South Carolina General Assembly
122nd Session, 2017-2018

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H. 4603

STATUS INFORMATION

General Bill
Sponsors: Reps. Bedingfield, Alexander, Dillard, Douglas, Erickson, Fry, Henderson, Hewitt, Huggins, Spires, West, Norrell, Weeks, Rutherford and Atwater
Document Path: l:\council\bills\cc\15191vr18.docx

Introduced in the House on January 10, 2018
Introduced in the Senate on March 27, 2018
Last Amended on March 21, 2018
Currently residing in the Senate Committee on Medical Affairs

Summary: Prescribing limitations

HISTORY OF LEGISLATIVE ACTIONS

     Date      Body   Action Description with journal page number
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   1/10/2018  House   Introduced and read first time (House Journal-page 59)
   1/10/2018  House   Referred to Committee on Medical, Military, Public and 
                        Municipal Affairs (House Journal-page 59)
    3/8/2018  House   Committee report: Favorable with amendment Medical, 
                        Military, Public and Municipal Affairs 
                        (House Journal-page 8)
   3/20/2018  House   Debate adjourned until Wed., 3-21-18 
                        (House Journal-page 35)
   3/21/2018  House   Amended (House Journal-page 19)
   3/21/2018  House   Read second time (House Journal-page 19)
   3/21/2018  House   Roll call Yeas-100  Nays-0 (House Journal-page 21)
   3/22/2018  House   Read third time and sent to Senate 
                        (House Journal-page 10)
   3/27/2018  Senate  Introduced and read first time (Senate Journal-page 9)
   3/27/2018  Senate  Referred to Committee on Medical Affairs 
                        (Senate Journal-page 9)

View the latest legislative information at the website

VERSIONS OF THIS BILL

1/10/2018
3/8/2018
3/21/2018

(Text matches printed bills. Document has been reformatted to meet World Wide Web specifications.)

AMENDED

March 21, 2018

H. 4603

Introduced by Reps. Bedingfield, Alexander, Dillard, Douglas, Erickson, Fry, Henderson, Hewitt, Huggins, Spires, West, Norrell, Weeks, Rutherford and Atwater

S. Printed 3/21/18--H.

Read the first time January 10, 2018.

            

A BILL

TO AMEND SECTION 44-53-360, CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, RELATING TO PRESCRIBING LIMITATIONS, SO AS TO LIMIT INITIAL PRESCRIPTIONS OF AN OPIOID MEDICATION FOR ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT OR POSTOPERATIVE PAIN MANAGEMENT TO A FIVE-DAY SUPPLY, WITH EXCEPTIONS.

Amend Title To Conform

Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina:

SECTION    1.    Section 44-53-360 of the 1976 Code is amended by adding an appropriately lettered subsection at the end to read:

"( )(1)    Initial opioid prescriptions for acute pain management or postoperative pain management must not exceed a seven-day supply, except when clinically indicated for chronic pain, cancer pain, hospice care, palliative care, major trauma, major surgery, treatment of sickle cell anemia, or medication-assisted treatment for substance abuse. Upon any subsequent consultation for the same pain, the practitioner may issue any appropriate renewal, refill, or new opioid prescription.

(2)    This subsection does not apply to opioid prescriptions issued by a practitioner who orders an opioid prescription to be wholly administered in a hospital, nursing home, hospice facility, or residential care facility.

(3)    A practitioner who acts in accordance with the limitation on prescriptions as set forth in this subsection is immune from any civil liability or disciplinary action from the practitioner's professional licensing board.

(4)    As used in this subsection:

(A)    'Acute pain' means pain that a practitioner reasonably expects to last for three months or less, whether resulting from disease, accident, intentional trauma, or other cause. The term does not include 'chronic pain' or pain being treated as part of cancer care, chronic care, hospice care, palliative care, or medication-assisted treatment for substance use disorder.

(B)    'Chronic pain' means pain that typically lasts for longer than three months or that lasts beyond the time of normal tissue healing.

(C)    'Postoperative pain' means acute pain experienced immediately after a surgical procedure.

(D)    'Surgical procedure' means a procedure performed for the purpose of altering the human body by incision or destruction of tissues as part of the practice of medicine such as diagnostic or therapeutic treatment of conditions or disease processes by use of instruments and includes lasers, ultrasound, ionizing, radiation, scalpels, probes, or needles that cause localized alteration or transportation of live human tissue by cutting, burning, vaporizing, freezing, suturing, probing, or manipulating by closed reduction for major dislocations and fractures, or otherwise altering by any mechanical, thermal, light-based, electromagnetic, or chemical means."

SECTION    2.    This act takes effect upon approval by the Governor.

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This web page was last updated on April 3, 2018 at 2:49 PM