Client request for prescriptions
Last updated May 2014
The following is a list of states that AVMA research has found
with specific statutes, rules or agency policy statements addressing whether or
not a veterinarian is required to provide a written prescription at the request
of his or her client. Twenty-one states have adopted laws, regulations or policy
statements that specifically or implicitly require veterinarians to provide
their clients with a written prescription upon request in some circumstances. An
additional ten states incorporate into their discipline standards for
veterinarians the AVMA’s Principles of Veterinary Medical Ethics, which state
that veterinarians should honor a client’s request for a prescription in lieu of
dispensing. (Section III-C). Most recently in May 2014, the Montana Board of
Veterinary Medicine adopted a regulatory provision stating that if a
veterinarian, based upon his or her medical opinion, is willing to dispense
medication, then the veterinarian must also provide a prescription in place of
said medication should the owner request a prescription.
Arizona requires a dispensing veterinarian to notify an animal
owner that some prescription-only drugs and controlled substances may be
available at a pharmacy. The dispensing veterinarian may provide a written
prescription to the animal owner if so requested.
California law requires a prescribing veterinarian to offer to give a written prescription to a client that the client may elect to have filled by the prescriber or by a pharmacy.
California law requires a prescribing veterinarian to offer to give a written prescription to a client that the client may elect to have filled by the prescriber or by a pharmacy.
It’s important to note that even in states not listed below,
state boards of veterinary medicine could find in acting on a complaint that
failure to honor a client’s request for a prescription constitutes
unprofessional conduct, leading to discipline against a veterinarian.
Unprofessional conduct generally refers to a departure from or failure to
conform to the standards of acceptable and prevailing practice of a veterinary
medicine.
more information and a state chart available here
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