Collaborative Agreement Requirement
California’s NPA policy does not require Advanced Practice Registered Nurses, including Nurse Practitioners, to maintain a collaborative relationship with a physician. This can be interpreted as a fact that NPs in California have full practice authority and, respectively, are self-authorized for the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of patients without the supervision of physician physicians (Boehning & Haddad, 2023). This accords with a trend of many states granting autonomous practice rights to APRNs by crediting their advanced education and training and their capacity to render excellent care autonomously.
Opinion
In California, no collaborative agreement is necessary for an APRN to have the NPA, revealing the high level of education, training, and technical competence that APRNs have. This self-determining capacity could increase access to medical care, especially in areas with insufficient physicians. On the other hand, it enables APRNs to utilize their full potential and the knowledge and experience they have acquired through the specific training. Nevertheless, maintaining continuous interaction and communication with other healthcare professionals is essential to offering patients holistic care.
Prescribing Agreement Requirement
Unlike in some states, the prescribing privileges for APNs in California are more flexible since they do not require a prescribing agreement with a physician. This means that NPs in California have the right to independently prescribe medications, including controlled substances, which do not need formalization with the doctor (Brown et al., 14 February 2014).
Opinion
In California, substituting a prescribing agreement with NPs’ elevated drug and clinical NPs’ competency will improve patients’ access to care. Nurses advance in pharmacology to prescribe drugs safely and effectively, making a key point: the education and training for this purpose as part of their advanced practice nursing programs. Nurse practitioners (NPs) should practice medicine independently instead of going through the doctors to obtain some prescriptions. Streamlining the treatment process could reduce delays in necessary medication and improve access to treatments.
Prescription Authority for Schedule II Controlled Substances
In California, advanced practice registered nurses, including NPs, have the privilege to prescribe schedule II controlled medications, including those commonly used for treating chronic pain. Nevertheless, different ways of issuing prescriptions exist and are regulated by specific regulations, such as electronic prescribing, tamper-resistant prescription forms and refill limitations.
Opinion
Schedule II controlled substances prescribing authority is given to APRNs as these nurses take care of chronic pain cases and other conditions requiring these drugs. Nevertheless, doctors should strictly abide by regulations and protocols to prevent misuse, diversion and negative outcomes. Continued education on safe prescription habits and involvement of other healthcare providers in the treatment play an important role in providing responsible opioid prescribing and reducing associated risks.
Treatment of Chronic Pain and Prescription Issuance
California has passed various laws and regulations targeting the Opioid crisis and improving secure prescribing requirements for addressing chronic pain. The requirements involve the prescribers reviewing the Controlled Substance Utilization Review and Evaluation System (CURES) database before prescribing controlled substances and the mandates to have minimum education training on pain management and opioid prescribing for healthcare providers (Newsom & Lawson, 2023).
Opinion
California’s proactive legislation regarding the treatment of chronic pain and the supply of prescriptions for controlled substances manifests adherence to patients’ safety and public health. Through the adoption of evidence-based strategies, as well as the constant monitoring of opioid prescription patterns, the state hopes to decrease the number of cases related to opioid abuse, addiction, and overdose (Newsom & Lawson, 2023). Educating healthcare providers and the public on the risks and potentials of opioid treatment is an important target in efforts to control the opioid crisis and ensure the proper management of chronic pain
Conclusion
California’s implementation has given the NP scope of practice and provided opportunities for independent leaders and prescribers. Medications with controlled substances do not require a practitioner’s collaboration agreement with an MD. On the one hand, this autonomy shows great faith in APRNs to make their own decisions; on the other, it requires them to stick to regulators who work on determining how controlled substances can be prescribed. Collaboration is the key to the future, and the foundations of such cooperation, education, and monitoring are necessary to ensure that appropriate prescriptions and optimal outcomes are maintained in California.
References
Boehning, A. P., & Haddad, L. M. (2023, July 17). Nursing Practice Act. PubMed; StatPearls Publishing. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK559012/
Brown, E., & Serrano Sewell, D. (2014). GUIDELINES FOR PRESCRIBING CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES FOR PAIN MEDICAL BOARD OF CALIFORNIA. https://www.ombc.ca.gov/forms_pubs/pain_guide.pdf
Newsom, G., & Lawson, K. (2023). MEDICAL BOARD OF CALIFORNIA GUIDELINES FOR PRESCRIBING CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES FOR PAIN JULY 2023. https://www.mbc.ca.gov/Download/Publications/pain-guidelines.pdf