Opioid Policies

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Much like the rest of the United States, residents of the District of Columbia are struggling with substance use disorder (SUD) rate increases and high rates of opioid-related deaths. Unfortunately, these are multi-faceted issues that require year-long initiatives and systematic programs to address the myriad causes of addiction.

MSDC stands as a partner to the District government and private entities to help arrest the rates of opioid and substance abuse in the District. Through our advocacy for better prescribing practices, education on addiction, and even helping our own community through our Physician Health Program, MSDC is working to make DC a leader in reducing SUD, OUD, and addiction.

On a related note, MSDC is passionate about helping patients make prescriptions and medication more affordable. Whether expanding access to biosimilars or advocating for more affordable co-pays, MSDC wants to help our patients afford the medications they need.

MSDC Statement and Testimony on Opioid and Prescription Issues

25th Council information coming soon

 

MSDC President to Council = Get License Reciprocity Done

Feb 28, 2023, 17:10 PM by MSDC Staff
Dr. Bathgate testified before the Committee on Health with ideas for the Board of Medicine and DC Health.

MSDC President Dr. Susanne Bathgate told the DC Committee on Health today that regional medical license reciprocity needs to get done on time - or the Council should step in to make it happen.

Why now: The comments were part of Dr. Bathgate's testimony before the committee during its oversight hearing on the medical licensing boards.

Status: The Board of Medicine has publicly stated it has a goal of launching DC/Maryland/Virginia medical license reciprocity by this summer. This comes after years of pressure by the Medical Society for DC and its neighbors to create a process where a physician in good standing in one state can more quickly be licensed in the other two.

The three states all had provisions in statute to permit this, but the implementation and coordination was lacking.

In her testimony, Dr. Bathgate spelled out the importance of this issue and told the Council it had a role to ensuring DC Health implemented this on time. Her entire testimony is below.

The big picture: Post-2020, telemedicine and regional patient populations are not going away. Allowing quicker licensing for area physicians saves time, money, and stress for the regional healthcare system.

What else? Dr. Bathgate also testified on:

  • Changing harmful language on license applications dealing with wellness and addiction treatment
  • Adding customer service staff to licensing boards
  • Removing the LGBTQ cultural competency CME requirement

 

February 28, 2023

Councilmember Christina Henderson
Chair, Committee on Health
1350 Pennsylvania Ave NW
Washington, DC 20004

Dear Chair Henderson,

The Medical Society of the District of Columbia (MSDC) is the largest medical organization representing metropolitan Washington physicians in the District. We advocate on behalf of all 11,000 plus licensed physicians in the District and seek to make the District “the best place to practice medicine”.

I thank you for holding this hearing for oversight of the various health licensing baords. I want to begin by saying that the Board of Medicine, which we work closest with, is responsive to the Medical Society and our members. We have partnered on various issues throughout the year – most recently the 2022 medical license renewal – and valued our working relationship.

We especially appreciate the respect given by the Board to our Physician Health Committee, which advocates for and supports physicians dealing with addiction. We know post-2020 that physician addiction and suicide is on the rise, and the Committee is available to provide additional support to the Board. However, an increase in referrals and expert assistance cannot be accommodated without a corresponding grant or funding source within the department.

MSDC is concerned about the following and encourages the committee to consider them during the budget process:

1. Change harmful language around wellness and addiction. The Mayor’s Healthcare Workforce Task Force included a recommendation in its draft report to limit, “‘fitness for duty’ questions during application and renewal cycles” such that they only apply to current impairment to practice safely. The Dr. Lorna Breen Heroes Foundation has identified the District as one of the states who licensure language can harm physician wellness by forcing unnecessary disclosure of past impairment and wellness treatment. We urge the Board of Medicine and, if necessary, the Council, to remove this offending language.

2. Implement regional license reciprocity as soon as possible. The Board of Medicine has shared regional reciprocity should be online in the summer of 2023. The Council must keep the Boards to this timeline and ensure the DMV license reciprocity process is fully operational, including IT Infrastructure. MSDC has long championed the need for area physicians licensed in one state to easily apply for a license in the other without totally redoing their applications. We also firmly believe a regional license should be less expensive than going through the regular license.

3. Staff up customer service support. During license renewal times, MSDC stands up its own license renewal center and takes calls and emails from members helping the through the process. We even arrange office hours for members to come in and sit down to complete their applications with us. We did this not only as a service but because it is hard to call and get answers to questions about licensing and relicensing. The DC government should look at how it funds customer support personnel for the boards. 

4. Work with Council to remove the LGBTQ cultural competency CME requirement. MSDC and its members believe that content-specific mandated CME is wrong, as government through the licensing process should not dictate what learning is essential to the practice of medicine. The mandatory two hours of LGBTQ cultural competency remains a requirement due to Council legislation. We urge the Council to repeal the requirement, not because we oppose LGBTQ cultural competency education, but because it is another mandate for all physicians regardless of practice type.

Please reach out to the MSDC office if our membership can be of assistance on these or any issue. We look forward to working with you and the Committee to make the District the best place to practice medicine.

Sincerely,

Susanne Bathgate, MD

President, Medical Society of DC

Sample of Legislation MSDC Tracked on Opioid and Prescription Policy

 

Access to Biosimilars Amendment Act (B23-430)

What does it do? The bill authorizes licensed pahrmacists to dispense interchangeable biological products and requires notifications to physicians when such interchangeables are dispensed.

MSDC position: MSDC has a position of priority support on this legislation, identifying its passage as one of its highest legislative priorities.

Current status: SUCCESS. The bill was passed by the Council and signed by the Mayor.

Opioid Labeling Amendment Act (B23-535)

What does it do? The bill requires prescription opioid medications to include a statement that the drug is an opioid and opioids may cause dependence, addiction, or overdoes.

MSDC position: MSDC supports the legislation.

Current status: The bill had a hearing before the Committee on Health on July 29, 2020. MSDC leader Dr. Sam Kareff testified for the Medical Society. It passed the Council on November 10 and was signed by the Mayor December 7.

Pre-exposure Prophylaxis Insurance Discrimination Amendment Act (B23-36)

What does it do? The bill prohibits insurance companies from factoring the use of PreP in decisions related to disability, life, or long-term care policies.

MSDC position: MSDC supports this legislation

Current status: The bill was introduced on January 8, 2019 and assigned to the Committee on Business and Economic Development.