On March 1, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on a serious issue facing medical practitioners: When can their care turn criminal in the context of prescribing opioids? The Court's decision will have broad implications not only for the many physicians and other practitioners who prescribe opioids, but also for the millions of patients who suffer from pain every day. The inconsistent decisions from lower courts on this issue has left good doctors wondering when their judgment may be called into question and their freedom on the line.
Dinsmore attorneys are closely monitoring this issue and will follow the oral arguments before the Supreme Court. We will keep clients apprised of any major developments that may affect their businesses or health care practices.
Medical practitioners derive their prescribing authority from the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), which makes it unlawful "except as authorized ... for any person [to] knowingly or intentionally ... distribute ... a controlled substance."1 Drug Enforcement Administration regulations further mandate that prescriptions "must be issued for a legitimate medical purpose by an individual practitioner acting in the usual course of his professional practice."2 Innocent prescribing mistakes, differences of opinion on prescribing, or even negligence, should not amount to criminal liability.
In 1975, the Supreme...