Deregulation enables mid-level practitioners to prescribe
and dispense buprenorphine to addicts
WASHINGTON – The United States Drug Enforcement
Administration today announced a deregulatory measure that will make it easier
for residents of underserved areas to receive treatment for opioid addiction.
As published today in the Federal Register, nurse
practitioners and physician assistants can now become DATA-Waived qualifying
practitioners, which give them authority to prescribe and dispense the opioid
maintenance drug buprenorphine from their offices. Prior to the enactment of
the Drug Abuse Treatment Act of 2000, only physicians could treat opioid
addicts and had to register with DEA as both physicians and operators of
Narcotic Treatment Programs. Waiving this second registration prompted more
physicians to offer treatment services. The Federal Register notice is
available here:
Today’s action brings DEA regulations into conformity with
the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act passed by Congress and signed into
law in 2016. Because the vast majority of DATA-Waived physicians prior to CARA
served urban areas, rural parts of the United States were underserved. This
action provides more treatment options for addicts in rural parts of the
country.
According to a 2017 report published by the National Rural
Health Association, 90 percent of DATA-Waived physicians practice in urban
counties, leaving 53 percent of rural counties without any prescribing
physician and 30 million people living in counties where treatment is
unavailable. As a result, rural patients seeking outpatient buprenorphine treatment
must often travel long distances to access care. Rural providers of
buprenorphine report a demand far beyond their capacity and say they lack the
resources to adequately support themselves and patients in treatment. The NRHA
report also found that, with 92 percent of substance use treatment facilities
located in urban areas, rural areas offer fewer inpatient and day treatment
resources.
Currently, there are nearly 43,000 Data-Waived qualifying
practitioners in the United States. When CARA was enacted, DEA began the
process of transitioning mid-level practitioners into DATA-Waived status in
order to treat more addicts, and nearly 5,000 mid-level practitioners are
already able to treat and prescribe opioid addicts.
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