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The Association Between Scope of Practice Regulations and Nurse Practitioner Prescribing of Buprenorphine After the 2016 Opioid Bill

Thủy Nguyễn, Ulrike Muench, Barbara Andraka‐Christou, Kosali Simon, W. David Bradford, Joanne Spetz

2021Medical Care Research and Review33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article examines the relationship between federal regulations, state scope-of-practice regulations on nurse practitioners (NPs), and buprenorphine prescribing patterns using pharmacy claims data from Optum's deidentified Clinformatics Data Mart between January 2015 and September 2018. The county-level proportion of patients filling prescriptions written by NPs was low even after the 2016 Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act (CARA), 2.7% in states that did not require physician oversight of NPs, and 1.1% in states that did. While analyses in rural counties showed higher rates of buprenorphine prescriptions written by NPs, rates were still considerably low: 3.7% in states with less restrictive regulations and 1.1% in other states. These results indicate that less restrictive scope-of-practice regulations are associated with greater NP prescribing following CARA. The small magnitude of the changes indicates that federal attempts to expand treatment access through CARA have been limited.

Topics & Concepts

BuprenorphineMedicineMedical prescriptionPharmacyScope of practiceScope (computer science)Nurse practitionersFamily medicineMethadoneOpioid epidemicMEDLINEOpioidNursingPsychiatryHealth carePolitical scienceLawProgramming languageReceptorInternal medicineComputer scienceOpioid Use Disorder TreatmentSubstance Abuse Treatment and OutcomesPoisoning and overdose treatments