The original instrument and the following digest, which constitutes no part of the legislative instrument, were prepared by Christine Arbo Peck. DIGEST SB 96 Original 2017 Regular Session Johns Present law provides for access to prescription monitoring information. Proposed law establishes a definition for "audit trail information". Proposed law provides for access to prescription monitoring information and audit trail information. Present law provides statutory authority for certain specific individuals to have access to prescription monitoring program information including persons authorized to prescribe or dispense controlled dangerous substances, designated representatives from health professional licensing boards that regulate prescribers and dispensers, designated representatives from Louisiana Medicaid, and the designated vendor managing the prescription monitoring program for the Board of Pharmacy. Proposed law adds medical examiners, coroners, licensed substance abuse addiction counselors, and probation and parole officers to those who may access prescription monitoring program information in certain circumstances. Proposed law adds judicially supervised drug courts to the list of law enforcement and judicial entities that may obtain limited data in report form from the prescription monitoring program. Proposed law provides that the board may provide prescription monitoring program information in limited circumstances to individuals, parents, legal guardians, legal health care agents, and executors of a will or estate. Proposed law provides that audit trail information may be disclosed to certain individuals in the course of an investigation. Present law provides a limitation of liability to the board and advisory council arising from inaccuracy of any information submitted to the board. Proposed law expands and clarifies the limitation of liability to include failure to possess prescription monitoring information that was not reported to the board, release of information that was factually incorrect and release of information to the wrong person. Present law provides for an orientation course during implementation of the prescription monitoring program and a course for those who missed orientation. Proposed law repeals references to orientation training but retains other trainings on prescribing practices. Present law provides penalties for a dispenser who fails to submit prescription monitoring information to the board and who knowingly discloses prescription monitoring information in violation of the law. Proposed law expands the penalties to also include instances where a dispenser fails to correct or amend data after notification by the board and where he knowingly accesses prescription monitoring information in violation of the law. Effective upon signature of the governor or upon lapse of gubernatorial action. (Amends R.S. 40:1007(A), (B), (E)(intro para), (F)(intro para), (I), and (J), 1008(A), and 1009(A) and (B); adds R.S. 40:1003(15) and 1007(E)(5), (6), and (7), and (K))