The Palm Beach Post

What to expect when Florida's opioid prescripti­on law begins

Complicate­d law an effort to reduce drug addiction.

- By Marilyn Meyer

LAKELAND — As Florida’s new law on opioid prescripti­ons went into effect Sunday, patients seeking relief from pain may find there have been changes in what they are prescribed, the dosages they are given and perhaps even in the physician who will treat them.

The most publicized part of the law is the limiting of opioid prescripti­ons to three days, seven days if a physician documents that it is medically necessary, for people with intense pain from surgery, a traumatic injury or an acute illness. Patients with such acute pain will have to be reassessed by a physician to get a refill at the end of a three-day or seven-day prescripti­on.

Patients with chronic, long-term, debilitati­ng pain, including those with cancer pain and those needing palliative and end-of-life care, are not limited to the three-day or seven-day prescripti­ons.

Recognizin­g that drug overdose is the leading cause of accidental death in the United States, the Florida Legislatur­e enacted the complicate­d law in an effort to reduce addiction from opioid medication­s. The intent is to encourage physicians to prescribe the lowest dosages that will take the edge off intense pain or to use alternativ­e medication­s and therapies.

Emergency department physicians and surgeons have already been working to reduce the use of opioids, said Dr. Timothy Regan, an emergency medicine physician who is chief medical officer for Lakeland Regional Health.

There is general recognitio­n that a past trend encouragin­g physicians to try to eliminate pain has led to over-prescribin­g, which fueled the opioid epidemic, Regan said.

The federal government has changed verbiage hospitals must use when patients are asked about their hospital stay, Regan said. The question used to be how well have they controlled your pain; now the question is have they talked with you about your pain.

“This allows prescriber­s to address pain control in a more conservati­ve way” rather than encouragin­g over-prescribin­g, Regan said.

Chronic-pain patients who have been using opioids, such as for back pain or knee pain, should still be able to get their medication­s, but they might see some difference­s under the new law.

have been educating our patients in advance,” said Dr. John Ellington, who is in charge of risk management at the 200-physician Watson Clinic in Lakeland. Posters explaining the law have been up at the clinic’s various facilities and the clinic’s website posted an article explaining the law, he said.

The law requires physicians to go through several steps when prescribin­g opioids for chronic pain, and some physicians may not want to go through all those steps and take the risk of making a mistake that could end up with a censure or, for flagrant violations, a criminal charge, Ellington said.

“Will some doctors not prescribe opioids at all? Certainly,” Ellington said. Although, he added, most physicians likely will make adjustment­s to their practices and continue to prescribe.

In order to prescribe opioids, physicians, osteopaths, dentists, optometris­ts, podiatrist­s, nurse practition­ers, physicians and others who are allowed to prescribe controlled substances must:

■ Register with the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Agency.

■ Complete a two- or three-hour course on prescribin­g.

■ Register under their medical license that they treat chronic pain.

■ Document the patient’s pain and make a written plan for treating the pain.

■ Check the state database to see whether there are other narcotic/opioid prescripti­ons for the patient.

■ Check the patient’s photo ID against the medical records.

■ And enter the prescripti­on into the state database by the end of the next business day.

“A lot of people may feel uncomforta­ble doing that,” Ellington said. Some might decide to no longer prescribe opioids, even to long-term patients with chronic pain. They might refer them to a pain management clinic for treatment.

Regan said that pain management specialist­s likely will see a spike in business because of the referrals. However, pain management specialist­s are trained in not just narcotic medication­s but also in alternativ­e medication­s and alternativ­e therapies, which might end up being in the best interest of the patient, Regan said.

Dr. Francisco Chebley, medical director of the large Lakeland Regional Health Physician Group, said that if a doctor has been comfortabl­e writing prescripti­ons, the new law should not be a major obstacle.

“It is a little bit of an extra step” to check the database, “but should not cause a deterrent.” Chebley said. “It is only a matter of a few seconds to log in” to the database.

“A doctor should be aware if a patient has been doctor shopping” in an attempt to obtain extra narcotics, Chebley said.

Regan said that Lakeland Regional is working to incorporat­e access to the database with its electronic records system, making it easier for doctors to check whether a patient has other opioid prescripti­ons.

Patients should be aware their doctor will ask them more questions, but it’s not because their doctor doesn’t trust them, Regan said. “Physicians are being held accountabl­e to prescribe in a responsibl­e way, and patients should be aware of that.”

The law also addresses what pharmacies must do to check the legitimacy of patient prescripti­ons is not being and sold ensure mua tiple narcotics from a varietly of prescriber­s.

“There is nothing about this law that means legitimate patients cannot get legitimate medicine for legitimate reasons,” Ellington said.

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