Florida Legislature approves new opioid rules for physicians....

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Doctodd

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In Florida you currently must register and pay for license to operate as a Pain Clinic and inspections are also paid for by the Pain Clinic(about $1500 last I heard....I’m not a pain clinic so I’m not sure). Seems like #5 equals paying for a license to be exempt. We shall see.

Effective Date: July 1, 2018

In an effort to address the opioid crisis impacting communities across the state, the Florida Legislature approved legislation last week that will have an impact on physicians and patients. All physicians practicing in Florida need to be aware of particular measures contained in the legislation that will impact you.



1. Mandatory Physician Education

2. Mandatory Review of the Prescription Drug Monitoring Database (E-FORCSE)

3. Limitations on Prescribing Controlled Substances

4. Mandatory Emergency Opioid Antagonist

5. Mandatory Application for a Certificate of Exemption

6. Board of Medicine to Adopt Standards of Practice for Treatment of Acute Pain



1. Mandatory Physician Education– Prior to January 31, 2019, all physicians registered with the DEA to prescribe controlled substances will have to take a 2-hour Board of Medicine approved CME Course on prescribing controlled substances. Physicians will have to take the 2-hour course every two years in accordance to your license renewal cycle. The course must be an approved course offered by a statewide association of physicians.



2. Mandatory Review of the Prescription Drug Monitoring Database – Prior to prescribing a controlled substance, a physician must check the patient’s prescription drug history in the Prescription Drug Monitoring Database. A physician is able to delegate this task to a designee registered on the database. Physicians and their designees need to be aware of the restrictions around use of the database to make sure they are in compliance. Click here to view the PDMP (E-FORCSE) - https://flpdm-ph.hidinc.com/fllogappl/bdflpdmqlog/pmqhome.html



3. Limitations on Prescribing Controlled Substances - Prescriptions of Schedule II Controlled Substances for the treatment of “Acute Pain” are limited to a 3-day supply. If a physician feels that a 3-day supply is insufficient, they can prescribe up to a 7-day supply.



Physicians writing a 7-day supply must include on the prescription “Acute Pain Exemption” to authorize the pharmacist to dispense the higher limits. The prescriber must adequately document in the patient's medical records the acute medical condition and lack of alternative treatment options that justify deviation from the 3-day supply limit established in this subsection.



The definition of Acute Pain and thus the 3 and 7 day restriction does not apply for a series of exemptions (see below) to include cancer, terminal conditions, palliative care, or for patients with injuries that have a trauma severity index score of 9 or higher.



Acute Pain is defined as:

(a) "Acute pain" means the normal, predicted, physiological, and time-limited response to an adverse chemical, thermal, or mechanical stimulus associated with surgery, trauma, or acute illness. The term does not include pain related to:

1. Cancer.

2. A terminal condition. As used in this subparagraph, the term "terminal condition" means a progressive disease or medical or surgical condition that causes significant functional impairment; is not considered by a treating physician to be reversible without the administration of life-sustaining procedures; and will result in death within 1 year after diagnosis if the condition runs its normal course.

3. Palliative care to provide relief of symptoms related to an incurable, progressive illness or injury.

4. A traumatic injury with an Injury Severity Score of 9 or higher.



For a prescription for a Schedule II opioid, as defined in s. 893.03 or 21 U.S.C. s. 812, for the treatment of pain, other than acute pain, the practitioner must indicate "NONACUTE PAIN" on the prescription.



The bill makes it clear in Florida Law that controlled substances can be e-prescribed. The DEA has a process for you to register to have e-prescribing capability as long as your EMR enables you to do so. Click here for information on the DEA requirements: https://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/ecomm/e_rx/faq/practitioners.htm



4. Mandatory Emergency Opioid Antagonist Prescription– For a prescription for a Schedule II opioid, as defined in s. 893.03 or 21 U.S.C. s. 812, for the treatment of pain related to a traumatic injury with an Injury Severity Score of 9 or higher, the prescriber must concurrently prescribe an emergency opioid antagonist.



5. Mandatory Application for a Certificate of Exemption from the Pain Management Clinic Statutes – The bill requires physician offices that are exempt from the Pain Management Clinic regulations to apply for a Certificate of Exemption on an application form to be provided by the Agency for Health Care Administration. Physician practices will have to re-apply for this Certificate of Exemption every two years. The Agency will have to develop rules to implement this Certificate of Exemption application and process.



6. Board of Medicine to Adopt Standards of Practice for Treatment of Acute Pain - The Board of Medicine/Department of Health shall adopt rules establishing guidelines for prescribing controlled substances for acute pain, which may include evaluation of the patient, creation and maintenance of a treatment plan, obtaining informed consent and agreement for treatment, periodic review of the treatment plan, consultation, medical record review, and compliance with controlled substance laws and regulations. The rules shall take into account the applicability of the guidelines in different practice settings. Failure of a prescriber to follow such guidelines constitutes grounds for disciplinary action pursuant to s. 456.072(1)(gg), punishable as provided in s. 456.072(2).



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You are exempt from having to apply as a pain clinic if you are boarded in Pain Medicine and I don't think we have to much other than the application fees. Other than basically having to give everyone narcan and placing NONACUTE PAIN on all of my Rxs greater than 7 days, I am not sure if this law will affect me much as of yet. I will probably start to see a lot more early consults from ortho and other docs who just don't want to deal with managing post op pain beyond 1 or 2 weeks. Also my guess is most pcps that still prescribe narcs are going to stop and will probably see more of the "please take over this Rx that I have giving the patient for the last 3 years" consults as well. Although I will say pharmacies and insurers have become more of a PITA since that law passed and it doesn't even become official until July 1st. One pharmacist even refused to fill on of my Rxs because they "didn't know whom I was" and wanted a plan of care before filling the Rx and the guy is only on 20MED a day. Overall I think the law will be good and hopefully will keep the few rogue prescribers we still have in my area in check or eliminate them altogether.
 
So what about major surgeries that puts the patient in pain for months (joint replacement, open-heart surgery, spine surgery, etc). They're going to torture patients in an attempt to stop an addict from overdosing on heroin.
 
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So what about major surgeries that puts the patient in pain for months (joint replacement, open-heart surgery, spine surgery, etc). They're going to torture patients in an attempt to stop an addict from overdosing on heroin.

Acute pain from tissue injury resolves within 2 weeks even for sternotomy, large abdominal surgeries etc. This has been studied
 
They're going to torture patients in an attempt to stop an addict from overdosing on heroin.

Or maybe they are trying to make things difficult in an attempt to stop patients from becoming addicts overdosing on Heroin.
 
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Acute pain from tissue injury resolves within 2 weeks even for sternotomy

There's still some patients that have severe pain for more than 2 weeks. I'm looking at a study right now that proves you're wrong, but I can't post the link. Some patients have knee replacements and still have severe pain for as long as 10 weeks.

"Pain and Functionality Following Sternotomy: A Prospective 12-Month Observational Study"
Published: 05 January 2016
"11% experiencing on average moderate-severe pain at 6 weeks."

Or maybe they are trying to make things difficult in an attempt to stop patients from becoming addicts overdosing on Heroin.

I just don't think it's going to help and instead will cause legitimate patients to suffer.

Edit: Not trying to troll and I'm not from "pain news network".
 
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Mods, please return troll to sender (Pain News Network)

Duct, great article which highlights cultural differences in how a society approaches pain

Would not fly with the US “altered comfort” crowd. But their approach is healthier and more rational
 
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