STRENGTHEN CONTROLLED SUB. REPORTING SYSTEM.

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View NCGA Bill Details2013-2014 Session
Senate Bill 206 (Public) Filed Wednesday, March 6, 2013
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT TO STRENGTHEN THE CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES REPORTING SYSTEM BY REQUIRING THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES TO UPDATE THE SYSTEM TO PROVIDE REAL-TIME PRESCRIPTION INFORMATION, BY REQUIRING DISPENSERS TO REPORT PRESCRIPTION INFORMATION WITHIN TWENTY-FOUR HOURS AFTER DISPENSING A PRESCRIPTION, AND BY REQUIRING PRESCRIBERS AND DISPENSERS TO REVIEW INFORMATION IN THE CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES REPORTING SYSTEM PRIOR TO PRESCRIBING OR DISPENSING A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE TO A PATIENT.
Intro. by J. Davis.

Status: Re-ref Com On Judiciary II (Senate Action) (Apr 10 2013)
S 206

Bill Summaries:

  • Summary date: Mar 6 2013 - View Summary

    Amends GS 90-113.73 to require the NC Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) to maintain an electronic reporting system that provides real-time prescription information for all Schedule II through Schedule V controlled substances (current law does not require the reporting system to be electronic or that the information be provided in real-time). Further amends this statute requiring the Commission for Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities, and Substance Abuse Services to adopt rules requiring dispensers to report information currently required under GS 90-113.73(b) within twenty-four hours after dispensing a prescription for a Schedule II through Schedule V controlled substance (current law does not require reporting within twenty-four hours). Amends Article 5E of GS Chapter 90 (the North Carolina Controlled Substances Act) to add a new GS 90-113.74A requiring that all dispensers and providers review all information in the DHHS controlled substances reporting system pertaining to a patient for the preceding 12-month period prior to prescribing or dispensing a controlled substance to that patient to determine if the prescription is medically necessary and appropriate (emergency situations in which immediate action necessary to preserve the life or health of a patient are exempt from this requirement). Effective December 1, 2013.