Department of Justice June 27, 2008 – Federal Register Recent Federal Regulation Documents

Importer of Controlled Substances; Notice of Registration
Document Number: E8-14651
Type: Notice
Date: 2008-06-27
Agency: Drug Enforcement Administration, Department of Justice
Importer of Controlled Substances Notice of Application
Document Number: E8-14590
Type: Notice
Date: 2008-06-27
Agency: Drug Enforcement Administration, Department of Justice
Manufacturer of Controlled Substances; Notice of Application
Document Number: E8-14588
Type: Notice
Date: 2008-06-27
Agency: Drug Enforcement Administration, Department of Justice
Importer of Controlled Substances; Notice of Application
Document Number: E8-14586
Type: Notice
Date: 2008-06-27
Agency: Drug Enforcement Administration, Department of Justice
Manufacturer of Controlled Substances; Notice of Application
Document Number: E8-14585
Type: Notice
Date: 2008-06-27
Agency: Drug Enforcement Administration, Department of Justice
Importer of Controlled Substances; Notice of Registration
Document Number: E8-14584
Type: Notice
Date: 2008-06-27
Agency: Drug Enforcement Administration, Department of Justice
Electronic Prescriptions for Controlled Substances
Document Number: E8-14405
Type: Proposed Rule
Date: 2008-06-27
Agency: Drug Enforcement Administration, Department of Justice
DEA is proposing to revise its regulations to provide practitioners with the option of writing prescriptions for controlled substances electronically. These regulations would also permit pharmacies to receive, dispense, and archive these electronic prescriptions. These proposed regulations would be an addition to, not a replacement of, the existing rules. These regulations provide pharmacies, hospitals, and practitioners with the ability to use modern technology for controlled substance prescriptions while maintaining the closed system of controls on controlled substances dispensing; additionally, the proposed regulations would reduce paperwork for DEA registrants who dispense or prescribe controlled substances and have the potential to reduce prescription forgery. The proposed regulations would also have the potential to reduce the number of prescription errors caused by illegible handwriting and misunderstood oral prescriptions. Moreover, they would help both pharmacies and hospitals to integrate prescription records into other medical records more directly, which would increase efficiency, and would reduce the amount of time patients spend waiting to have their prescriptions filled.
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