Bill Text: TX HB2811 | 2019-2020 | 86th Legislature | Engrossed
Bill Title: Relating to the prescribing of controlled substances and dangerous drugs for acute pain.
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2019-05-15 - Left pending in committee [HB2811 Detail]
Download: Texas-2019-HB2811-Engrossed.html
By: Price, Frank, Minjarez, | H.B. No. 2811 | |
Thompson of Harris, VanDeaver, et al. |
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relating to the prescribing of controlled substances and dangerous | ||
drugs for acute pain. | ||
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: | ||
SECTION 1. Subtitle A, Title 3, Occupations Code, is | ||
amended by adding Chapter 107A to read as follows: | ||
CHAPTER 107A. TREATMENT FOR ACUTE PAIN | ||
Sec. 107A.001. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter: | ||
(1) "Abuse" or "substance abuse" means the maladaptive | ||
pattern of substance use manifested by recurrent and significant | ||
adverse consequences related to the repeated use of controlled | ||
substances or other drugs. | ||
(2) "Acute pain" means the normal, predicted, | ||
physiological response to a stimulus such as trauma, disease, and | ||
operative procedures. Acute pain is time limited. The term does | ||
not include: | ||
(A) chronic pain; | ||
(B) pain being treated as part of cancer care; | ||
(C) pain being treated as part of hospice or | ||
other end-of-life care; or | ||
(D) pain being treated as part of palliative | ||
care. | ||
(3) "Addiction" means a primary, chronic, or | ||
neurobiological disease characterized by craving and compulsive | ||
use of drugs. Addiction is often characterized by impaired control | ||
over drug use, including taking more drugs more often than | ||
prescribed by a physician. It may also be characterized by | ||
continued use despite harm to oneself or others. Genetic, | ||
psychosocial, and environmental factors may influence the | ||
development and manifestation of addiction. Physical dependence | ||
and tolerance are normal physiological consequences of extended | ||
drug therapy for pain and, alone, do not indicate addiction. | ||
(4) "Chronic pain" means a state in which pain | ||
persists beyond the usual course of an acute disease or healing of | ||
an injury. Chronic pain may be associated with a chronic | ||
pathological process that causes continuous or intermittent pain | ||
over months or years. | ||
(5) "Controlled substance" has the meaning assigned by | ||
Section 481.002, Health and Safety Code. | ||
(6) "Dangerous drug" has the meaning assigned by | ||
Section 483.001, Health and Safety Code. | ||
(7) "Diversion" means the use of drugs by anyone other | ||
than the person for whom the drug was prescribed. | ||
(8) "Pain" means an unpleasant sensory and emotional | ||
experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage. | ||
(9) "Physical dependence" means a state of adaptation | ||
that is manifested by drug class-specific signs and symptoms that | ||
can be produced by abrupt cessation, rapid dose reduction, | ||
decreasing blood level of the drug, or administration of an | ||
antagonist. | ||
(10) "Practitioner" means a person, other than a | ||
veterinarian, authorized to prescribe a controlled substance. | ||
(11) "Tolerance" means a physiological state | ||
resulting from regular use of a drug in which an increased dosage is | ||
needed to produce a specific effect or in which a reduced effect is | ||
observed with a constant dose over time. Tolerance does not | ||
necessarily occur during opioid treatment and does not, alone, | ||
indicate addiction. | ||
(12) "Withdrawal" means the physiological and mental | ||
readjustment that accompanies discontinuation of a drug for which a | ||
person has established a physical dependency. | ||
Sec. 107A.002. EVALUATION OF PATIENT WITH ACUTE PAIN. (a) | ||
A practitioner's treatment of a patient's acute pain is evaluated by | ||
considering whether the treatment meets the generally accepted | ||
standard of care. | ||
(b) A practitioner shall obtain a medical history and a | ||
physical examination that includes a problem-focused examination | ||
specific to the chief presenting complaint of the patient. The | ||
patient's medical record must document the medical history and | ||
physical examination. | ||
(c) The Texas Medical Board shall adopt rules governing what | ||
information a practitioner who is prescribing a controlled | ||
substance or dangerous drug for acute pain or creating a treatment | ||
plan for the treatment of acute pain must place in the patient's | ||
medical record regarding the medical history and physical | ||
examination of the patient. The rules adopted under this | ||
subsection may create different standards for practitioners | ||
treating patients with acute pain in an emergency department. | ||
(d) Before prescribing a controlled substance or dangerous | ||
drug for the treatment of acute pain, a practitioner must review | ||
prescription data and history related to the patient under Section | ||
481.076, Health and Safety Code. | ||
(e) If a practitioner determines that reviewing the | ||
patient's prescription data and history under Subsection (d) is not | ||
necessary before prescribing a controlled substance or dangerous | ||
drug to the patient, the practitioner must document in the | ||
patient's medical record the practitioner's rationale for not | ||
reviewing the data and history. | ||
Sec. 107A.003. INFORMED CONSENT. (a) Each regulatory | ||
agency that issues a license, certification, or registration to a | ||
practitioner shall create specific written guidelines for a | ||
discussion between the practitioner and a patient with acute pain, | ||
or the patient's surrogate or guardian if the patient is unable to | ||
give consent for the patient's medical treatment, about the risks | ||
and benefits of the use of a controlled substance or dangerous drug | ||
to treat the patient's acute pain. | ||
(b) The written guidelines must require that the | ||
discussion: | ||
(1) be verbal; | ||
(2) be documented by a signed document maintained in | ||
the patient's medical record or a contemporaneous notation included | ||
in the patient's medical record; and | ||
(3) include an explanation of: | ||
(A) the risk of addiction associated with the | ||
drug prescribed, including any risk of developing an addiction or a | ||
physical or psychological dependence on the drug; | ||
(B) the risk of taking the drug in a dosage | ||
greater than the dosage prescribed; | ||
(C) the danger of taking the drug with | ||
benzodiazepines, alcohol, or other central nervous system | ||
depressants; | ||
(D) the reasons why the prescription is | ||
necessary; | ||
(E) the responsibility of the patient to | ||
safeguard all drugs in a secure location; | ||
(F) methods for safely disposing of an unused | ||
portion of a controlled substance or dangerous drug prescription; | ||
(G) the patient's diagnosis; | ||
(H) the proposed treatment plan; | ||
(I) any anticipated therapeutic results, | ||
including realistic expectations for sustained pain relief and | ||
improved functioning and possibilities for lack of pain relief; | ||
(J) therapies available in addition to or instead | ||
of drug therapy, including non-pharmacological therapeutic | ||
modalities or psychological techniques; | ||
(K) potential side effects and techniques for | ||
managing the side effects; | ||
(L) possible adverse effects, including the | ||
potential for tolerance and withdrawal; and | ||
(M) the potential for impairment of judgment and | ||
motor skills. | ||
(c) A regulatory agency described by Subsection (a) may | ||
develop written guidelines for written information to be provided | ||
to the patient about the risks and benefits of a controlled | ||
substance or dangerous drug used to treat the patient's acute pain. | ||
The guidelines may not authorize the practitioner to provide the | ||
written information under this subsection in lieu of discussing the | ||
information verbally with the patient as described by Subsection | ||
(b). | ||
Sec. 107A.004. PERIODIC REVIEW OF TREATMENT OF ACUTE PAIN; | ||
CONSULTATION AND REFERRAL. (a) If necessary, the practitioner | ||
shall: | ||
(1) see the patient being treated for acute pain for | ||
periodic review at reasonable intervals; or | ||
(2) subject to Subsection (c), refer the patient to | ||
another practitioner for further evaluation and treatment. | ||
(b) The practitioner shall review the patient's compliance | ||
with the prescribed treatment plan and reevaluate the potential for | ||
substance abuse or diversion. | ||
(c) Patients who are at risk for substance abuse or | ||
addiction and patients with acute pain and histories of substance | ||
abuse or addiction or with comorbid psychiatric disorders require | ||
the consideration of a consultation with or referral to an expert in | ||
the management of those patients. | ||
SECTION 2. The Texas Medical Board shall adopt and | ||
implement the rules described by Section 107A.002(c), Occupations | ||
Code, as added by this Act, not later than March 1, 2020. | ||
SECTION 3. Each regulatory agency that issues a license, | ||
certification, or registration to a practitioner as defined by | ||
Section 107A.001, Occupations Code, as added by this Act, shall | ||
create and make available to the practitioner the specific written | ||
discussion guidelines required by Section 107A.003, Occupations | ||
Code, as added by this Act, not later than March 1, 2020. | ||
SECTION 4. The change in law made by this Act applies only | ||
to a prescription issued on or after March 1, 2020. A prescription | ||
issued before that date is governed by the law in effect immediately | ||
before March 1, 2020, and the former law is continued in effect for | ||
that purpose. | ||
SECTION 5. This Act takes effect September 1, 2019. |