TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF OPTOMETRY
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The Board of Optometry is claiming an exemption from Article 2 of the Administrative Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 4 a of the Code of Virginia, which excludes regulations that are necessary to conform to changes in Virginia statutory law or the appropriation act where no agency discretion is involved. The board will receive, consider, and respond to petitions by any interested person at any time with respect to reconsideration or revision.
Title of Regulation: 18VAC105-20. Regulations Governing the Practice of Optometry (adding 18VAC105-20-51).
Statutory Authority: § 54.1-2400 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 6, 2024.
Agency Contact: Kelli Moss, Executive Director, Board of Optometry, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Henrico, VA 23233, telephone (804) 597-4077, FAX (804) 793-9145, or email kelli.moss@dhp.virginia.gov.
Summary:
Pursuant to Chapter 448 of the 2024 Acts of Assembly, the amendments require specific patient counseling prior to initiation of opioid treatment regardless of the length of treatment.
18VAC105-20-51. Patient counseling for opioids.
A. Prior to issuing a prescription for an opioid to treat acute or chronic pain, practitioners must provide patient counseling on the following:
1. The risks of addiction and overdose associated with opioid drugs and the dangers of taking opioid drugs with alcohol, benzodiazepines, and other central nervous system depressants;
2. The reasons why the prescription is necessary;
3. Alternative treatments that may be available; and
4. Risks associated with the use of the drugs being prescribed, specifically that opioids are highly addictive, even when taken as prescribed, that there is a risk of developing a physical or psychological dependence on the controlled dangerous substance, and that the risks of taking more opioids than prescribed or mixing sedatives, benzodiazepines, or alcohol with opioids can result in fatal respiratory depression.
Such patient counseling shall be documented in the patient's medical record.
B. Patient counseling shall not be a requirement for patients who are (i) in active treatment for cancer, (ii) receiving hospice care from a licensed hospice or palliative care, (iii) residents of a long-term care facility, (iv) being prescribed an opioid in the course of treatment for substance abuse or opioid dependence, or (v) receiving treatment for sickle cell disease.
VA.R. Doc. No. R25-7887; Filed September 04, 2024