Clinical Implications of PL c. 488
An Act To Prevent Opiate Abuse by Strengthening the Controlled Substances Prescription Monitoring Program
- What is now mandated?
- Checking the PMP with initial prescriptions for opioids or benzodiazepines and every 90 days thereafter
- 7 day limit on opioid prescriptions for acute pain, 30 days for chronic pain
- Total daily dose not to exceed 100 MME (approx. 65mg of oxycodone daily, 24mg of hydromorphone daily, 100mg of hydrocodone daily, 20mg of methadone daily)
- 3 hours of mandated prescriber CME every 2 years
- Electronic prescribing
- Are there exceptions?
- Does not apply to cancer diagnoses, substance abuse treatment, hospice care, palliative care
- Does not apply to medications administered within a facility
- “medical exception” can be documented in the chart until DHHS has written the rules around exceptions (expected by January 1st 2017) – for example, managing acute postoperative pain in a patient already on 100 MME daily chronically
- When does this begin?
- 100 MME limit for new opioid prescriptions: July 29th, 2016
- PMP check and limits on duration of prescriptions: January 1st, 2017
- Electronic prescribing: July 1st, 2017
- Tapering from 300 MME to 100 MME limit for patients currently on high-dose opioids: completed by July 1st, 2017
- CME requirements: December 2017
- What are the consequences for violating the law? (delayed until PMP enhancements completed)
- Fines
- Disciplinary action by Board
- PMP improvements
- MME dosage converter
- Improved speed, improved delegation process
- De-identified comparison reports of prescriber to peers