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The 2010 Research Track from the National Institute of Drug Abuse and the American Psychiatric Association has just been released. Neurobiological Circuits of Addiction: Significance for Psychiatric Practice. To view the full PDF (30 pages), please click here.
AAAP, March 2010
If you are providing office-based treatment of opioid dependence, you should know that DATA 2000 requires the Drug Enforcement Agency to inspect physicians' office-based practices. The DEA has spent time in recent months preparing to inspect a greater number of these office-based settings, and several AAAP Board members recently had the opportunity to speak with DEA staff about the purpose of these visits and procedures to be used. The following information points are based on those discussions and are meant to assist you in preparing.
How to Prepare for a Visit from the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Regarding Buprenorphine Prescribing
The following are a series of brief suggestions on how to prepare for a DEA inspection of waivered physicians having an "X" number (modified DEA registration allowing them to engage in office-based treatment of opioid dependence) by the DEA based on a recent conversation (1/10) with officials at the DEA and AAAP Board members:
NOTE: It is important to note that DEA does not stipulate the way the prescriptions records have to be maintained. A log or file would be an efficient way to maintain the record, but DEA cannot mandate this format.
a. DEA will determine how many patients are being treated or have been treated at one time.
b. If your state has a prescription monitoring program, DEA cannot directly access it. However, DEA might request access to those records as one means of determining your adherence to the law.
c. It is recommended you keep any log of patients who are treated with buprenorphine, as well as copies or records of prescriptions for each patient in the location listed on your DEA registration (i.e.: if you are treating patients at more than one practice location, you must maintain copies of prescriptions/patient logs from each location and store those at the location listed on your DEA registration. This means that not only will you have information in an individual patient record for your buprenorphine-treated patients, but you will also need to keep a separate log of all patients/prescription copies at the location listed on your DEA registration. Failure to do this will result in problems during the inspection as DEA will not be able to easily determine your adherence to patient limits.
d. If you have all of this information easily accessible, the inspection should be fairly rapid. You do not have to be with them as they check your logs. You can have a staff person/office manager, etc. do this.
By Elinore F. McCance-Katz, MD, PhD © 2010 American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry
The American Psychiatric Association has created a website, www.mentalhealthparitywatch.org, about the 2008 Mental Health Parity Act (The Paul Wellstone and Pete Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008). The purpose of the site is to educate consumers and physicians about the Act and to monitor the implementation of this new law. For more information click here.
The Parity Act The parity legislation and its regulations are complicated. The Act requires that any group health plan that covers more than 50 employees and offers mental health and/or substance use disorders coverage must provide that coverage with no greater financial requirements (i.e., co-pays, deductibles, annual or life-time dollar limits) or treatment limitations (i.e., number of visits) than the predominant requirements that it applies to substantially all medical/surgical benefits.
Monitoring Implementation - Your Input Can Help You and your members are encouraged to go to the site to learn more about the Parity Act and state parity laws and to report concerns and questions about how an insurance plan may be interpreting the law. Please spread the word about the website. The more people who understand parity and the more reports received, the better. The only way we can know if the law is being implemented correctly is if we hear from patients and their physicians about problems or concerns they may have about a health plan's mental health coverage given the Parity Act's requirements. Your reports will help us identify areas of concern that will be passed along to federal regulators.
The Website
The American Psychiatric Association's (APA) website has information on:
- What it means to file an ERISA claim
- How state laws relate to the federal law
- When an external review is warranted
- What is involved in filing an insurance claim when benefits have been denied
- Where to file a complaint
Visit the web site www.mentalhealthparitywatch.org and call (866) 882-6227 to report concerns. For more information, please contact Samantha Hawkins in the APA's Office of Healthcare Systems and Financing at (703) 907-8612.