Florida 2022 2022 Regular Session

Florida Senate Bill S0544 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 01/26/2022

                    The Florida Senate 
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT 
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.) 
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Appropriations  
 
BILL: SB 544 
INTRODUCER:  Senator Boyd 
SUBJECT:  Drug-related Overdose Prevention 
DATE: January 26, 2022 
 
 ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR  REFERENCE  	ACTION 
1. Looke Brown HP Favorable 
2. Howard Money AHS  Recommend: Fav/CS 
3. Howard Sadberry AP Pre-meeting 
 
I. Summary: 
SB 544 amends section 381.887, Florida Statutes, to expand access to emergency opioid 
antagonists by: 
 Requiring the Florida Public Health Institute, Inc., to, in consultation with the Department of 
Health (department), educate the public regarding the use of emergency opioid antagonists as 
part of its statutory duty under section 381.981, Florida Statutes, to educate the public 
regarding substance abuse; 
 Allowing pharmacists to order, as well as dispense, emergency opioid antagonists with an 
autoinjection delivery system or intranasal delivery system; 
 Providing that specified persons who are authorized to possess, store, and administer 
emergency opioid antagonists are immune from any civil or criminal liability resulting from 
the administration of such emergency opioid antagonists; and 
 Adding specified civilian personnel of a law enforcement agency to the list of persons who 
are authorized to possess, store, and administer emergency opioid antagonists. 
 
The bill also amends sections 395.1041 and 401.253, Florida Statutes, to require hospital 
emergency departments, urgent care centers, and basic (BLS) and advanced life support (ALS) 
providers to report the treatment of actual or suspected overdose victims under certain 
circumstances. 
 
The department will incur costs for ongoing maintenance, additional storage and software 
licensing for their reporting systems for hospital emergency departments, urgent care centers and 
life support services to report data which can be absorbed within existing resources. 
 
The bill provides an effective date of July 1, 2022. 
REVISED:   BILL: SB 544   	Page 2 
 
II. Present Situation: 
History of the Opioid Crisis in Florida 
According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse:
1
 
 “In the late 1990s, pharmaceutical companies reassured the medical community that patients 
would not become addicted to prescription opioid pain relievers, and health care providers 
began to prescribe them at greater rates” and 
 “This subsequently led to widespread diversion and misuse of these medications before it 
became clear that these medications could indeed be highly addictive.” 
 
Between the early 2000s and the early 2010s, Florida was infamous as the “pill mill capital” of 
the country. At the peak of the pill mill crisis, doctors in Florida bought 89 percent of all the 
oxycodone sold in the country.
2
 
 
Between 2009 and 2011, the Legislature enacted a series of reforms to combat prescription drug 
abuse. These reforms included strict regulation of pain management clinics; creating the 
Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP); and stricter regulation on selling, distributing, 
and dispensing controlled substances.
3
 “In 2016, the opioid prescription rate was 75 per 
100 persons in Florida. This rate was down from a high of 83 per 100.”
 4
 
 
As reported at the time by the Florida Attorney General’s Opioid Working Group: 
 
Drug overdose is now the leading cause of non-injury related death in the 
United States. Since 2000, drug overdose death rates increased by 137 
percent, including a 200 percent increase in the rate of overdose deaths 
involving opioids. In 2015, over 52,000 deaths in the U.S. were attributed 
to drug poisoning, and over 33,000 (63 percent) involved an opioid. In 
2015, 3,535 deaths occurred in Florida where at least one drug was 
identified as the cause of death. More specifically, 2,535 deaths were 
caused by at least one opioid in 2015. Stated differently, seven lives per 
day were lost to opioids in Florida in 2015. Overall, the state had a rate of 
opioid-caused deaths of 13 per 100,000. The three counties with the 
highest opioid death rate were Manatee County (37 per 100,000), Dixie 
County (30 per 100,000), and Palm Beach County (22 per 100,000).
5
 
 
                                                
1
 National Institute on Drug Abuse, Opioid Overdose Crisis (Rev. Jan. 2019), available at https://www.drugabuse.gov/drugs-
abuse/opioids/opioid-overdose-crisis (last visited Nov. 29, 2021). 
2
 Lizette Alvarez, Florida Shutting ‘Pill Mill’ Clinics, The New York Times (Aug. 31, 2011), available at 
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/01/us/01drugs.html (last visited Nov. 29, 2021). 
3
 See Chapters 2009-198, 2010-211, and 2011-141, Laws of Fla. 
4
 Attorney General’s Opioid Working Group, Florida’s Opioid Epidemic: Recommendations and Best Practices, 7 (Mar. 1, 
2019), available at https://myfloridalegal.com/webfiles.nsf/WF/TDGT-
B9UTV9/$file/AG+Opioid+Working+Group+Report+Final+2-28-2019.pdf (last visited Nov. 29, 2021). 
5
 Id.  BILL: SB 544   	Page 3 
 
Early in 2017, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) declared the opioid 
crisis an epidemic.
6
 Shortly thereafter, on May 3, 2017, Governor Rick Scott signed Executive 
Order 17-146 declaring the opioid epidemic a public health emergency in Florida.
7
 
 
House Bill 21 (2018) 
In 2018, the Florida Legislature passed CS/CS/HB 21 (Chapter 2018-13, Laws of Florida) to 
combat the opioid crisis. CS/CS/HB 21: 
 Required additional training for practitioners on the safe and effective prescribing of 
controlled substances; 
 Restricted the duration of prescriptions for Schedule II opioid medications to three days or up 
to seven days if medically necessary; 
 Reworked the PDMP statute to require that prescribing practitioners check the PDMP prior 
to prescribing a controlled substance and to allow the integration of PDMP data with 
electronic health records and the sharing of PDMP data between Florida and other states; and 
 Provided for additional funding for treatment and other issues related to opioid abuse. 
 
Status of the Opioid Crisis after HB 21 
There is some evidence that the passage of HB 21 reduced opioid use in Florida. For example, 
one study that reviewed pharmacy prescriptions claims for a health plan serving more than 
45,000 Floridians found that on average, the number of enrollees per month that began opioid 
use between April of 2019 and August of 2019 dropped from 5.5 per 1,000 patients to 4.6 per 
1,000 patients.
8
  
 
Unfortunately, with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the incidence of opioid use disorder 
and resulting overdose deaths has once again risen. A report from Project Opioid details 
provisional data from the department showing that deaths from drug overdoses have increased by 
43 percent between 2019 and 2020, from 56 deaths per 100,000 in 2019 to 94 deaths per 100,000 
in 2020. Additionally, fentanyl, an extremely potent opioid drug, is the leading cause of overdose 
deaths in Florida, and the incidence of fentanyl overdose deaths increased by 38 percent, from 
2,348 in 2019 to 3,244 in 2020.
9
 
 
Opioid Antagonists 
Opioid receptor antagonists block one or more of the opioid receptors in the central or peripheral 
nervous system. The two most commonly used, centrally-acting opioid receptor antagonists are 
naloxone and naltrexone. Naloxone comes in intravenous, intramuscular, and intranasal 
formulations and is FDA-approved for the use in an opioid overdose and the reversal of 
respiratory depression associated with opioid use. Naltrexone is available in both oral and long-
                                                
6
 See Exec. Order No. 17-146, available at https://www.flgov.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/17146.pdf. (last visited Mar. 
12, 2021). 
7
 Id. 
8
 Juan M. Hincapie-Castillo, et al., Changes in Opioid Use After Florida’s Restriction Law for Acute Pain Prescriptions, 
JAMA Netw Open. 2020 Feb; 3(2): e200234, available at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7049083/, (last 
visited Nov. 29, 2021). 
9
 Project Opioid, A Pandemic Fueling an Epidemic in Florida in 2020, available at https://projectopioid.org/wp-
content/uploads/2020/12/PO-2020-Data-Study-Final_New-Section.pdf (last visited Nov. 29, 2021).  BILL: SB 544   	Page 4 
 
acting injectable formulations and is FDA-approved for the treatment of opioid and/or alcohol 
maintenance treatment. The most commonly used peripheral opioid receptor antagonist is 
methylnaltrexone, which is a potent competitive antagonist acting at the digestive tract and is 
also FDA-approved for the treatment of opioid-induced constipation.
10
 
 
The Florida Public Health Institute, Inc. 
The Florida Public Health Institute (Institute) is a not-for-profit corporation established by 
s. 381.98, F.S., with the purpose of advancing the knowledge and practice of public health, 
including promoting health awareness in Florida. The Institute is tasked with procuring funds to 
complement, supplement, and enhance the missions of the various organizations, entities, and 
departments that provide public health initiatives by serving as the lead corporation in the state 
for promoting public health awareness. The Institute is required to enter into partnerships with 
providers of continuing education for health care practitioners, including, but not limited to, 
hospitals and state and local medical organizations, to ensure that practitioners are aware of the 
most recent and complete diagnostic and treatment tools.  
 
Additionally, s. 381.981, F.S., requires the Institute to, in consultation with the department, 
coordinate monthly health awareness campaigns with national, state, and local health care 
organizations and government entities, targeting a wide range of the public, including: parents; 
teachers and other school employees; students in 4th through 12th grades, colleges, and 
universities; state agency employees; county and local government employees; patients of county 
health departments; Medicaid recipients; health care professionals and providers; and the public 
in general. The health campaigns must include the following diseases in at least one monthly 
campaign every 24 months: 
 Cancer, including breast, prostate, cervical, ovarian, colorectal, and skin cancer and 
leukemia. 
 Heart disease. 
 Stroke. 
 Lung disease, including asthma and smoking-relating disease. 
 Neurological disorders and disease, including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and 
epilepsy. 
 Gastrointestinal disease. 
 Kidney disease. 
 Diabetes. 
 Liver disease. 
 Autoimmune disorders. 
 Birth defects and prenatal care. 
 Obesity and malnutrition. 
 Sexually transmissible disease. 
 Hepatitis A, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C. 
 Arthritis. 
                                                
10
 Opioid Antagonists, Theriot, Jonathan, et. al., (last updated July 23, 2021), available at 
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK537079/#:~:text=3%5D%5B4%5D-
,The%20two%20most%20commonly%20used%20centrally%20acting%20opioid%20receptor%20antagonists,depression%2
0associated%20with%20opioid%20use. (last visited Nov. 29, 2021).  BILL: SB 544   	Page 5 
 
 Vaccine-preventable diseases. 
 Infectious diseases, including HIV/AIDS. 
 Substance abuse. 
 Mental illness. 
 Lupus. 
 Osteoporosis.  
III. Effect of Proposed Changes: 
This bill amends s. 381.887, F.S., to: 
 Include the prescribing, ordering and dispensing of emergency opioid antagonists within the 
purpose of the section, which is to provide for the emergency treatment for suspected opioid 
overdose; 
 Require the Florida Public Health Institute, Inc., in consultation with the department, to 
educate the public regarding the use of emergency opioid antagonists; 
 Authorize a pharmacist to order, and dispense pursuant to that order, an emergency opioid 
antagonist with an autoinjection delivery system or intranasal application delivery system to 
a patient or caregiver;
11
  
 Add civilian personnel of a law enforcement agency to the list of persons authorized to 
possess, store, and administer emergency opioid antagonists under the section. The bill 
specifies that such personnel includes, but is not limited to, employees of a sheriff’s office 
authorized to provide child protective investigative services under s. 39.3065, F.S., and 
correctional probation officers who, while acting within the scope or course of employment, 
come into contact with controlled substances or persons at risk of experiencing an opioid 
overdose; and 
 Provide immunity from any civil or criminal liability to the listed persons authorized to 
possess, store, and administer emergency opioid antagonists under the section for the 
administering of emergency opioid antagonists.
12
  
 
The bill also amends ss. 395.1041 and 401.253, F.S., to require a hospital emergency department 
or urgent care center to report the treatment of a person in response to an actual or suspected 
overdose to the department if the patient was not transported to the hospital by a BLS or ALS 
provider and to require a BLS or ALS provider to report when it treats and releases or transports 
to a medical facility a person in response to an emergency call for a suspected or actual overdose 
of a controlled substance. The provider must use an appropriate reporting method with secure 
access, including, but not limited to, the Washington/Baltimore High Intensity Drug Trafficking 
Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program or other program identified by the 
department rule and must use its best effort to report such incidents within 120 hours of 
discovering the incident. Current law in s. 401.253, F.S., authorizes, but does not require, a BLS 
or ALS provider to report when it treats and releases or transports to a medical facility a person 
in response to an emergency call for a suspected or actual overdose of a controlled substance.  
                                                
11
 Section 381.887, F.S., defines “patient” as a person who is at risk of experiencing an opioid overdose, and defines 
“caregiver” as a family member, friend, or person in a position to have recurring contact with a person at risk of experiencing 
an opioid overdose. 
12
 These persons include emergency responders as well as crime laboratory personnel for the statewide criminal analysis 
laboratory system and their supervisors.  BILL: SB 544   	Page 6 
 
 
The bill provides an effective date of July 1, 2022. 
IV. Constitutional Issues: 
A. Municipality/County Mandates Restrictions: 
None. 
B. Public Records/Open Meetings Issues: 
None. 
C. Trust Funds Restrictions: 
None. 
D. State Tax or Fee Increases: 
None. 
E. Other Constitutional Issues: 
None. 
V. Fiscal Impact Statement: 
A. Tax/Fee Issues: 
None. 
B. Private Sector Impact: 
SB 544 may have an indeterminate negative fiscal impact on BLS providers, ALS 
providers, hospital emergency departments, and urgent care centers that are required to 
report specified incidents of treatment of patients suffering from suspected or actual 
overdoses of controlled substances. 
C. Government Sector Impact: 
The Department of Health has existing reporting systems for hospital emergency 
departments, urgent care centers and life support services to report data; however, 
ongoing maintenance, additional data storage and software licensing will be needed. The 
cost is estimated to be $64,000 recurring and can be absorbed with existing resources.
13
 
 
                                                
13
 Department of Health, Senate Bill 544, 2022 Agency Legislative Analysis (January 11, 2022) (on file with the Senate 
Appropriations Subcommittee on Health and Human Services).   BILL: SB 544   	Page 7 
 
VI. Technical Deficiencies: 
None. 
VII. Related Issues: 
None. 
VIII. Statutes Affected: 
This bill substantially amends the following sections of the Florida Statutes: 381.887, 395.1041, 
and 401.253. 
IX. Additional Information: 
A. Committee Substitute – Statement of Changes: 
(Summarizing differences between the Committee Substitute and the prior version of the bill.) 
None. 
B. Amendments: 
None. 
This Senate Bill Analysis does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill’s introducer or the Florida Senate.