Hoping to stop people from “doctor shopping” for highly addictive painkillers, Louisiana lawmakers have ordered physicians to consult a statewide prescription monitoring program before prescribing opioid drugs.
The Senate has unanimously approved minor changes the House had made to Sen. Fred Mills’ bill and sent the legislation to Gov. John Bel Edwards’ desk. Edwards has publicly supported the measure, which he hopes will help fight the country’s opioid epidemic.
The monitoring program already exists, but doctors had not previously been required to use it. Under the bill, physicians still will not have to access the system if they are writing a prescription for seven days or less, or if the patient is in the hospital.
Louisiana has the nation’s sixth-highest opioid prescription rate.
Topics Louisiana
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
US Appeals Court Rejects Challenge to Trump’s Efforts to Ban DEI
Chubb CEO Greenberg on Personal Insurance Affordability and Data Centers
Q4 Global Commercial Insurance Rates Drop 4%, in 6th Quarterly Decline: Marsh
Zurich Insurance’s Beazley Bid Sets the Stage for More Insurance Deals 

