
| person prescribing on the day when issued and bearing the full name and address of the patient to |
| whom, or of the owner of the animal for which, the substance is dispensed and the full name, |
| address, and registration number under the federal law of the person prescribing, if he or she is |
| required by that law to be registered. If the prescription is for an animal, it shall state the species |
| of the animal for which the substance is prescribed. |
| (b) When filling a hard-copy prescription for a schedule II controlled substance, the |
| apothecary filling the prescription shall sign his or her full name and shall write the date of filling |
| on the face of the prescription. |
| (c) The prescription shall be retained on file by the proprietor of the pharmacy in which |
| it was filled for a period of two (2) years so as to be readily accessible for inspection by any |
| public officer or employee engaged in the enforcement of this chapter. |
| (d) (1) Hard-copy prescriptions for controlled substances in schedule II shall be filed |
| separately and shall not be refilled. |
| (2) The director of health shall, after appropriate notice and hearing pursuant to § 42-35- |
| 3, promulgate rules and regulations for the purpose of adopting a system for electronic data |
| transmission, including by facsimile, of prescriptions for controlled substances in schedule II, III, |
| and IV. |
| (3) A practitioner may sign and transmit electronic prescriptions for controlled |
| substances and a pharmacy may dispense an electronically transmitted prescription in accordance |
| with the code of federal regulations, title 21 part 1300, 21 C.F.R., pt. 1300, et seq. |
| (e) A prescription for a schedule II narcotic substance to be compounded for the direct |
| administration to a patient by parenteral, intravenous, intramuscular, subcutaneous, or intraspinal |
| infusion may be transmitted by the practitioner, or practitioner's agent, to the pharmacy by |
| facsimile. The facsimile will serve as the original prescription. |
| (f) A prescription for a schedule II substance for a resident of a long-term-care facility |
| may be transmitted by the practitioner, or the practitioner's agent, to the dispensing pharmacy by |
| facsimile. The facsimile serves as the original prescription. |
| (g) A prescription for a schedule II narcotic substance for a patient residing in a hospice |
| certified by Medicare under title XVIII of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1395 et seq., or |
| licensed by the state, may be transmitted by the practitioner, or practitioner's agent, to the |
| dispensing pharmacy by facsimile. The practitioner, or the practitioner's agent, will note on the |
| prescription that the patient is a hospice patient. The facsimile serves as the original, written |
| prescription. |
| (h) An apothecary, in lieu of a written prescription, may sell and dispense controlled |
| substances in schedules III, IV, and V to any person upon an oral prescription of a practitioner. In |
| issuing an oral prescription, the prescriber shall furnish the apothecary with the same information |
| as is required by subsection (a) of this section and the apothecary who fills the prescription shall |
| immediately reduce the oral prescription to writing and shall inscribe the information on the |
| written record of the prescription made. This record shall be filed and preserved by the proprietor |
| of the pharmacy in which it is filled in accordance with the provisions of subsection (c) of this |
| section. In no case may a prescription for a controlled substance listed in schedules III, IV, or V |
| be filled or refilled more than six (6) months after the date on which the prescription was issued |
| and no prescription shall be authorized to be refilled more than five (5) times. Each refilling shall |
| be entered on the face or back of the prescription and note the date and amount of controlled |
| substance dispensed and the initials or identity of the dispensing apothecary. |
| (i) In the case of an emergency situation as defined in federal law, an apothecary may |
| dispense a controlled substance listed in schedule II upon receiving an oral authorization of a |
| prescribing practitioner provided that: |
| (1) The quantity prescribed and dispensed is limited to the amount adequate to treat the |
| patient during the emergency period and dispensing beyond the emergency period must be |
| pursuant to a written prescription signed by the prescribing practitioner. |
| (2) The prescription shall be immediately reduced to writing and shall contain all the |
| information required in subsection (a) of this section. |
| (3) The prescription must be dispensed in good faith in the normal course of professional |
| practice. |
| (4) Within seven (7) days after authorizing an emergency oral prescription, the |
| prescribing practitioner shall cause a prescription for the emergency quantity prescribed to be |
| delivered to the dispensing apothecary. The prescription shall have written on its face |
| "Authorization for emergency dispensing" and the date of the oral order. The prescription, upon |
| receipt by the apothecary, shall be attached to the oral emergency prescription that had earlier |
| been reduced to writing. |
| (j) (1) The partial filling of a prescription for a controlled substance listed in schedule II |
| is permissible, if the apothecary is unable to supply the full quantity called for in a prescription or |
| emergency oral prescription and he or she makes a notation of the quantity supplied on the face of |
| the prescription or oral emergency prescription that has been reduced to writing. The remaining |
| portion of the prescription may be filled within seventy-two (72) hours of the first partial filling, |
| however, if the remaining portion is not, or cannot be, filled within seventy-two (72) hours, the |
| apothecary shall notify the prescribing practitioner. No further quantity may be supplied beyond |
| seventy-two (72) hours without a new prescription. |
| (2) (i) A prescription for a schedule II controlled substance written for a patient in a long- |
| term-care facility (LTCF), or for a patient with a medical diagnosis documenting a terminal |
| illness, may be filled in partial quantities to include individual dosage units. If there is a question |
| whether a patient may be classified as having a terminal illness, the pharmacist must contact the |
| practitioner prior to partially filling the prescription. Both the pharmacist and the prescribing |
| practitioner have a corresponding responsibility to assure that the controlled substance is for a |
| terminally ill patient. |
| (ii) The pharmacist must record on the prescription whether the patient is "terminally ill" |
| or an "LTCF patient." A prescription that is partially filled, and does not contain the notation |
| "terminally ill" or "LTCF patient", shall be deemed to have been filled in violation of this chapter. |
| (iii) For each partial filling, the dispensing pharmacist shall record on the back of the |
| prescription (or on another appropriate record, uniformly maintained, and readily retrievable), |
| the: |
| (A) Date of the partial filling; |
| (B) Quantity dispensed; |
| (C) Remaining quantity authorized to be dispensed; and |
| (D) Identification of the dispensing pharmacist. |
| (iv) The total quantity of schedule II controlled substances dispensed in all partial fillings |
| must not exceed the total quantity prescribed. |
| (v) Schedule II prescriptions for patients in a LTCF, or patients with a medical diagnosis |
| documenting a terminal illness, are valid for a period not to exceed sixty (60) days from the issue |
| date, unless sooner terminated by the discontinuance of medication. |
| (k) Automated, data-processing systems. - As an alternative to the prescription record |
| keeping provision of subsection (h) of this section, an automated, data-processing system may be |
| employed for the record-keeping system if the following conditions have been met: |
| (1) The system shall have the capability of producing sight-readable documents of all |
| original and refilled prescription information. The term "sight-readable" means that an authorized |
| agent shall be able to examine the record and read the information. During the course of an on- |
| site inspection, the record may be read from the CRT, microfiche, microfilm, printout, or other |
| method acceptable to the director. In the case of administrative proceedings, records must be |
| provided in a paper printout form. |
| (2) The information shall include, but not be limited to, the prescription requirements and |
| records of dispensing as indicated in subsection (h) of this section. |
| (3) The individual pharmacist responsible for completeness and accuracy of the entries to |
| the system must provide documentation of the fact that prescription information entered into the |
| computer is correct. In documenting this information, the pharmacy shall have the option to |
| either: |
| (i) Maintain a bound logbook, or separate file, in which each individual pharmacist |
| involved in the dispensing shall sign a statement each day attesting to the fact that the prescription |
| information entered into the computer that day has been reviewed and is correct as shown. The |
| book or file must be maintained at the pharmacy employing that system for a period of at least |
| two (2) years after the date of last dispensing; or |
| (ii) Provide a printout of each day's prescription information. That printout shall be |
| verified, dated, and signed by the individual pharmacist verifying that the information indicated is |
| correct. The printout must be maintained at least two (2) years from the date of last dispensing. |
| (4) An auxiliary, record-keeping system shall be established for the documentation of |
| refills if the automated, data-processing system is inoperative for any reason. The auxiliary |
| system shall ensure that all refills are authorized by the original prescription and that the |
| maximum number of refills is not exceeded. When this automated, data-processing system is |
| restored to operation, the information regarding prescriptions filled and refilled during the |
| inoperative period shall be entered into the automated, data-processing system within ninety-six |
| (96) hours. |
| (5) Any pharmacy using an automated, data-processing system must comply with all |
| applicable state and federal laws and regulations. |
| (6) A pharmacy shall make arrangements with the supplier of data-processing services or |
| materials to ensure that the pharmacy continues to have adequate and complete prescription and |
| dispensing records if the relationship with the supplier terminates for any reason. A pharmacy |
| shall ensure continuity in the maintenance of records. |
| (7) The automated, data-processing system shall contain adequate safeguards for security |
| of the records to maintain the confidentiality and accuracy of the prescription information. |
| Safeguards against unauthorized changes in data after the information has been entered and |
| verified by the registered pharmacist shall be provided by the system. |
| (l) Prescriptions for controlled substances as found in schedules II will become void |
| unless dispensed within ninety (90) days of the original date of the prescription and in no event |
| shall more than a thirty-day (30) supply be dispensed at any one time. |
| (1) In prescribing controlled substances in schedule II, practitioners may write up to three |
| (3)- (3) separate prescriptions, each for up to a one-month supply, each signed and dated on the |
| date written. For those prescriptions for the second and/or third month, the practitioner must write |
| the earliest date each of those subsequent prescription may be filled, with directions to the |
| pharmacist to fill no earlier than the date specified on the face of the prescription. |
| (m) The prescriptions in schedules III, IV, and V will become void unless dispensed |
| within one hundred eighty (180) days of the original date of the prescription. For purposes of this |
| section, a "dosage unit" shall be defined as a single capsule, tablet, or suppository, or not more |
| than one five (5) ml. of an oral liquid. |
| (1) Prescriptions in Schedule III cannot be written for more than one hundred (100) |
| dosage units and not more than one hundred (100) dosage units may be dispensed at one time. |
| (2) Prescriptions in Schedule IV and V may be written for up to a ninety-day (90) supply |
| based on directions. No more than three hundred and sixty (360) dosage units may be dispensed |
| at one time. |
| (n) A pharmacy shall transmit prescription information to the prescription-monitoring |
| database at the department of health within one business day following the dispensing of an |
| opioid prescription. |
| (o) The pharmacist shall inform patients verbally or in writing about the proper disposal |
| of expired, unused, or unwanted medications, including the location of local disposal sites as |
| listed on the department of health website. |
| (p) The pharmacist shall inform patients verbally or in writing in the proper use of any |
| devices necessary for the administration of controlled substances. |
| 21-28-3.20. Authority of practitioner to prescribe, administer, and dispense. – (a) A |
| practitioner, in good faith and in the course of his or her professional practice only, may |
| prescribe, administer, and dispense controlled substances, or he or she may cause the controlled |
| substances to be administered by a nurse or intern under his or her direction and supervision. |
| (b) The prescription-monitoring program shall be reviewed prior to starting any opioid. A |
| prescribing practitioner, or designee as authorized by §21-28-3.32(a)(3), shall review the |
| prescription-monitoring program prior to refilling or initiating opioid therapy with an intrathecal |
| pump. For patients the prescribing practitioner is maintaining on continuous opioid therapy for |
| pain for three (3) months or longer, the prescribing practitioner shall review information from the |
| prescription-monitoring program at least every three (3) months. Documentation of that review |
| shall be noted in the patient’s medical record. |
| (c) The director of health shall develop regulations for prescribing practitioners on |
| appropriate limits of opioid use in acute pain management. Initial prescriptions of opioids for |
| acute pain management of outpatient adults shall not exceed thirty (30) morphine milligram |
| equivalents (MMEs) total daily dose per day for a maximum total of twenty (20) doses, and, for |
| pediatric patients, the appropriate opioid dosage maximum per the department of health. |
| (d) For the purposes of this section, acute pain management shall not include chronic pain |
| management, pain associated with a cancer diagnosis, palliative or nursing home care, or other |
| exception in accordance with department of health regulations. |
| (e) Subsection (c) of this section shall not apply to medications designed for the treatment |
| of substance abuse or opioid dependence. |
| 21-28-3.32. Electronic prescription database. -- (a) The information contained in any |
| prescription-drug-monitoring database maintained by the department of health pursuant to § 21- |
| 28-3.18 of this chapter shall be disclosed only: |
| (1) To a practitioner who certifies that the requested information is for the purpose of |
| evaluating the need for, or providing medical treatment to, a current patient to whom the |
| practitioner is prescribing or considering prescribing a controlled substance; |
| (2) To a pharmacist who certifies that the requested information is for a current client to |
| whom the pharmacist is dispensing, or considering dispensing, a controlled substance; |
| (3) To an authorized designee of the practitioner and/or pharmacist to consult the |
| prescription-drug-monitoring database on the practitioner's and/or pharmacist's behalf, provided |
| that: |
| (i) The designee so authorized is employed by the same professional practice or |
| pharmacy; |
| (ii) The practitioner or pharmacist takes reasonable steps to ensure that such designee is |
| sufficiently competent in the use of the database; |
| (iii) The practitioner or pharmacist remains responsible for ensuring that access to the |
| database by the designee is limited to authorized purposes as provided for in subsections (a)(1) |
| and (a)(2) of this section; |
| (iv) The practitioner or pharmacist remains responsible for ensuring access to the |
| database by the designee occurs in a manner that protects the confidentiality of information |
| obtained from the database and remains responsible for any breach of confidentiality; |
| (v) The practitioner or pharmacist terminates the designee's access to the database at the |
| termination of the designee's employment; and |
| (vi) The ultimate decision as to whether or not to prescribe or dispense a controlled |
| substance remains with the practitioner or pharmacist and is reasonably informed by the relevant, |
| controlled-substance history information obtained from the database. |
| (4) Pursuant to a valid search warrant based on probable cause to believe a violation of |
| federal or state criminal law has occurred and that specified information contained in the database |
| would assist in the investigation of the crime; |
| (5) To a patient who requests his or her own prescription information, or the parent or |
| legal guardian of a minor child who requests the minor child's prescription information; |
| (6) To a health professional regulatory board that documents, in writing, that the |
| requested information is necessary for an investigation related to licensure, renewal, or |
| disciplinary action involving the applicant, licensee, or registrant to whom the requested |
| information pertains; |
| (7) To any vendor or contractor with whom the department has contracted to establish or |
| maintain the electronic system of the prescription-drug-monitoring database; or |
| (8) To public or private entities for statistical, research, or educational purposes, after |
| removing the patient and prescriber information that could be used to identify individual patients. |
| This shall not include entities receiving a waiver from the institutional review board. |
| (b) Information stored in the prescription-drug-monitoring database shall include only |
| the following: |
| (1) Patient's first and last name, and/or patient identification number; provided, however, |
| the patient's social security number shall not be recorded in whole or in part, patient sex, patient |
| date of birth, and patient address; |
| (2) Prescribing practitioner's name and dDrug eEnforcement aAdministration prescriber- |
| information number; |
| (3) Prescribing practitioner's office or hospital contact information; |
| (4) Prescription name, prescription number, prescription species code, national drug code |
| number, prescription dosage, prescription quantity, days' supply, new-refill code, number of |
| refills authorized, date the prescription was written, date the prescription was filled, payment |
| type; provided, however, no credit card number shall be recorded in whole or in part; and |
| (5) The dDrug eEnforcement aAdministration pharmacy number of the pharmacy filling |
| the prescription. |
| (c) The department shall disclose any information relating to a patient maintained in the |
| prescription-drug-monitoring database to that patient, at no cost to the patient, within thirty (30) |
| business days after the department receives a written request from the patient for the information. |
| This information shall include the records maintained by the department pursuant to subsection |
| (e). Notwithstanding the above, the department may, at the request of the law enforcement |
| agency, withhold for up to sixty (60) days following the conclusion of a law enforcement |
| investigation, the disclosure to the patient that information has been obtained pursuant to |
| subdivision (a)(3)(4). |
| (d) A patient may request, from the dispensing pharmacy, correction of any inaccurate |
| information contained within the prescription-drug-monitoring database in accordance with the |
| procedure specified by § 5-37.3-5(c). |
| (e) The department shall, for the period of time that prescription information is |
| maintained, maintain records of the information disclosed through the prescription-drug- |
| monitoring database, including, but not limited to: |
| (1) The identity of each person who requests or receives information from the |
| prescription-drug-monitoring database and the organization, if any, the person represents; |
| (2) The information released to each person or organization and the basis for its release |
| under subsection (a); and |
| (3) The dates the information was requested and provided. |
| (f) Prescription information contained within the prescription-drug-monitoring database |
| shall be removed no later than five (5) years from the date the information is entered into the |
| database. Records in existence prior to the enactment of this section shall be removed no later |
| than ten (10) years from the date the information is entered into the database. |
| (g) The department shall promptly notify any affected individual of an improper |
| disclosure of information from the prescription-drug-monitoring database or a breach in the |
| security of the prescription-drug-monitoring database that poses a significant risk of disclosure of |
| patient information to an unauthorized individual. |
| (h) At the time of signing a prescription that is required by the department to be entered |
| into the prescription-drug-monitoring database, the prescribing practitioner shall inform the |
| patient in writing of the existence of the prescription-drug-monitoring database, the patient's right |
| to access their own prescription information, and the name and contact information of the agency |
| operating the program. |
| (i) No person shall access information in the prescription-monitoring-database except to |
| the extent and for the purposes authorized by subsection (a). |
| (j) In any civil action allowing a violation of this chapter, the court may award damages, |
| including punitive damages, and reasonable attorneys' fees and costs to a prevailing plaintiff, and |
| injunctive and any other appropriate relief. |
| (k) Any pharmacist who, in his or her professional judgment, refuses to fill a prescription |
| based on information contained within the prescription-drug-monitoring database shall inform the |
| prescribing physician within twenty-four (24) hours. |
| (l) All practitioners shall, as a condition of the initial registration or renewal of the |
| practitioner's authority to prescribe controlled substances, register with the prescription-drug- |
| monitoring database maintained by the department of health. |
| (m) The prescription-monitoring program shall be reviewed prior to starting any opioid. |
| A prescribing practitioner, or designee as authorized by subsection (a)(3) of this section, shall |
| review the prescription-monitoring program prior to refilling or initiating opioid therapy with an |
| intrathecal pump. For patients the prescribing practitioner is maintaining on continuous opioid |
| therapy for pain for three (3) months or longer, the prescribing practitioner shall review |
| information from the prescription-monitoring program at least every three (3) months. |
| Documentation of that review shall be noted in the patient's medical record. |
| SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC004637/SUB A/3 |
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