Chapter 263
2017 -- H 5469 SUBSTITUTE A
Enacted 07/19/2017

A N   A C T
RELATING TO FOOD AND DRUGS - UNIFORM CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES ACT

Introduced By: Representative Joseph M. McNamara
Date Introduced: February 15, 2017

It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
     SECTION 1. Sections 21-28-1.2 and 21-28-3.32 of the General Laws in Chapter 21-28
entitled "Uniform Controlled Substances Act" are hereby amended to read as follows:
     21-28-1.02. Definitions.
     Unless the context otherwise requires, the words and phrases as defined in this section are
used in this chapter in the sense given them in the following definitions:
     (1) "Administer" refers to the direct application of controlled substances to the body of a
patient or research subject by:
     (i) A practitioner, or, in his or her presence by his or her authorized agent; or
     (ii) The patient or research subject at the direction and in the presence of the practitioner
whether the application is by injection, inhalation, ingestion, or any other means.
     (2) "Agent" means an authorized person who acts on behalf of, or at the direction of, a
manufacturer, wholesaler, distributor, or dispenser; except that these terms do not include a
common or contract carrier or warehouse operator, when acting in the usual and lawful course of
the carrier's or warehouse operator's business.
     (3) "Apothecary" means a registered pharmacist as defined by the laws of this state and,
where the context requires, the owner of a licensed pharmacy or other place of business where
controlled substances are compounded or dispensed by a registered pharmacist; and includes
registered assistant pharmacists as defined by existing law, but nothing in this chapter shall be
construed as conferring on a person who is not registered as a pharmacist any authority, right, or
privilege that is not granted to him or her by the pharmacy laws of the state.
     (4) "Automated data processing system" means a system utilizing computer software and
hardware for the purposes of record keeping.
     (5) "Certified law enforcement prescription drug diversion investigator" means a certified
law enforcement officer assigned by their his or her qualified law enforcement agency to
investigate prescription drug diversion.
     (5)(6) "Computer" means programmable electronic device capable of multi-functions,
including, but not limited to,: storage, retrieval, and processing of information.
     (6)(7) "Control" means to add a drug or other substance or immediate precursor to a
schedule under this chapter, whether by transfer from another schedule or otherwise.
     (7)(8) "Controlled substance" means a drug, substance, immediate precursor, or synthetic
drug in schedules I -- V of this chapter. The term shall not include distilled spirits, wine, or malt
beverages, as those terms are defined or used in chapter 1 of title 3, nor tobacco.
      (9)(10) "Counterfeit substance" means a controlled substance which that, or the
container or labeling of which, without authorization bears the trademark, trade name, or other
identifying mark, imprint, number, or device, or any likeness of them, of a manufacturer,
distributor, or dispenser, other than the person or persons who in fact manufactured, distributed,
or dispensed the substance and which that thereby falsely purports or is represented to be the
product of, or to have been distributed by, the other manufacturer, distributor, or dispenser, or
which substance is falsely purported to be or represented to be one of the controlled substances by
a manufacturer, distributor, or dispenser.
     (10)(9) "CRT" means cathode ray tube used to impose visual information on a screen.
     (10)(11) "Deliver" or "delivery" means the actual, constructive, or attempted transfer of a
controlled substance or imitation controlled substance, whether or not there exists an agency
relationship.
     (11)(12) "Department" means the department of health of this state.
     (12)(13) "Depressant or stimulant drug" means:
     (i) A drug which that contains any quantity of:
     (A) Barbituric acid or derivatives, compounds, mixtures, or preparations of barbituric
acid; and
     (B) "Barbiturate" or "barbiturates" includes all hypnotic and/or somnifacient drugs,
whether or not derivatives of barbituric acid, except that this definition shall not include bromides
and narcotics.
     (ii) A drug which that contains any quantity of:
     (A) Amphetamine or any of its optical isomers;
     (B) Any salt of amphetamine and/or desoxyephedrine or any salt of an optical isomer of
amphetamine and/or desoxyephedrine, or any compound, mixture, or preparation of them.
     (iii) A drug which that contains any quantity of coca leaves. "Coca leaves" includes
cocaine, or any compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of coca leaves,
except derivatives of coca leaves, which that do not contain cocaine, ecgonine, or substance from
which cocaine or ecgonine may be synthesized or made.
     (iv) Any other drug or substance which that contains any quantity of a substance which
that the attorney general of the United States, or the director of health, after investigation, has
found to have, or by regulation designates as having, a potential for abuse because of its
depressant or stimulant effect on the central nervous system.
     (13)(14) "Director" means the director of health.
     (14)(15) "Dispense" means to deliver, distribute, leave with, give away, or dispose of a
controlled substance to the ultimate user or human research subject by or pursuant to the lawful
order of a practitioner, including the packaging, labeling, or compounding necessary to prepare
the substance for that delivery.
     (15)(16) "Dispenser" is a practitioner who delivers a controlled substance to the ultimate
user or human research subject.
     (16)(17) "Distribute" means to deliver (other than by administering or dispensing) a
controlled substance or an imitation controlled substance and includes actual constructive, or
attempted transfer. "Distributor" means a person who so delivers a controlled substance or an
imitation controlled substance.
     (17)(18) "Downtime" means that period of time when a computer is not operable.
     (18)(19) "Drug addicted person" means a person who exhibits a maladaptive pattern of
behavior resulting from drug use, including one or more of the following: impaired control over
drug use; compulsive use; and/or continued use despite harm, and craving.
     (19)(20) "Drug Enforcement Administration" means the Drug Enforcement
Administration United States Department of Justice or its successor.
     (20)(21) "Federal law" means the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control
Act of 1970, (84 stat. 1236) (see generally 21 U.S.C. § 801 et seq.), and all regulations pertaining
to that federal act.
     (21)(22) "Hardware" means the fixed component parts of a computer.
     (22)(23) "Hospital" means an institution as defined in chapter 17 of title 23.
     (23)(24) "Imitation controlled substance" means a substance that is not a controlled
substance, which that by dosage unit, appearance (including color, shape, size, and markings), or
by representations made, would lead a reasonable person to believe that the substance is a
controlled substance and, which imitation controlled substances contain substances which if
ingested, could be injurious to the health of a person. In those cases when the appearance of the
dosage unit is not reasonably sufficient to establish that the substance is an "imitation controlled
substance" (for example in the case of powder or liquid), the court or authority concerned should
consider, in addition to all other logically relevant factors, the following factors as related to
"representations made" in determining whether the substance is an "imitation controlled
substance":
     (i) Statement made by an owner, possessor, transferor, recipient, or by anyone else in
control of the substance concerning the nature of the substance, or its use or effect.
     (ii) Statements made by the owner, possessor, or transferor, to the recipient that the
substance may be resold for substantial profit.
     (iii) Whether the substance is packaged in a manner reasonably similar to packaging of
illicit controlled substances.
     (iv) Whether the distribution or attempted distribution included an exchange of or
demand for money or other property as consideration, and whether the amount of the
consideration was substantially greater than the reasonable value of the non-controlled substance.
     (24)(25) "Immediate precursor" means a substance:
     (i) Which That the director of health has found to be and by regulation designated as
being the principal compound used, or produced primarily for use, in the manufacture of a
controlled substance;
     (ii) Which That is an immediate chemical intermediary used or likely to be used in the
manufacture of those controlled substances; and
     (iii) The control of which is necessary to prevent, curtail, or limit the manufacture of that
controlled substance.
     (25)(26) "Laboratory" means a laboratory approved by the department of health as proper
to be entrusted with controlled substances and the use of controlled substances for scientific and
medical purposes and for the purposes of instruction.
      (27)(29) "Marijuana" means all parts of the plant cannabis sativa L., whether growing or
not; the seeds of the plant; the resin extracted from any part of the plant; and every compound,
manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds or resin, but shall not
include the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the stalks, oil or cake made from the
seeds of the plant, any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of
mature stalks, (except the resin extracted from it), fiber, oil or cake, or the sterilized seed from the
plant which is incapable of germination.
     (28)(27) "Manufacture" means the production, preparation, propagation, cultivation,
compounding, or processing of a drug or other substance, including an imitation controlled
substance, either directly or indirectly or by extraction from substances of natural origin, or
independently by means of chemical synthesis or by a combination of extraction and chemical
synthesis and includes any packaging or repackaging of the substance or labeling or relabeling of
its container in conformity with the general laws of this state except by a practitioner as an
incident to his or her administration or dispensing of the drug or substance in the course of his or
her professional practice.
     (29)(28) "Manufacturer" means a person who manufactures but does not include an
apothecary who compounds controlled substances to be sold or dispensed on prescriptions.
     (29)(30) "Narcotic drug" means any of the following, whether produced directly or
indirectly by extraction from substances of vegetable origin, or independently by means of
chemical synthesis or by a combination of extraction and chemical synthesis:
     (i) Opium and opiates.
     (ii) A compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, or preparation of opium or opiates.
     (iii) A substance (and any compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, or preparation of it)
which that is chemically identical with any of the substances referred to in paragraphs (i) and (ii)
of this subdivision.
     (iv) Any other substance which that the attorney general of the United States, or his or
her successor, or the director of health, after investigation, has found to have, and by regulation
designates as having, a potential for abuse similar to opium and opiates.
     (30)(31) "Official written order" means an order written on a form provided for that
purpose by the Drug Enforcement Administration under any laws of the United States making
provision for an official form, if order forms are authorized and required by federal law, and if no
order form is provided then on an official form provided for that purpose by the director of health.
     (31)(32) "Opiate" means any substance having an addiction-forming or addiction-
sustaining liability similar to morphine or being capable of conversion into a drug having
addiction-forming or addiction-sustaining liability.
     (32)(33) "Opium poppy" means the plant of the species papaver somniferum L., except
the seeds of the plant.
     (33)(34) "Ounce" means an avoirdupois ounce as applied to solids and semi-solids, and a
fluid ounce as applied to liquids.
     (34)(35) "Person" means any corporation, association, partnership, or one or more
individuals.
     (35)(36) "Physical dependence" means a state of adaptation that is manifested by a drug
class specific withdrawal syndrome that can be produced by abrupt cessation, rapid dose
reduction, decreasing blood level of the drug, and/or administration of an antagonist.
     (36)(37) "Poppy straw" means all parts, except the seeds, of the opium poppy, after
mowing.
     (37)(38) "Practitioner" means:
     (i) A physician, osteopath, dentist, chiropodist, veterinarian, scientific investigator, or
other person licensed, registered or permitted to distribute, dispense, conduct research with
respect to or to administer a controlled substance in the course of professional practice or research
in this state.
     (ii) A pharmacy, hospital, or other institution licensed, registered or permitted to
distribute, dispense, conduct research with respect to, or to administer a controlled substance in
the course of professional practice or research in this state.
     (38)(39) "Printout" means a hard copy produced by computer that is readable without the
aid of any special device.
     (39)(40) "Production" includes the manufacture, planting, cultivation, growing, or
harvesting of a controlled substance.
     (41) "Qualified law enforcement agency" means the U.S. Food and Drug Administration,
Drug Enforcement Administration, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Office of Inspector General
of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, or the Medicaid Fraud and Patient Abuse
Unit in the Office of the Attorney General.
      (40)(42) "Researcher" means a person authorized by the director of health to conduct a
laboratory as defined in this chapter.
     (41)(43) "Sell" includes sale, barter, gift, transfer, or delivery in any manner to another,
or to offer or agree to do the same.
     (42)(44) "Software" means programs, procedures and storage of required information
data.
     (43)(45) "Synthetic drugs" means any synthetic cannabinoids or piperazines or any
synthetic cathinones as provided for in schedule I.
     (44)(46) "Ultimate user" means a person who lawfully possesses a controlled substance
for his or her own use or for the use of a member of his or her household, or for administering to
an animal owned by him or her or by a member of his or her household.
     (45)(47) "Wholesaler" means a person who sells, vends, or distributes at wholesale, or as
a jobber, broker agent, or distributor, or for resale in any manner in this state any controlled
substance.
     21-28-3.32. Electronic prescription database.
     (a) The information contained in any prescription-drug-monitoring database maintained
by the department of health pursuant to § 21-28-3.18 of this chapter shall be disclosed only:
     (1) To a practitioner who certifies that the requested information is for the purpose of
evaluating the need for, or providing medical treatment to, a current patient to whom the
practitioner is prescribing or considering prescribing a controlled substance;
     (2) To a pharmacist who certifies that the requested information is for a current client to
whom the pharmacist is dispensing, or considering dispensing, a controlled substance;
     (3) To an authorized designee of the practitioner and/or pharmacist to consult the
prescription-drug-monitoring database on the practitioner's and/or pharmacist's behalf, provided
that:
     (i) The designee so authorized is employed by the same professional practice or
pharmacy;
     (ii) The practitioner or pharmacist takes reasonable steps to ensure that such designee is
sufficiently competent in the use of the database;
     (iii) The practitioner or pharmacist remains responsible for ensuring that access to the
database by the designee is limited to authorized purposes as provided for in subsections (a)(1)
and (a)(2);
     (iv) The practitioner or pharmacist remains responsible for ensuring access to the
database by the designee occurs in a manner that protects the confidentiality of information
obtained from the database and remains responsible for any breach of confidentiality;
     (v) The practitioner or pharmacist terminates the designee's access to the database at the
termination of the designee's employment; and
     (vi) The ultimate decision as to whether or not to prescribe or dispense a controlled
substance remains with the practitioner or pharmacist and is reasonably informed by the relevant,
controlled-substance history information obtained from the database.;
     (4) Pursuant to a valid search warrant based on probable cause to believe a violation of
federal or state criminal law has occurred and that specified information contained in the database
would assist in the investigation of the crime;
     (5) By a department employee to a certified law enforcement prescription drug diversion
investigator of a qualified law enforcement agency for use in an investigation.
     (i) A certified law enforcement prescription drug diversion investigator shall provide to
the department the following information in order to receive information from the database:
     (A) The identification credentials assigned by the department; and
     (B) The case number of the investigation.
     (ii) A qualified law enforcement agency shall submit to the department quarterly reports
of the data received by all certified law enforcement prescription drug diversion investigators in
the qualified law enforcement agency, including, without limitation:
     (A) Written verification that the inquiries were part of a lawful prescription drug
diversion investigation as provided to the department through the case number of the
investigation; and
     (B) A brief description of each case closed during that quarter for which the qualified law
enforcement agency used information from the database; and
     (C) The disposition of the investigation.
     (iii) The department shall:
     (A) Create a verification form for use under subsection (5)(ii)(A) of this section; and
     (B) Make the verification form available annually to the qualified law enforcement
agency.
     (iv) The verification form under subsection (5)(ii)(A) of this section shall be submitted to
the department within thirty (30) days of receipt of the form by the qualified law enforcement
agency.
     (v) Failure to submit a verification form under subsection (5)(iv) of this section shall
result in the immediate suspension of disclosure of information from the database by the
department to the qualified law enforcement agency and its certified law enforcement prescription
drug diversion investigators until a determination is made by the department to allow continued
disclosure.
     (vi) The director shall, beginning January 1, 2018, and annually thereafter, review
disclosure of information pursuant to subsection (a)(5) of this section. Thereafter, the disclosure
of information pursuant to subsection (a)(5) of this section shall automatically renew for
successive one-year terms unless the director provides written notice to:
     (A) The qualified law enforcement agencies; and
     (B) The speaker of the house and the president of the senate, at least sixty (60) days in
advance of the then existing-term's end, that the department wishes to discontinue providing
information from the database pursuant to this subsection, the director may reinstitute disclosure
by providing written notice to the same parties.
     (5)(6) To a patient who requests his or her own prescription information, or the parent or
legal guardian of a minor child who requests the minor child's prescription information;
     (6)(7) To a health professional regulatory board that documents, in writing, that the
requested information is necessary for an investigation related to licensure, renewal, or
disciplinary action involving the applicant, licensee, or registrant to whom the requested
information pertains;
     (7)(8) To any vendor or contractor with whom the department has contracted, pursuant to
state purchasing law and regulations in the contracting of vendors, to establish or maintain the
electronic system of the prescription-drug-monitoring database;
     (8)(9) To public or private entities for statistical, research, or educational purposes, after
removing the patient and prescriber information that could be used to identify individual patients.
This shall not include entities receiving a waiver from the institutional review board; or
     (9)(10) To any vendor, agent, contractor, or designee who operates an electronic health
record or clinical-management system for the purpose of sharing data with practitioners,
pharmacists, or licensed health care facilities or designees.
     (b) Information stored in the prescription-drug-monitoring database shall include only the
following:
     (1) Patient's first and last name and/or patient identification number; provided, however,
the patient's social security number shall not be recorded in whole or in part, patient sex, patient
date of birth, and patient address;
     (2) Prescribing practitioner's name and Drug Enforcement Administration prescriber-
information number;
     (3) Prescribing practitioner's office or hospital contact information;
     (4) Prescription name, prescription number, prescription species code, national drug code
number, prescription dosage, prescription quantity, days' supply, new-refill code, number of
refills authorized, date the prescription was written, date the prescription was filled, payment
type; provided, however, no credit card number shall be recorded in whole or in part; and
     (5) The Drug Enforcement Administration pharmacy number of the pharmacy filling the
prescription.
     (c) The department shall disclose any information relating to a patient maintained in the
prescription-drug-monitoring database to that patient, at no cost to the patient, within thirty (30)
business days after the department receives a written request from the patient for the information.
This information shall include the records maintained by the department pursuant to subsection
(e). Notwithstanding the above, the department may, at the request of the law-enforcement
agency, withhold, for up to sixty (60) days following the conclusion of a law-enforcement
investigation that has been confirmed by the department, the disclosure to the patient that
information has been obtained pursuant to subdivision subsections (a)(4) and (a)(5) of this
section.
     (d) A patient may request, from the dispensing pharmacy, correction of any inaccurate
information contained within the prescription-drug-monitoring database in accordance with the
procedure specified by § 5-37.3-5(c).
     (e) The department shall, for the period of time that prescription information is
maintained, maintain records of the information disclosed through the prescription-drug-
monitoring database, including, but not limited to:
     (1) The identity of each person who requests or receives information from the
prescription-drug-monitoring database and the organization, if any, the person represents;
     (2) The information released to each person or organization and the basis for its release
under subsection (a); and
     (3) The dates the information was requested and provided.
     (f) Prescription information contained within the prescription-drug-monitoring database
shall be removed no later than five (5) years from the date the information is entered into the
database. Records in existence prior to the enactment of this section shall be removed no later
than ten (10) years from the date the information is entered into the database.
     (g) The department shall promptly notify any affected individual of an improper
disclosure of information from the prescription-drug-monitoring database or a breach in the
security of the prescription-drug-monitoring database that poses a significant risk of disclosure of
patient information to an unauthorized individual.
     (h) At the time of signing a prescription that is required by the department to be entered
into the prescription-drug-monitoring database, the prescribing practitioner shall inform the
patient in writing of the existence of the prescription-drug-monitoring database; the patient's right
to access his or her own prescription information; and the name and contact information of the
agency operating the program.
     (i) No person shall access information in the prescription-monitoring-database except to
the extent and for the purposes authorized by subsection (a).
     (j) In any civil action allowing a violation of this chapter, the court may award damages,
including punitive damages, and reasonable attorneys' fees and costs to a prevailing plaintiff, and
injunctive and any other appropriate relief.
     (k) Any pharmacist who, in his or her professional judgment, refuses to fill a prescription
based on information contained within the prescription-drug-monitoring database shall inform the
prescribing physician within twenty-four (24) hours.
     (l) All practitioners shall, as a condition of the initial registration or renewal of the
practitioner's authority to prescribe controlled substances, register with the prescription-drug-
monitoring database maintained by the department of health.
     (m) The prescription-monitoring program shall be reviewed prior to starting any opioid.
A prescribing practitioner, or designee as authorized by subsection (a)(3) of this section, shall
review the prescription-monitoring program prior to refilling or initiating opioid therapy with an
intrathecal pump. For patients the prescribing practitioner is maintaining on continuous opioid
therapy for pain for three (3) months or longer, the prescribing practitioner shall review
information from the prescription-monitoring program at least every three (3) months.
Documentation of that review shall be noted in the patient's medical record.
     (n) The department shall improve the usefulness and value of the prescription-drug-
monitoring database program by increasing its analytical functionality, timeliness, and scope,
such as by:
     (1) Utilizing data from additional data sources as permissible under state and federal
statutes;
     (2) Analyzing information submitted to the prescription-drug-monitoring database to
ensure that prescription data collected from dispensing pharmacists is readily accessible for a
given patient; to identify unusual or aberrant patterns of prescribing, dispensing, or receiving
controlled substances; and to generate an automatic alert when such patterns arise to automate
standard reports; and to provide ad hoc reports on a real-time basis on this data as well as other
data feeds. These reports shall comply with the patient confidentiality requirements of federal and
state law;
     (3) Developing regulations to ensure that prescription-drug-monitoring analyses are
updated and disseminated regularly to appropriate officials and that summary reports are provided
to the general assembly on or before February 1st of each year. Given the intent to decrease the
number of Rhode Island citizens affected by opioid use, the department shall provide an interim
report on the status of the directives included herein and any progress made as of October 1,
2016. In the development of said regulations, the department may include any of the following
analytical functions, within the boundaries of patient confidentiality rights under state and federal
law:
     (i) Consolidate raw prescription data collected from dispensing pharmacists into a single
view of all prescriptions filled for a given patient;
     (ii) Identify unusual or aberrant patterns of prescribing controlled substances, by relevant
prescriber attributes, and generate an automatic alert when such patterns arise;
     (iii) Identify unusual or aberrant patterns of receiving prescriptions for controlled
substances, by relevant patient attributes, and generate an automatic alert when such patterns
arise;
     (iv) Identify unusual or aberrant patterns of dispensing controlled substances, by relevant
dispenser attributes, and generate an automatic alert when such patterns arise;
     (v) Identify and visually display linkages among prescribers, patients, and dispensers that
can be used to detect any collusive behaviors; and
     (vi) The department shall apply for federal funding in support of the goals and objectives
contained in this subsection.
     SECTION 2. This act shall take effect on January 1, 2018 and the amendments hereto
shall expire on January 1, 2023.
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LC001228/SUB A
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