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DEA and HHS Issue its Third Extension of Telemedicine Flexibilities through 2025

Client Alert

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) together with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has extended telemedicine flexibilities for the prescribing of controlled medication through December 31, 2025.

Prior to telemedicine flexibilities, the Ryan Haight Act required that a prescribing provider could only prescribe controlled medications to patients whom they had evaluated in-person. The DEA made temporary exceptions to this Act in 2020 in response to COVID-19, granting prescribing providers the authority to prescribe Schedule II-V controlled medications from a telemedicine evaluation alone. However, these prescriptions still had to comply with the requirements outlined in the DEA guidance documents, DEA regulations, and applicable Federal and State laws.

The DEA received more than 38,000 comments in response to its set of proposed telemedicine rules in March 2023 and held two days of listening sessions as a result. This feedback prompted the DEA and HHS to ultimately extend the current telemedicine flexibilities through the end of 2024. While the two agencies continue working to issue a final set of telemedicine regulations, they decided to extend telemedicine flexibilities for a third time through December 31, 2025.

This extension benefits both patients and providers by ensuring expanded patient access to these prescriptions and allowing sufficient time for providers to become compliant with any new standards that may eventually appear in the final set of regulations.

If you have questions about the DEA and HHS’s decision to issue a third extension of telemedicine flexibilities, please contact BMD Healthcare Member Daphne Kackloudis at dlkackloudis@bmdllc.com or Attorney Kate Crawford at khcrawford@bmdllc.com.


Lead Paint Contamination and Resources for Ohio Landlords

Children are exposed to lead-based paint, which was used in most homes until it was banned in the US in 1978 and “can severely damage the brain and central nervous system causing coma, convulsions and even death.” Property owners and landlords should educate themselves on regulations and resources to mitigate their own liability.

Will Student-Athlete Collectives Survive NIL Changes?

By July 2025 the landscape of student-athlete funding will look nothing like the current landscape, so preparing now is a must. If you are a student-athlete, the parent of a student-athlete, a university/college, or “booster”, it behooves you to understand these evolving issues.

Ohio's Recent Rule Changes to Administration of Immunizations, Outpatient Pharmacy Delivery, and Mobile Response Services

The Ohio Board of Pharmacy (“BOP”) and Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services (“OMHAS”) recently posted notices of Ohio Administrative Code rule changes related to the administration of immunizations (BOP), outpatient pharmacy delivery services (BOP), and mobile response and stabilization services (OMHAS).

HOA Construction Project Do’s and Don’ts

Local regulators can approve new construction, but if a resident contacts their homeowners association there may be trouble. Fences, yard alterations, and backyard decks do not have to be such a hassle and a point of conflict. Find out general Do’s and Don’ts to help HOA residents avoid issues in this article by BMD Partner Scott Heasley.

New Ohio Recovery Housing Rules Take Effect January 1, 2025

Ohio’s new recovery housing rules, effective January 1, 2025, require certified community behavioral health providers to refer clients only to accredited recovery housing residences listed on the statewide registry.