Examples of Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement in a sentence
Receive, and include in the patient’s medical record, a signed Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement from the patient, or, if the patient lacks the capacity to provide informed consent, from the patient’s legal representative.
Receive, and include in the patient’s medical record, a signed Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement from the patient, or if the patient lacks the capacity, from the patient’s legal representative.
Kansas Joint & Spine Specialists Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement Your physician may prescribe a controlled substance medication for pain management.
If it is necessary to prescribe controlled substances for the treatment of your condition, you will be required to separately sign our Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement.
Receive, and include in the patient’s medical record, a signed Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement from the patient, or if the patient lacks the capacity to provide consent, from the patient’s legal representative.
If it is necessary to prescribe controlled substances for the treatment of Your condition, You may be required to separately sign our Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement and the shared goal will generally be to reduce the chronic use of controlled substances over time, except for palliative situations.
A plan for the discontinuance of prescribed hydrocodone(s) if a patient has failed to adhere to the Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement.
If Xx. Xxx determines controlled substances are appropriate for treatment, then the member must sign a separate Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement prior to issuance of the prescription.
Prescribers are also responsible for ensuring that their chronic pain patients complete and sign a Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement which is reviewed between the prescriber and patient no less frequently than annually, and that the initial agreement and these reviews are documented in the patient’s medical record.
Rule § 6.2.1.5: Prescribers who prescribe opioids for pain lasting longer than 90 days must include a signed Controlled Substance Treatment Agreement in the patient’s medical record including the functional goals of treatment, dispensing pharmacy choice, safe storage and disposal of the medication, and requirements to reasonably and timely inform the prescriber if the patient is misusing the prescribed medication.