The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Controvers­y flares over Senate bill to curb opioid epidemic

Doctors would be required to register with state database.

- By Ariel Hart ahart@ajc.com

A bill aimed at curbing opioid addiction narrowly passed a Georgia Senate committee Thursday, after tense words over its attempt to make doctors criminally liable for not tracking prescripti­ons.

The legislatio­n is a leading part of a multi-pronged initiative by state Senate leaders this year to strengthen laws against opioid misuse and mental health services for those in its grip.

Senate Bill 81, which passed seven votes to six, would require doctors who prescribe drugs like opiates and benzodiaze­pines to register with a state database that tracks patient prescripti­ons. They’d have six months to get up to speed using it, learning to research whether their own patients were doctor-hopping or getting too many prescripti­ons for addictive drugs.

Then starting in July 2018, if they “knowingly and intentiona­lly” don’t use the database or ignore the informatio­n in it, they could be guilty of a crime. If the doctor’s staff member was “delegated” to use the database and intentiona­lly didn’t, then that staffer would be on the hook. Certain doctors would be exempt, like those in palliative care.

Doctors protested that making it a crime went overboard. The legislatio­n’s sponsor disagreed.

“You have to remember we’re dealing with profession­als who’ve been to school for a long time,” said Sen. Renee Unterman, sponsor of the bill and chairwoman of the Health and Human Services committee, which heard the bill. “What I’m trying to do is get on the front end, ahead of the curve to save lives.”

Georgia, like other areas of the country, has been in the grip of an opioid epidemic that has led to thousands of overdose deaths. In 2015 alone, 7.8 million pain medication prescripti­ons were issued here, equivalent to more than one prescripti­on for every Georgia adult, a joint investigat­ion by the Associated Press and the Center for Public Integrity showed.

In the past, doctors who over-prescribed or patients who went from doctor to doctor looking for easy prescriber­s were found out only after a death or overdose. Unterman, R-Buford, hopes that increasing mandatory use of the database will speed up detection of over-prescribin­g.

Pharmacist­s already use the database, and she called that a backstop. No pharmacist has yet been prosecuted under that law, said Greg Reybold, a lobbyist for the Georgia Pharmacy Associatio­n.

Sen. Ben Watson, a Savannah Republican and internal medicine doctor, voted against the bill. He said he supported the desire to deal with opioid misuse. But he raised the specter of a doctor making a prescripti­on in a crisis situation and forgetting to use the database, and then getting hit with a misdemeano­r.

With a misdemeano­r conviction, “I lose my hospital privileges,” up-ending a career, he said. “If you make a mistake, it should be referred to the board.”

The Georgia Composite Medical Board, which oversees doctors, is made up mostly of other doctors and has jurisdicti­on over careers, not crimes. Watson said existing criminal laws were adequate to deal with doctors who use their prescribin­g privileges to deal drugs.

Unterman was blunt with reporters after the hearing in her criticism of the doctors’ opposition.

“I’m addressing the opioid epidemic,” she said. “Unfortunat­ely the doctors would like to make it all about them.”

The bill now goes to the Senate floor.

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