Texas 2015 - 84th Regular

Texas House Bill HB3200 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 03/11/2015

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                            84R12117 GCB-D
 By: Capriglione H.B. No. 3200


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to limitations on filling prescriptions for certain opioid
 pain medications; adding prohibitions subject to a criminal
 penalty.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 481.074, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsections (a-1),
 (r), and (s) to read as follows:
 (a)  A pharmacist may not:
 (1)  dispense or deliver a controlled substance or
 cause a controlled substance to be dispensed or delivered under the
 pharmacist's direction or supervision except under a valid
 prescription and in the course of professional practice;
 (2)  dispense a controlled substance if the pharmacist
 knows or should have known that the prescription was issued without
 a valid patient-practitioner relationship;
 (3)  fill a prescription that is not prepared or issued
 as prescribed by this chapter;
 (4)  permit or allow a person who is not a licensed
 pharmacist or pharmacist intern to dispense, distribute, or in any
 other manner deliver a controlled substance even if under the
 supervision of a pharmacist, except that after the pharmacist or
 pharmacist intern has fulfilled his professional and legal
 responsibilities, a nonpharmacist may complete the actual cash or
 credit transaction and delivery; [or]
 (5)  permit the delivery of a controlled substance to
 any person not known to the pharmacist, the pharmacist intern, or
 the person authorized by the pharmacist to deliver the controlled
 substance without first requiring identification of the person
 taking possession of the controlled substance, except as provided
 by Subsection (n); or
 (6)  dispense or deliver an opioid pain medication, or
 cause an opioid pain medication to be dispensed or delivered under
 the pharmacist's direction or supervision, in a manner other than
 as authorized under Subsection (r).
 (a-1)  In this section, "opioid pain medication" means a
 controlled substance listed in Section 481.102 that is an opiate or
 opium derivative and that a licensed physician has prescribed to a
 patient for the treatment of pain.
 (r)  Notwithstanding Subsection (d-1) and except as
 otherwise provided by this subsection, a pharmacist may not
 dispense or deliver, or cause to be dispensed or delivered under the
 pharmacist's direction or supervision, more than a 10-day supply of
 an opioid pain medication for that patient in a 60-day period unless
 the pharmacist receives a form adopted under Subsection (s)
 indicating that the prescribing physician intends the patient to be
 treated for pain for a period longer than 10 days or that the
 patient requires treatment with opioid pain medication before the
 expiration of the 60-day period beginning on the date the patient's
 previous prescription for opioid pain medication was filled. A
 pharmacist who receives a prescription for an amount of opioid pain
 medication greater than a 10-day supply without receiving the
 required form shall partially fill the prescription by dispensing
 or delivering, or causing to be dispensed or delivered under the
 pharmacist's direction or supervision, a 10-day supply for that
 patient and shall inform the prescribing physician that the
 remainder of the prescription is canceled in accordance with this
 subsection. A pharmacist may not fill a prescription for opioid
 pain medication for a patient before the expiration of the 60-day
 period beginning on the date the patient's previous prescription
 for opioid pain medication was filled without receiving the
 required form.
 (s)  The director by rule shall adopt a form for purposes of
 Subsection (r) and prescribe procedures governing the use of that
 form by prescribing physicians and pharmacists.
 SECTION 2.  Not later than December 1, 2015, the public
 safety director of the Department of Public Safety shall adopt the
 form required under Section 481.074(s), Health and Safety Code, as
 added by this Act.
 SECTION 3.  The change in law made by this Act applies only
 to a prescription completely filled on or after January 1, 2016. A
 prescription completely filled before January 1, 2016, is covered
 by the law as it existed immediately before the effective date of
 this Act, and the former law is continued in effect for that
 purpose.
 SECTION 4.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2015.