Legislation to reduce opioid abuse and overdoses has passed the North Carolina House with unanimous bipartisan support.
The House approved the measure April 10 that strengthens requirements for doctors and pharmacists on the use a statewide controlled substance database.
Doctors would also generally be limited to 5- and 7-day supplies when first prescribing the potent drugs for pain or after operations. A larger refill prescription would require a subsequent consultation with the doctor.
Bill sponsor Rep. Greg Murphy of Greenville, a doctor, said the legislation is meant to combat the opioid epidemic in the state and nationally.
Topics North Carolina
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
How Insurers Know When It’s Time to Scale AI
What Happens to Property Pricing in ’27, Insurance, Reinsurance Execs Ask
PE-Backed Insurance Broker Hub International Files Confidentially for US IPO
Florida-Based Safepoint Withdraws IPO Just as it Was Expected to Launch 

