REFERENCE TITLE: controlled substances; schedule designations

 

 

 

 

State of Arizona

Senate

Fifty-fifth Legislature

First Regular Session

2021

 

 

 

SB 1088

 

Introduced by

Senator Pace

 

 

AN ACT

 

Amending sections 13‑3412, 13‑3412.01, 13‑3451, 32‑1401, 32‑1501, 32‑1901, 32‑1969, 32‑2901, 32‑2933, 36‑2501, 36‑2511, 36‑2512, 36‑2513, 36‑2514, 36‑2515, 36‑2516, 36‑2525, 36‑2531 and 36‑2608, Arizona Revised Statutes; relating to the uniform controlled substances act.

 

 

(TEXT OF BILL BEGINS ON NEXT PAGE)

 


Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Arizona:

Section 1.  Section 13-3412, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE13-3412.  Exceptions and exemptions; burden of proof; privileged communications

A.  The provisions of sections 13‑3402 and 13‑3403, section 13‑3404.01, subsection A, paragraph 1 and sections 13‑3405 through 13‑3409 do not apply to:

1.  Manufacturers, wholesalers, pharmacies and pharmacists under the provisions of sections 32‑1921 and 32‑1961.

2.  Medical practitioners, pharmacies and pharmacists while acting in the course of their professional practice, in good faith and in accordance with generally accepted medical standards.

3.  Persons who lawfully acquire and use such drugs only for scientific purposes.

4.  Officers and employees of the United States, this state or a political subdivision of the United States or this state, while acting in the course of their official duties.

5.  An employee or agent of a person described in paragraphs 1 through 4 of this subsection, and a registered nurse or medical technician under the supervision of a medical practitioner, while such employee, agent, nurse or technician is acting in the course of professional practice or employment, and not on his own account.

6.  A common or contract carrier or warehouseman, or an employee of such carrier or warehouseman, whose possession of drugs is in the usual course of business or employment.

7.  Persons lawfully in possession or control of controlled substances authorized by title 36, chapter 27 or the rules adopted pursuant to title 36, chapter 27.

8.  The receipt, possession or use, of a controlled substance included in schedule I of section 36‑2512 or the rules adopted pursuant to section 36‑2512, by any seriously ill or terminally ill patient, pursuant to the prescription of a doctor in compliance with the provisions of section 13‑3412.01.

B.  In any complaint, information or indictment and in any action or proceeding brought for the enforcement of any provision of this chapter the burden of proof of any such exception, excuse, defense or exemption is on the defendant.

C.  In addition to other exceptions to the physician‑patient privilege, information communicated to a physician in an effort to procure unlawfully a prescription‑only, dangerous or narcotic drug, or to procure unlawfully the administration of such drug, is not a privileged communication. END_STATUTE

Sec. 2.  Section 13-3412.01, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE13-3412.01.  Prescribing controlled substances included in schedule I for seriously ill and terminally ill patients

A.  Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, any medical doctor licensed to practice in this state may prescribe a controlled substance included in schedule I as prescribed by section 36‑2512 or the rules adopted pursuant to section 36‑2512 to treat a disease, or to relieve the pain and suffering of a seriously ill patient or terminally ill patient, subject to the provisions of this section.  In prescribing such a controlled substance, the medical doctor shall comply with professional medical standards.

B.  Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, a medical doctor shall document that scientific research exists that supports the use of a controlled substance listed in schedule I as prescribed by section 36‑2512 or the rules adopted pursuant to section 36‑2512 to treat a disease, or to relieve the pain and suffering of a seriously ill patient or a terminally ill patient before prescribing the controlled substance.  A medical doctor prescribing a controlled substance included in schedule I as prescribed by section 36‑2512 or the rules adopted pursuant to section 36‑2512 to treat a disease, or to relieve the pain and suffering of a seriously ill patient or terminally ill patient, shall obtain the written opinion of a second medical doctor that prescribing the controlled substance is appropriate to treat a disease or to relieve the pain and suffering of a seriously ill patient or terminally ill patient.  The written opinion of the second medical doctor shall be kept in the patient's official medical file.  Before prescribing the controlled substance included in schedule I as prescribed by section 36‑2512 or the rules adopted pursuant to section 36‑2512, the medical doctor shall receive in writing the consent of the patient.

C.  Any failure to comply with the provisions of this section may be the subject of investigation and appropriate disciplining action by the Arizona medical board. END_STATUTE

Sec. 3.  Section 13-3451, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE13-3451.  Definitions

In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:

1.  "Controlled substance" means a drug, substance or immediate precursor in schedules I through V of title 36, chapter 27 or the rules adopted pursuant to title 36, chapter 27, or a dangerous drug or a narcotic drug listed in section 13‑3401.

2.  "Counterfeit preparation" means a preparation that has an appearance which imitates another preparation but that, in fact, is a different preparation.

3.  "Distribute" means the actual, constructive or attempted transfer, delivery or sale of, or dispensing to another of, an imitation controlled substance, imitation prescription‑only drug or imitation over‑the‑counter drug.

4.  "Imitation controlled substance" means a drug, substance or immediate precursor which does or does not contain a controlled substance that by texture, consistency or color or dosage unit appearance as evidenced by color, shape, size or markings, apart from any other representations, packaging or advertisements, would lead a reasonable person to believe that the substance is a controlled substance but it is a counterfeit preparation.

5.  "Imitation over‑the‑counter drug" means an imitation of a nonprescription drug as defined in section 32‑1901 that by texture, consistency or color or dosage unit appearance as evidenced by color, shape, size or markings, apart from any other representations, packaging or advertisements, would lead a reasonable person to believe that the substance is an over‑the‑counter drug.

6.  "Imitation prescription‑only drug" means a drug, substance or immediate precursor which does or does not contain a prescription‑only drug as defined by section 32‑1901 that by texture, consistency or color or dosage unit appearance as evidenced by color, shape, size or markings, apart from any other representations, packaging or advertisements, would lead a reasonable person to believe that the substance is a prescription‑only drug but it is a counterfeit preparation.

7.  "Manufacture" means the production, preparation, compounding, processing, encapsulating, packaging or repackaging, or labeling or relabeling of an imitation controlled substance, imitation prescription‑only drug or imitation over‑the‑counter drug.

8.  "Placebo" means an inactive substance or preparation used in controlled studies to determine the effectiveness of medicinal substances or used to please or gratify a physician's patient. END_STATUTE

Sec. 4.  Section 32-1401, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE32-1401.  Definitions

In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:

1.  "Active license" means a valid and existing license to practice medicine.

2.  "Adequate records" means legible medical records, produced by hand or electronically, containing, at a minimum, sufficient information to identify the patient, support the diagnosis, justify the treatment, accurately document the results, indicate advice and cautionary warnings provided to the patient and provide sufficient information for another practitioner to assume continuity of the patient's care at any point in the course of treatment.

3.  "Advisory letter" means a nondisciplinary letter to notify a licensee that either:

(a)  While there is insufficient evidence to support disciplinary action, the board believes that continuation of the activities that led to the investigation may result in further board action against the licensee.

(b)  The violation is a minor or technical violation that is not of sufficient merit to warrant disciplinary action.

(c)  While the licensee has demonstrated substantial compliance through rehabilitation or remediation that has mitigated the need for disciplinary action, the board believes that repetition of the activities that led to the investigation may result in further board action against the licensee.

4.  "Approved hospital internship, residency or clinical fellowship program" means a program at a hospital that at the time the training occurred was legally incorporated and that had a program that was approved for internship, fellowship or residency training by the accreditation council for graduate medical education, the association of American medical colleges, the royal college of physicians and surgeons of Canada or any similar body in the United States or Canada approved by the board whose function is that of approving hospitals for internship, fellowship or residency training.

5.  "Approved school of medicine" means any school or college offering a course of study that, on successful completion, results in the degree of doctor of medicine and whose course of study has been approved or accredited by an educational or professional association, recognized by the board, including the association of American medical colleges, the association of Canadian medical colleges or the American medical association.

6.  "Board" means the Arizona medical board.

7.  "Completed application" means that the applicant has supplied all required fees, information and correspondence requested by the board on forms and in a manner acceptable to the board.

8.  "Direct supervision" means that a physician, physician assistant licensed pursuant to chapter 25 of this title or nurse practitioner certified pursuant to chapter 15 of this title is within the same room or office suite as the medical assistant in order to be available for consultation regarding those tasks the medical assistant performs pursuant to section 32‑1456.

9.  "Dispense" means the delivery by a doctor of medicine of a prescription drug or device to a patient, except for samples packaged for individual use by licensed manufacturers or repackagers of drugs, and includes the prescribing, administering, packaging, labeling and security necessary to prepare and safeguard the drug or device for delivery.

10.  "Doctor of medicine" means a natural person holding a license, registration or permit to practice medicine pursuant to this chapter.

11.  "Full‑time faculty member" means a physician who is employed full time as a faculty member while holding the academic position of assistant professor or a higher position at an approved school of medicine.

12.  "Health care institution" means any facility as defined in section 36‑401, any person authorized to transact disability insurance, as defined in title 20, chapter 6, article 4 or 5, any person who is issued a certificate of authority pursuant to title 20, chapter 4, article 9 or any other partnership, association or corporation that provides health care to consumers.

13.  "Immediate family" means the spouse, natural or adopted children, father, mother, brothers and sisters of the doctor and the natural or adopted children, father, mother, brothers and sisters of the doctor's spouse.

14.  "Letter of reprimand" means a disciplinary letter that is issued by the board and that informs the physician that the physician's conduct violates state or federal law and may require the board to monitor the physician.

15.  "Limit" means taking a nondisciplinary action that alters the physician's practice or professional activities if the board determines that there is evidence that the physician is or may be mentally or physically unable to safely engage in the practice of medicine.

16.  "Medical assistant" means an unlicensed person who meets the requirements of section 32‑1456, has completed an education program approved by the board, assists in a medical practice under the supervision of a doctor of medicine, physician assistant or nurse practitioner and performs delegated procedures commensurate with the assistant's education and training but does not diagnose, interpret, design or modify established treatment programs or perform any functions that would violate any statute applicable to the practice of medicine.

17.  "Medically incompetent" means a person who the board determines is incompetent based on a variety of factors, including:

(a)  A lack of sufficient medical knowledge or skills, or both, to a degree likely to endanger the health of patients.

(b)  When considered with other indications of medical incompetence, failing to obtain a scaled score of at least seventy‑five percent on the written special purpose licensing examination.

18.  "Medical peer review" means:

(a)  The participation by a doctor of medicine in the review and evaluation of the medical management of a patient and the use of resources for patient care.

(b)  Activities relating to a health care institution's decision to grant or continue privileges to practice at that institution.

19.  "Medicine" means allopathic medicine as practiced by the recipient of a degree of doctor of medicine.

20.  "Office based surgery" means a medical procedure conducted in a physician's office or other outpatient setting that is not part of a licensed hospital or licensed ambulatory surgical center.

21.  "Physician" means a doctor of medicine who is licensed pursuant to this chapter.

22.  "Practice of medicine" means the diagnosis, the treatment or the correction of or the attempt or the claim to be able to diagnose, treat or correct any and all human diseases, injuries, ailments, infirmities or deformities, physical or mental, real or imaginary, by any means, methods, devices or instrumentalities, except as the same may be among the acts or persons not affected by this chapter.  The practice of medicine includes the practice of medicine alone or the practice of surgery alone, or both.

23.  "Restrict" means taking a disciplinary action that alters the physician's practice or professional activities if the board determines that there is evidence that the physician is or may be medically incompetent or guilty of unprofessional conduct.

24.  "Special purpose licensing examination" means an examination that is developed by the national board of medical examiners on behalf of the federation of state medical boards for use by state licensing boards to test the basic medical competence of physicians who are applying for licensure and who have been in practice for a considerable period of time in another jurisdiction and to determine the competence of a physician who is under investigation by a state licensing board.

25.  "Teaching hospital's accredited graduate medical education program" means that the hospital is incorporated and has an internship, fellowship or residency training program that is accredited by the accreditation council for graduate medical education, the American medical association, the association of American medical colleges, the royal college of physicians and surgeons of Canada or a similar body in the United States or Canada that is approved by the board and whose function is that of approving hospitals for internship, fellowship or residency training.

26.  "Teaching license" means a valid license to practice medicine as a full‑time faculty member of an approved school of medicine or a teaching hospital's accredited graduate medical education program.

27.  "Unprofessional conduct" includes the following, whether occurring in this state or elsewhere:

(a)  Violating any federal or state laws, rules or regulations applicable to the practice of medicine.

(b)  Intentionally disclosing a professional secret or intentionally disclosing a privileged communication except as either act may otherwise be required by law.

(c)  Committing false, fraudulent, deceptive or misleading advertising by a doctor of medicine or the doctor's staff, employer or representative.

(d)  Committing a felony, whether or not involving moral turpitude, or a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude.  In either case, conviction by any court of competent jurisdiction or a plea of no contest is conclusive evidence of the commission.

(e)  Failing or refusing to maintain adequate records on a patient.

(f)  Exhibiting a pattern of using or being under the influence of alcohol or drugs or a similar substance while practicing medicine or to the extent that judgment may be impaired and the practice of medicine detrimentally affected.

(g)  Using controlled substances except if prescribed by another physician for use during a prescribed course of treatment.

(h)  Prescribing or dispensing controlled substances to members of the physician's immediate family.

(i)  Prescribing, dispensing or administering schedule II controlled substances as defined in prescribed by section 36‑2513 or the rules adopted pursuant to section 36‑2513, including amphetamines and similar schedule II sympathomimetic drugs in the treatment of exogenous obesity for a period in excess of thirty days in any one year, or the nontherapeutic use of injectable amphetamines.

(j)  Prescribing, dispensing or administering any controlled substance or prescription‑only drug for other than accepted therapeutic purposes.

(k)  Dispensing a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid, except as provided in section 32‑1491.

(l)  Signing a blank, undated or predated prescription form.

(m)  Committing conduct that the board determines is gross malpractice, repeated malpractice or any malpractice resulting in the death of a patient.

(n)  Representing that a manifestly incurable disease or infirmity can be permanently cured, or that any disease, ailment or infirmity can be cured by a secret method, procedure, treatment, medicine or device, if this is not true.

(o)  Refusing to divulge to the board on demand the means, method, procedure, modality of treatment or medicine used in the treatment of a disease, injury, ailment or infirmity.

(p)  Having action taken against a doctor of medicine by another licensing or regulatory jurisdiction due to that doctor's mental or physical inability to engage safely in the practice of medicine or the doctor's medical incompetence or for unprofessional conduct as defined by that jurisdiction and that corresponds directly or indirectly to an act of unprofessional conduct prescribed by this paragraph.  The action taken may include refusing, denying, revoking or suspending a license by that jurisdiction or a surrendering of a license to that jurisdiction, otherwise limiting, restricting or monitoring a licensee by that jurisdiction or placing a licensee on probation by that jurisdiction.

(q)  Having sanctions imposed by an agency of the federal government, including restricting, suspending, limiting or removing a person from the practice of medicine or restricting that person's ability to obtain financial remuneration.

(r)  Committing any conduct or practice that is or might be harmful or dangerous to the health of the patient or the public.

(s)  Violating a formal order, probation, consent agreement or stipulation issued or entered into by the board or its executive director under this chapter.

(t)  Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of or conspiring to violate any provision of this chapter.

(u)  Knowingly making any false or fraudulent statement, written or oral, in connection with the practice of medicine or if applying for privileges or renewing an application for privileges at a health care institution.

(v)  Charging a fee for services not rendered or dividing a professional fee for patient referrals among health care providers or health care institutions or between these providers and institutions or a contractual arrangement that has the same effect.  This subdivision does not apply to payments from a medical researcher to a physician in connection with identifying and monitoring patients for a clinical trial regulated by the United States food and drug administration.

(w)  Obtaining a fee by fraud, deceit or misrepresentation.

(x)  Charging or collecting a clearly excessive fee.  In determining whether a fee is clearly excessive, the board shall consider the fee or range of fees customarily charged in this state for similar services in light of modifying factors such as the time required, the complexity of the service and the skill requisite to perform the service properly.  This subdivision does not apply if there is a clear written contract for a fixed fee between the physician and the patient that has been entered into before the provision of the service.

(y)  Committing conduct that is in violation of section 36‑2302.

(z)  Using experimental forms of diagnosis and treatment without adequate informed patient consent, and without conforming to generally accepted experimental criteria, including protocols, detailed records, periodic analysis of results and periodic review by a medical peer review committee as approved by the United States food and drug administration or its successor agency.

(aa)  Engaging in sexual conduct with a current patient or with a former patient within six months after the last medical consultation unless the patient was the licensee's spouse at the time of the contact or, immediately preceding the physician‑patient relationship, was in a dating or engagement relationship with the licensee.  For the purposes of this subdivision, "sexual conduct" includes:

(i)  Engaging in or soliciting sexual relationships, whether consensual or nonconsensual.

(ii)  Making sexual advances, requesting sexual favors or engaging in any other verbal conduct or physical contact of a sexual nature.

(iii)  Intentionally viewing a completely or partially disrobed patient in the course of treatment if the viewing is not related to patient diagnosis or treatment under current practice standards.

(bb)  Procuring or attempting to procure a license to practice medicine or a license renewal by fraud, by misrepresentation or by knowingly taking advantage of the mistake of another person or an agency.

(cc)  Representing or claiming to be a medical specialist if this is not true.

(dd)  Maintaining a professional connection with or lending one's name to enhance or continue the activities of an illegal practitioner of medicine.

(ee)  Failing to furnish information in a timely manner to the board or the board's investigators or representatives if legally requested by the board.

(ff)  Failing to allow properly authorized board personnel on demand to examine and have access to documents, reports and records maintained by the physician that relate to the physician's medical practice or medically related activities.

(gg)  Knowingly failing to disclose to a patient on a form that is prescribed by the board and that is dated and signed by the patient or guardian acknowledging that the patient or guardian has read and understands that the doctor has a direct financial interest in a separate diagnostic or treatment agency or in nonroutine goods or services that the patient is being prescribed if the prescribed treatment, goods or services are available on a competitive basis.  This subdivision does not apply to a referral by one doctor of medicine to another doctor of medicine within a group of doctors of medicine practicing together.

(hh)  Using chelation therapy in the treatment of arteriosclerosis or as any other form of therapy, with the exception of treatment of heavy metal poisoning, without:

(i)  Adequate informed patient consent.

(ii)  Conforming to generally accepted experimental criteria, including protocols, detailed records, periodic analysis of results and periodic review by a medical peer review committee.

(iii)  Approval by the United States food and drug administration or its successor agency.

(ii)  Prescribing, dispensing or administering anabolic‑androgenic steroids to a person for other than therapeutic purposes.

(jj)  Exhibiting a lack of or inappropriate direction, collaboration or direct supervision of a medical assistant or a licensed, certified or registered health care provider employed by, supervised by or assigned to the physician.

(kk)  Knowingly making a false or misleading statement to the board or on a form required by the board or in a written correspondence, including attachments, with the board.

(ll)  Failing to dispense drugs and devices in compliance with article 6 of this chapter.

(mm)  Committing conduct that the board determines is gross negligence, repeated negligence or negligence resulting in harm to or the death of a patient.

(nn)  Making a representation by a doctor of medicine or the doctor's staff, employer or representative that the doctor is boarded or board certified if this is not true or the standing is not current or without supplying the full name of the specific agency, organization or entity granting this standing.

(oo)  Refusing to submit to a body fluid examination or any other examination known to detect the presence of alcohol or other drugs as required by the board pursuant to section 32‑1452 or pursuant to a board investigation into a doctor of medicine's alleged substance abuse.

(pp)  Failing to report in writing to the Arizona medical board or the Arizona regulatory board of physician assistants any evidence that a doctor of medicine or a physician assistant is or may be medically incompetent, guilty of unprofessional conduct or mentally or physically unable to safely practice medicine or to perform as a physician assistant.

(qq)  As a physician who is the chief executive officer, the medical director or the medical chief of staff of a health care institution, failing to report in writing to the board that the hospital privileges of a doctor of medicine have been denied, revoked, suspended, supervised or limited because of actions by the doctor that appear to show that the doctor is or may be medically incompetent, is or may be guilty of unprofessional conduct or is or may be unable to engage safely in the practice of medicine.

(rr)  Claiming to be a current member of the board or its staff or a board medical consultant if this is not true.

(ss)  Failing to make patient medical records in the physician's possession promptly available to a physician assistant, a nurse practitioner, a person licensed pursuant to this chapter or a podiatrist, chiropractor, naturopathic physician, osteopathic physician or homeopathic physician licensed under chapter 7, 8, 14, 17 or 29 of this title on receipt of proper authorization to do so from the patient, a minor patient's parent, the patient's legal guardian or the patient's authorized representative or failing to comply with title 12, chapter 13, article 7.1.

(tt)  Prescribing, dispensing or furnishing a prescription medication or a prescription‑only device as defined in section 32‑1901 to a person unless the licensee first conducts a physical or mental health status examination of that person or has previously established a doctor‑patient relationship.  The physical or mental health status examination may be conducted during a real-time telemedicine encounter with audio and video capability, unless the examination is for the purpose of obtaining a written certification from the physician for the purposes of title 36, chapter 28.1.  This subdivision does not apply to:

(i)  A physician who provides temporary patient supervision on behalf of the patient's regular treating licensed health care professional or provides a consultation requested by the patient's regular treating licensed health care professional.

(ii)  Emergency medical situations as defined in section 41‑1831.

(iii)  Prescriptions written to prepare a patient for a medical examination.

(iv)  Prescriptions written or prescription medications issued for use by a county or tribal public health department for immunization programs or emergency treatment or in response to an infectious disease investigation, public health emergency, infectious disease outbreak or act of bioterrorism.  For the purposes of this item, "bioterrorism" has the same meaning prescribed in section 36‑781.

(v)  Prescriptions written or antimicrobials dispensed to a contact as defined in section 36‑661 who is believed to have had significant exposure risk as defined in section 36‑661 with another person who has been diagnosed with a communicable disease as defined in section 36‑661 by the prescribing or dispensing physician.

(vi)  Prescriptions written or prescription medications issued for administration of immunizations or vaccines listed in the United States centers for disease control and prevention's recommended immunization schedule to a household member of a patient.

(vii)  Prescriptions for epinephrine auto-injectors written or dispensed for a school district or charter school to be stocked for emergency use pursuant to section 15‑157 or for an authorized entity to be stocked pursuant to section 36‑2226.01.

(viii)  Prescriptions written by a licensee through a telemedicine program that is covered by the policies and procedures adopted by the administrator of a hospital or outpatient treatment center.

(ix)  Prescriptions for naloxone hydrochloride or any other opioid antagonist approved by the United States food and drug administration that are written or dispensed for use pursuant to section 36‑2228 or 36‑2266.

(uu)  Performing office based surgery using sedation in violation of board rules.

(vv)  Practicing medicine under a false or assumed name in this state. END_STATUTE

Sec. 5.  Section 32-1501, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE32-1501.  Definitions

In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:

1.  "Accepted therapeutic purpose" means treatment of a disease, injury, ailment or infirmity that is competent and generally recognized as safe and effective.

2.  "Active license" means a current valid license to practice naturopathic medicine.

3.  "Adequate medical records" means legible medical records containing, at a minimum, sufficient information to identify the patient, support the diagnosis, describe the treatment, accurately document the results, indicate advice and cautionary warning provided to the patient and provide sufficient information for a similarly qualified practitioner to assume continuity of the patient's care at any point in the course of treatment.

4.  "Approved clinical training program" or "clinical training program" means a program for naturopathic medical students in which the training occurred or is being conducted by or in conjunction with an approved school of naturopathic medicine.

5.  "Approved internship program" or "internship" means that the program in which the training occurred or is being conducted has been approved for internship training for physicians or for graduates of a school of naturopathic medicine by the board or was approved or accredited by an educational or professional association recognized by the board or by another state's or country's licensing agency recognized by the board.

6.  "Approved postdoctoral training" or "postdoctoral training" means that the program in which the training occurred or is being conducted has been approved for specialty training or for graduate medical education in naturopathic medicine by the board or approved or accredited by an educational or professional association recognized by the board or by another state's or country's licensing agency recognized by the board.

7.  "Approved preceptorship program" or "preceptorship" means that the program in which the training occurred or is being conducted has been approved for preceptorship training for physicians or for graduates of a school of naturopathic medicine by the board or was approved or accredited by an educational or professional association recognized by the board or by another state's or country's licensing agency recognized by the board.

8.  "Approved school of naturopathic medicine" or "school of naturopathic medicine" means a school or college determined by the board to have an educational program that meets standards prescribed by the council on naturopathic medical education, or its successor agency, and that offers a course of study that, on successful completion, results in the awarding of the degree of doctor of naturopathic medicine and whose course of study is either of the following:

(a)  Accredited or a candidate for accreditation by an accrediting agency recognized by the United States secretary of education as a specialized accrediting agency for schools of naturopathic medicine or its successor.

(b)  Accredited or a candidate for accreditation by an accrediting agency recognized by the council for higher education accreditation or its successor.

9.  "Board" means the naturopathic physicians medical board.

10.  "Chelation therapy" means an experimental medical therapy to restore cellular homeostasis through the use of intravenous, metal‑binding and bioinorganic agents such as ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid.  Chelation therapy does not include experimental therapy used to treat heavy metal poisoning.

11.  "Completed application" means that the applicant paid the required fees and supplied all documents and information as requested by the board and in a manner acceptable to the board.

12.  "Controlled substance" means a drug, substance or immediate precursor in schedules I through V of title 36, chapter 27, article 2 or the rules adopted pursuant to title 36, chapter 27, article 2.

13.  "Direct supervision" means that a physician who is licensed pursuant to this chapter or chapter 13, 17 or 29 of this title:

(a)  Is physically present and within sight or sound of the person supervised and is available for consultation regarding procedures that the physician has authorized and for which the physician remains responsible.

(b)  Has designated a person licensed pursuant to this chapter or chapter 13, 17 or 29 of this title to provide direct supervision in the physician's absence.

14.  "Doctor of naturopathic medicine" or "doctor" means a natural person who is licensed to practice naturopathic medicine under this chapter.

15.  "Drug" has the same meaning prescribed in section 32‑1901 but does not include:

(a)  Intravenous administration of legend drugs, except for:

(i)  Vitamins, chelation therapy and drugs used in emergency resuscitation and stabilization.

(ii)  Minerals.

(iii)  Nutrients.  For the purposes of this item, "nutrient" means a substance that provides nourishment for growth or metabolism and that is manufactured and supplied for intravenous use by a manufacturer registered with the United States food and drug administration or compounded by a pharmacy licensed by the Arizona state board of pharmacy.

(b)  Controlled substances listed as schedule I or II controlled substances as defined in the federal controlled substances act of 1970 (21 United States Code section 802), except morphine, any drug that is reclassified from schedule III to schedule II after January 1, 2014 and any homeopathic preparations that are also controlled substances.

(c)  Cancer chemotherapeutics classified as legend drugs.

(d)  Antipsychotics.

16.  "General supervision" means that the physician is available for consultation regarding procedures that the physician has authorized and for which the physician remains responsible.

17.  "Legend drug" means any drug that is defined by section 503(b) of the federal food, drug, and cosmetic act and under which definition its label is required to bear the statement "Rx only".

18.  "Letter of concern" means a nondisciplinary advisory letter that is issued by the board to a person who is regulated under this chapter and that states that while there is insufficient evidence to support disciplinary action the board believes that the person should modify or eliminate certain practices and that continuation of the activities that led to the information being submitted to the board may result in action against the person's license, certificate or registration.

19.  "Letter of reprimand" means a disciplinary letter that is issued by the board and that informs a person who is regulated under this chapter that the person's conduct violates state or federal law but does not require the board to restrict the person's license, certificate or registration because the person's conduct did not result in harm to a patient or to the public.

20.  "Limit" means taking a nondisciplinary action that alters the physician's practice or professional activities if the board determines that there is evidence that the physician is or may be mentally or physically unable to safely engage in the practice of medicine.

21.  "Medical assistant" or "naturopathic medical assistant" means a person who is certified by the board as a medical assistant, who assists a doctor of naturopathic medicine and who may perform delegated procedures that are commensurate with the assistant's education and training under the direct supervision of a doctor of naturopathic medicine and that do not include diagnosing, designing or modifying established treatment programs or those procedures prohibited by the board or by this chapter.

22.  "Medically incompetent" means a person who is licensed, certified or registered pursuant to this chapter and who lacks sufficient naturopathic medical knowledge or skills, or both, to a degree that is likely to endanger the health of patients.

23.  "Natural substance" means a homeopathic, botanical, nutritional or other supplement that does not require a prescription pursuant to federal law before it is prescribed, dispensed or otherwise furnished to a patient and that is prescribed by a physician who is licensed pursuant to this chapter to enhance health, prevent disease or treat a medical condition diagnosed by the physician.

24.  "Naturopathic medical student" means a person who is enrolled in a course of study at an approved school of naturopathic medicine.

25.  "Naturopathic medicine" means medicine as taught in approved schools of naturopathic medicine and in clinical, internship, preceptorship and postdoctoral training programs approved by the board and practiced by a recipient of a degree of doctor of naturopathic medicine licensed pursuant to this chapter.

26.  "Nurse" means a person who is licensed pursuant to chapter 15 of this title.

27.  "Physician" means a doctor of naturopathic medicine who is licensed pursuant to this chapter.

28.  "Practice of naturopathic medicine" means a medical system of diagnosing and treating diseases, injuries, ailments, infirmities and other conditions of the human mind and body, including by natural means, drugless methods, drugs, nonsurgical methods, devices, physical, electrical, hygienic and sanitary measures and all forms of physical agents and modalities.

29.  "Restrict" means taking a disciplinary action that alters the physician's practice or professional activities if the board determines that there is evidence that the physician is or may be medically incompetent or guilty of unprofessional conduct.

30.  "Specialist" means a physician who has successfully completed approved postdoctoral training, who is certified by a specialty board of examiners recognized by the board and who is certified by the board to practice the specialty pursuant to this chapter.

31.  "Unprofessional conduct" includes the following, whether occurring in this state or elsewhere:

(a)  Intentionally disclosing a professional secret or intentionally disclosing a privileged communication except as either of these may otherwise be required by law.

(b)  Engaging in any dishonorable conduct reflecting unfavorably on the profession.

(c)  Committing a felony, whether or not involving moral turpitude, or a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude.  In either case conviction by any court of competent jurisdiction or a plea of no contest is conclusive evidence of the commission of the felony or misdemeanor.

(d)  Habitual intemperance in the use of alcohol or any substance abuse.

(e)  Engaging in the illegal use of any narcotic or hypnotic drugs, or illegal substances.

(f)  Engaging in conduct that the board determines is gross malpractice, repeated malpractice or any malpractice resulting in the death of a patient.

(g)  Impersonating another doctor of naturopathic medicine or any other practitioner of the healing arts.

(h)  Falsely acting or assuming to act as a member, an employee or an authorized agent of the board.

(i)  Procuring or attempting to procure a license or a certificate pursuant to this chapter by fraud, by misrepresentation or by knowingly taking advantage of the mistake of another person or agency.

(j)  Having professional connection with or lending one's name to enhance or continue the activities of an illegal physician or an illegal practitioner of any healing art.

(k)  Representing that a manifestly incurable disease, injury, ailment or infirmity can be permanently cured, or falsely or fraudulently representing that a curable disease, injury, ailment or infirmity can be cured within a stated time.

(l)  Offering, undertaking or agreeing to cure or treat a disease, injury, ailment or infirmity by a secret means, method, treatment, medicine, substance, device or instrumentality.

(m)  Refusing to divulge to the board on demand the means, method, treatment, medicine, substance, device or instrumentality used in the treatment of a disease, injury, ailment or infirmity.

(n)  Giving or receiving, or aiding or abetting the giving or receiving of, rebates, either directly or indirectly.

(o)  Knowingly making any false or fraudulent statement, written or oral, in connection with the practice of naturopathic medicine or any naturopathic treatment method.

(p)  Engaging in immorality or misconduct that tends to discredit the naturopathic profession.

(q)  Having a license refused, revoked or suspended by any other state, district or territory of the United States or any other country, unless it can be shown that this action was not due to reasons that relate to the ability to safely and skillfully practice as a doctor of naturopathic medicine or to any act of unprofessional conduct in this paragraph.

(r)  Engaging in any conduct or practice that is contrary to recognized standards of ethics of the naturopathic profession, any conduct or practice that does or might constitute a danger to the health, welfare or safety of the patient or the public, or any conduct, practice or condition that does or might impair the ability to safely and skillfully practice as a doctor of naturopathic medicine.

(s)  Failing to observe any federal, state, county or municipal law relating to public health as a physician in this state.

(t)  Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of, or conspiring to violate this chapter or board rules.

(u)  Committing false, fraudulent, deceptive or misleading advertising or advertising the quality of a medical or health care service by a physician or by the physician's staff, employer or representative.

(v)  Failing or refusing to maintain adequate medical records on a patient or failing or refusing to make medical records in the physician's possession promptly available to another physician or health care provider who is licensed pursuant to chapter 7, 8, 13, 15, 17 or 29 of this title on request and receipt of proper authorization to do so from the patient, a minor patient's parent, the patient's legal guardian or the patient's authorized representative or failing to comply with title 12, chapter 13, article 7.1.

(w)  Referring a patient to a diagnostic or treatment facility or prescribing goods and services without disclosing in writing to the patient that the physician has a pecuniary interest in the facility, goods or services to which the patient is referred or prescribed.  This subdivision does not apply to a referral by one physician or practitioner to another physician or practitioner within a group of physicians or practitioners practicing together.

(x)  Engaging in sexual intimacies with a patient in the course of direct treatment.

(y)  Failing to dispense drugs and devices in compliance with article 4 of this chapter.

(z)  Administering, dispensing or prescribing any drug or a device for other than an accepted therapeutic purpose.

(aa)  Falsely representing or holding oneself out as being a specialist or representation by a doctor of naturopathic medicine or the doctor's staff, employer or representative that the doctor is boarded or board certified if this is not true or that standing is not current.

(bb)  Delegating professional duties and responsibilities to a person if the person has not been approved or qualified by licensure or by certification to perform these duties or responsibilities.

(cc)  Failing to appropriately supervise a naturopathic medical student, a nurse, a medical assistant, a health care provider or a technician who is employed by or assigned to the physician during the performance of delegated professional duties and responsibilities.

(dd)  Using experimental forms of diagnosis or treatment without adequate informed consent of the patient or the patient's legal guardian and without conforming to experimental criteria, including protocols, detailed records, periodic analysis of results and periodic review by a medical peer review committee as approved by the United States food and drug administration or its successor agency.

(ee)  Failing to furnish information in a timely manner to the board or investigators or representatives of the board if this information is legally requested by the board and failing to allow properly authorized board personnel on demand to examine and have access to documents, reports and records maintained by the physician that relate to the physician's medical practice or medically related activities.

(ff)  Failing to report in writing to the board evidence that a person who is licensed, certified or registered pursuant to this chapter is or may be medically incompetent, guilty of unprofessional conduct or mentally or physically unable to safely practice or assist in the practice of naturopathic medicine.

(gg)  Conducting or engaging in an internship, preceptorship or clinical training program in naturopathic medicine without being approved and registered by the board for that internship, preceptorship or clinical training program.

(hh)  Signing a blank, undated or predated prescription form.

(ii)  Engaging in conduct that the board determines is gross negligence, repeated negligence or negligence resulting in harm or death to a patient.

(jj)  Knowingly making a false or misleading statement in oral testimony to the board on a form required by the board or in written correspondence to the board, including attachments to that correspondence.

(kk)  The failure of a physician who is the chief medical officer, the executive officer or the chief of staff of an internship, a preceptorship or a clinical training program to report in writing to the board that the privileges of a doctor of naturopathic medicine, a naturopathic medical student or a medical assistant have been denied, limited, revoked or suspended because that doctor's, student's or assistant's actions appear to indicate that the person is or may be medically incompetent, is or may be guilty of unprofessional conduct or is or may be unable to safely engage or assist in the practice of naturopathic medicine.

(ll)  Having action taken against a doctor of naturopathic medicine by a licensing or regulatory board in another jurisdiction due to that doctor's mental or physical inability to engage safely in the practice of naturopathic medicine or the doctor's medical incompetence or for unprofessional conduct as defined by that licensing or regulatory board and that corresponds directly or indirectly to an act of unprofessional conduct prescribed by this paragraph.  The action taken may include refusing, denying, revoking or suspending a license, otherwise limiting, restricting or monitoring a licensee or placing a licensee on probation by that licensing or regulatory board.

(mm)  Having sanctions imposed by an agency of the federal government, including restricting, suspending, limiting or removing a person from the practice of naturopathic medicine or restricting that person's ability to obtain financial remuneration.

(nn)  Violating any formal order, probation, consent agreement or stipulation issued or entered into by the board pursuant to this chapter.

(oo)  Refusing to submit to a body fluid examination pursuant to a board investigation of alleged substance abuse by a doctor of naturopathic medicine.

(pp)  Charging a fee for services not rendered or dividing a professional fee for patient referrals among health care providers or health care institutions or between these providers and institutions or a contractual arrangement that has this effect.

(qq)  Obtaining a fee by fraud, deceit or misrepresentation.

(rr)  Charging or collecting a clearly excessive fee.  In determining whether a fee is clearly excessive, the board shall consider the fee or range of fees customarily charged in this state for similar services, in light of modifying factors such as the time required, the complexity of the service and the skill required to perform the service properly.  This subdivision does not apply if there is a clear written contract for a fixed fee between the physician and the patient that was entered into before the service was provided.

(ss)  With the exception of heavy metal poisoning, using chelation therapy in the treatment of arteriosclerosis or as any other form of therapy without adequate informed patient consent and without conforming to generally accepted experimental criteria, including protocols, detailed records, periodic analysis of results and periodic review by a medical peer review committee.

(tt)  Using a controlled substance unless it is prescribed by another physician for use during a prescribed course of treatment.

(uu)  Prescribing, dispensing or administering anabolic androgenic steroids for other than therapeutic purposes.

(vv)  Except in an emergency or urgent care situation, prescribing or dispensing a controlled substance to a member of the naturopathic physician's immediate family.

(ww)  Prescribing, dispensing or furnishing a prescription medication or a prescription‑only device as defined in section 32‑1901 to a person unless the licensee first conducts a physical examination of that person or has previously established a doctor‑patient relationship.  The physical examination may be conducted during a real‑time telemedicine encounter with audio and video capability unless the examination is for the purpose of obtaining a written certification from the physician for the purposes of title 36, chapter 28.1.  This subdivision does not apply to:

(i)  A licensee who provides temporary patient supervision on behalf of the patient's regular treating licensed health care professional.

(ii)  An emergency medical situation as defined in section 41‑1831.

(iii)  Prescriptions written to prepare a patient for a medical examination.

(iv)  Prescriptions written or prescription medications issued for use by a county or tribal public health department for immunization programs or emergency treatment or in response to an infectious disease investigation, a public health emergency, an infectious disease outbreak or an act of bioterrorism.  For the purposes of this item, "bioterrorism" has the same meaning prescribed in section 36‑781.

(v)  Prescriptions written or antimicrobials dispensed to a contact as defined in section 36‑661 who is believed to have had significant exposure risk as defined in section 36‑661 with another person who has been diagnosed with a communicable disease as defined in section 36‑661 by the prescribing or dispensing physician.

(vi)  Prescriptions written by a licensee through a telemedicine program that is covered by the policies and procedures adopted by the administrator of a hospital or outpatient treatment center.

(xx)  If medical treatment is considered experimental or investigational, failing to include in a patient's record a consent to treatment document that is signed by the patient or the patient's parent or legal guardian and that indicates that the patient or the patient's parent or legal guardian has been informed of the risk of any treatment to be provided and the expected cost of that treatment.

(yy)  When issuing a written certification as defined in section 36‑2801, failing or refusing to include in the adequate medical records of a patient a copy of all of the following:

(i)  The medical records relied on by the physician to support the diagnosis or confirmed diagnosis of the patient's debilitating medical condition.

(ii)  The written certification.

(iii)  The patient's profile on the Arizona board of pharmacy controlled substances prescription monitoring program database.

(zz)  Dispensing a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid.END_STATUTE

Sec. 6.  Section 32-1901, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE32-1901.  Definitions

In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:

1.  "Administer" means the direct application of a controlled substance, prescription‑only drug, dangerous drug or narcotic drug, whether by injection, inhalation, ingestion or any other means, to the body of a patient or research subject by a practitioner or by the practitioner's authorized agent or the patient or research subject at the direction of the practitioner.

2.  "Advertisement" means all representations disseminated in any manner or by any means, other than by labeling, for the purpose of inducing, or that are likely to induce, directly or indirectly, the purchase of drugs, devices, poisons or hazardous substances.

3.  "Advisory letter" means a nondisciplinary letter to notify a licensee or permittee that either:

(a)  While there is insufficient evidence to support disciplinary action, the board believes that continuation of the activities that led to the investigation may result in further board action against the licensee or permittee.

(b)  The violation is a minor or technical violation that is not of sufficient merit to warrant disciplinary action.

(c)  While the licensee or permittee has demonstrated substantial compliance through rehabilitation, remediation or reeducation that has mitigated the need for disciplinary action, the board believes that repetition of the activities that led to the investigation may result in further board action against the licensee or permittee.

4.  "Antiseptic", if a drug is represented as such on its label, means a representation that it is a germicide, except in the case of a drug purporting to be, or represented as, an antiseptic for inhibitory use as a wet dressing, ointment or dusting powder or other use that involves prolonged contact with the body.

5.  "Authorized officers of the law" means legally empowered peace officers, compliance officers of the board of pharmacy and agents of the division of narcotics enforcement and criminal intelligence of the department of public safety.

6.  "Automated prescription‑dispensing kiosk" means a mechanical system that is operated as an extension of a pharmacy, that maintains all transaction information within the pharmacy operating system, that is separately permitted from the pharmacy and that performs operations that either:

(a)  Accept a prescription or refill order, store prepackaged or repackaged medications, label and dispense patient‑specific prescriptions and provide counseling on new or refilled prescriptions.

(b)  Dispense or deliver a prescription or refill that has been prepared by or on behalf of the pharmacy that oversees the automated prescription‑dispensing kiosk.

7.  "Board" or "board of pharmacy" means the Arizona state board of pharmacy.

8.  "Certificate of composition" means a list of a product's ingredients.

9.  "Certificate of free sale" means a document that authenticates a product that is generally and freely sold in domestic or international channels of trade.

10.  "Color additive" means a material that either:

(a)  Is any dye, pigment or other substance made by a process of synthesis or similar artifice, or extracted, isolated or otherwise derived, with or without intermediate or final change of identity, from any vegetable, animal, mineral or other source.

(b)  If added or applied to a drug, or to the human body or any part of the human body, is capable of imparting color, except that color additive does not include any material that has been or may be exempted under the federal act.  Color includes black, white and intermediate grays.

11.  "Compounding" means the preparation, mixing, assembling, packaging or labeling of a drug by a pharmacist or an intern or pharmacy technician under the pharmacist's supervision, for the purpose of dispensing to a patient based on a valid prescription order.  Compounding includes the preparation of drugs in anticipation of prescription orders prepared on routine, regularly observed prescribing patterns and the preparation of drugs as an incident to research, teaching or chemical analysis or for administration by a medical practitioner to the medical practitioner's patient and not for sale or dispensing.  Compounding does not include the preparation of commercially available products from bulk compounds or the preparation of drugs for sale to pharmacies, practitioners or entities for the purpose of dispensing or distribution.

12.  "Compressed medical gas distributor" means a person who holds a current permit issued by the board to distribute compressed medical gases pursuant to a compressed medical gas order to compressed medical gas suppliers and other entities that are registered, licensed or permitted to use, administer or distribute compressed medical gases.

13.  "Compressed medical gases" means gases and liquid oxygen that a compressed medical gas distributor or manufacturer has labeled in compliance with federal law.

14.  "Compressed medical gas order" means an order for compressed medical gases that is issued by a medical practitioner.

15.  "Compressed medical gas supplier" means a person who holds a current permit issued by the board to supply compressed medical gases pursuant to a compressed medical gas order and only to the consumer or the patient.

16.  "Controlled substance" means a drug, substance or immediate precursor that is identified, defined or listed in title 36, chapter 27, article 2 or the rules adopted pursuant to title 36, chapter 27, article 2.

17.  "Corrosive" means any substance that when it comes in contact with living tissue will cause destruction of tissue by chemical action.

18.  "Counterfeit drug" means a drug that, or the container or labeling of which, without authorization, bears the trademark, trade name or other identifying mark, imprint, number or device, or any likeness of these, of a manufacturer, distributor or dispenser other than the person who in fact manufactured, distributed or dispensed that drug.

19.  "Dangerous drug" has the same meaning prescribed in section 13‑3401.

20.  "Day" means a business day.

21.  "Decree of censure" means an official action that is taken by the board and that may include a requirement for restitution of fees to a patient or consumer.

22.  "Deliver" or "delivery" means the actual, constructive or attempted transfer from one person to another whether or not there is an agency relationship.

23.  "Deputy director" means a pharmacist who is employed by the board and selected by the executive director to perform duties as prescribed by the executive director.

24.  "Device", except as used in paragraph 18 of this section, section 32‑1965, paragraph 4 and section 32‑1967, subsection A, paragraph 15 and subsection C, means instruments, apparatuses and contrivances, including their components, parts and accessories, including all such items under the federal act, intended either:

(a)  For use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment or prevention of disease in the human body or other animals.

(b)  To affect the structure or any function of the human body or other animals.

25.  "Director" means the director of the division of narcotics enforcement and criminal investigation of the department of public safety.

26.  "Direct supervision of a pharmacist" means the pharmacist is present.  If relating to the sale of certain items, direct supervision of a pharmacist means that a pharmacist determines the legitimacy or advisability of a proposed purchase of those items.

27.  "Dispense" means to deliver to an ultimate user or research subject by or pursuant to the lawful order of a practitioner, including the prescribing, administering, packaging, labeling or compounding necessary to prepare for that delivery.

28.  "Dispenser" means a practitioner who dispenses.

29.  "Distribute" means to deliver, other than by administering or dispensing.

30.  "Distributor" means a person who distributes.

31.  "Drug" means:

(a)  Articles recognized, or for which standards or specifications are prescribed, in the official compendium.

(b)  Articles intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment or prevention of disease in the human body or other animals.

(c)  Articles other than food intended to affect the structure or any function of the human body or other animals.

(d)  Articles intended for use as a component of any articles specified in subdivision (a), (b) or (c) of this paragraph but does not include devices or their components, parts or accessories.

32.  "Drug enforcement administration" means the drug enforcement administration of the United States department of justice or its successor agency.

33.  "Drug or device manufacturing" means the production, preparation, propagation or processing of a drug or device, either directly or indirectly, by extraction from substances of natural origin or independently by means of chemical synthesis and includes any packaging or repackaging of substances or labeling or relabeling of its container and the promotion and marketing of the same.  Drug or device manufacturing does not include compounding.

34.  "Economic poison" means any substance that alone, in chemical combination with or in formulation with one or more other substances is a pesticide within the meaning of the laws of this state or the federal insecticide, fungicide and rodenticide act and that is used in the production, storage or transportation of raw agricultural commodities.

35.  "Enteral feeding" means nourishment provided by means of a tube inserted into the stomach or intestine.

36.  "Established name", with respect to a drug or ingredient of a drug, means any of the following:

(a)  The applicable official name.

(b)  If there is no such name and the drug or ingredient is an article recognized in an official compendium, the official title in an official compendium.

(c)  If neither subdivision (a) nor (b) of this paragraph applies, the common or usual name of the drug.

37.  "Executive director" means the executive director of the board of pharmacy.

38.  "Federal act" means the federal laws and regulations that pertain to drugs, devices, poisons and hazardous substances and that are official at the time any drug, device, poison or hazardous substance is affected by this chapter.

39.  "Full service wholesale permittee":

(a)  Means a permittee who may distribute prescription‑only drugs and devices, controlled substances and over‑the‑counter drugs and devices to pharmacies or other legal outlets from a place devoted in whole or in part to wholesaling these items.

(b)  Includes a virtual wholesaler as defined in rule by the board.

40.  "Good manufacturing practice" means a system for ensuring that products are consistently produced and controlled according to quality standards and covering all aspects of design, monitoring and control of manufacturing processes and facilities to ensure that products do not pose any risk to the consumer or public.

41.  "Highly toxic" means any substance that falls within any of the following categories:

(a)  Produces death within fourteen days in half or more than half of a group of ten or more laboratory white rats each weighing between two hundred and three hundred grams, at a single dose of fifty milligrams or less per kilogram of body weight, when orally administered.

(b)  Produces death within fourteen days in half or more than half of a group of ten or more laboratory white rats each weighing between two hundred and three hundred grams, if inhaled continuously for a period of one hour or less at an atmospheric concentration of two hundred parts per million by volume or less of gas or vapor or two milligrams per liter by volume or less of mist or dust, provided the concentration is likely to be encountered by humans if the substance is used in any reasonably foreseeable manner.

(c)  Produces death within fourteen days in half or more than half of a group of ten or more rabbits tested in a dosage of two hundred milligrams or less per kilogram of body weight, if administered by continuous contact with the bare skin for twenty‑four hours or less.

If the board finds that available data on human experience with any substance indicate results different from those obtained on animals in the dosages or concentrations prescribed in this paragraph, the human data shall take precedence.

42.  "Hospital" means any institution for the care and treatment of the sick and injured that is approved and licensed as a hospital by the department of health services.

43.  "Intern" means a pharmacy intern.

44.  "Internship" means the practical, experiential, hands‑on training of a pharmacy intern under the supervision of a preceptor.

45.  "Irritant" means any substance, other than a corrosive, that on immediate, prolonged or repeated contact with normal living tissue will induce a local inflammatory reaction.

46.  "Jurisprudence examination" means a board‑approved pharmacy law examination that is written and administered in cooperation with the national association of boards of pharmacy or another board‑approved pharmacy law examination.

47.  "Label" means a display of written, printed or graphic matter on the immediate container of any article that, unless easily legible through the outside wrapper or container, also appears on the outside wrapper or container of the article's retail package.  For the purposes of this paragraph, the immediate container does not include package liners.

48.  "Labeling" means all labels and other written, printed or graphic matter either:

(a)  On any article or any of its containers or wrappers.

(b)  Accompanying that article.

49.  "Letter of reprimand" means a disciplinary letter that is a public document issued by the board and that informs a licensee or permittee that the licensee's or permittee's conduct violates state or federal law and may require the board to monitor the licensee or permittee.

50.  "Limited service pharmacy" means a pharmacy that is approved by the board to practice a limited segment of pharmacy as indicated by the permit issued by the board.

51.  "Manufacture" or "manufacturer":

(a)  Means every person who prepares, derives, produces, compounds, processes, packages or repackages or labels any drug in a place, other than a pharmacy, that is devoted to manufacturing the drug.

(b)  Includes a virtual manufacturer as defined in rule by the board.

52.  "Marijuana" has the same meaning prescribed in section 13‑3401.

53.  "Medical practitioner" means any medical doctor, doctor of osteopathic medicine, dentist, podiatrist, veterinarian or other person who is licensed and authorized by law to use and prescribe drugs and devices for the treatment of sick and injured human beings or animals or for the diagnosis or prevention of sickness in human beings or animals in this state or any state, territory or district of the United States.

54.  "Medication order" means a written or verbal order from a medical practitioner or that person's authorized agent to administer a drug or device.

55.  "Narcotic drug" has the same meaning prescribed in section 13‑3401.

56.  "New drug" means either:

(a)  Any drug the composition of which is such that the drug is not generally recognized among experts qualified by scientific training and experience to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of drugs as safe and effective for use under the conditions prescribed, recommended or suggested in the labeling.

(b)  Any drug the composition of which is such that the drug, as a result of investigations to determine its safety and effectiveness for use under such conditions, has become so recognized, but that has not, other than in the investigations, been used to a material extent or for a material time under those conditions.

57.  "Nonprescription drug" or "over‑the‑counter drug" means any nonnarcotic medicine or drug that may be sold without a prescription and that is prepackaged and labeled for use by the consumer in accordance with the requirements of the laws of this state and federal law.  Nonprescription drug does not include:

(a)  A drug that is primarily advertised and promoted professionally to medical practitioners and pharmacists by manufacturers or primary distributors.

(b)  A controlled substance.

(c)  A drug that is required to bear a label that states "Rx only".

(d)  A drug that is intended for human use by hypodermic injection.

58.  "Nonprescription drug wholesale permittee":

(a)  Means a permittee who may distribute only over‑the‑counter drugs and devices to pharmacies or other lawful outlets from a place devoted in whole or in part to wholesaling these items.

(b)  Includes a virtual wholesaler as defined in rule by the board.

59.  "Notice" means personal service or the mailing of a copy of the notice by certified mail addressed either to the person at the person's latest address of record in the board office or to the person's attorney.

60.  "Nutritional supplementation" means vitamins, minerals and caloric supplementation.  Nutritional supplementation does not include medication or drugs.

61.  "Official compendium" means the latest revision of the United States pharmacopeia and the national formulary or any current supplement.

62.  "Other jurisdiction" means one of the other forty‑nine states, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico or a territory of the United States of America.

63.  "Package" means a receptacle defined or described in the United States pharmacopeia and the national formulary as adopted by the board.

64.  "Packaging" means the act or process of placing a drug item or device in a container for the purpose or intent of dispensing or distributing the item or device to another.

65.  "Parenteral nutrition" means intravenous feeding that provides a person with fluids and essential nutrients the person needs while the person is unable to receive adequate fluids or feedings by mouth or by enteral feeding.

66.  "Person" means an individual, partnership, corporation and association, and their duly authorized agents.

67.  "Pharmaceutical care" means the provision of drug therapy and other pharmaceutical patient care services.

68.  "Pharmacist" means an individual who is currently licensed by the board to practice the profession of pharmacy in this state.

69.  "Pharmacist in charge" means the pharmacist who is responsible to the board for a licensed establishment's compliance with the laws and administrative rules of this state and of the federal government pertaining to the practice of pharmacy, the manufacturing of drugs and the distribution of drugs and devices.

70.  "Pharmacist licensure examination" means a board‑approved examination that is written and administered in cooperation with the national association of boards of pharmacy or any other board‑approved pharmacist licensure examination.

71.  "Pharmacy":

(a)  Means:

(i)  Any place where drugs, devices, poisons or related hazardous substances are offered for sale at retail.

(ii)  Any place in which the profession of pharmacy is practiced or where prescription orders are compounded and dispensed.

(iii)  Any place that has displayed on it or in it the words "pharmacist", "pharmaceutical chemist", "apothecary", "druggist", "pharmacy", "drugstore", "drugs" or "drug sundries" or any of these words or combinations of these words, or words of similar import either in English or any other language, or that is advertised by any sign containing any of these words.

(iv)  Any place where the characteristic symbols of pharmacy or the characteristic prescription sign "Rx" is exhibited.

(v)  Any place or a portion of any building or structure that is leased, used or controlled by the permittee to conduct the business authorized by the board at the address for which the permit was issued and that is enclosed and secured when a pharmacist is not in attendance.

(vi)  A remote dispensing site pharmacy. where a pharmacy technician or pharmacy intern prepares, compounds or dispenses prescription medications under remote supervision by a pharmacist.

(b)  Includes a satellite pharmacy.

72.  "Pharmacy intern" means a person who has all of the qualifications and experience prescribed in section 32‑1923.

73.  "Pharmacy technician" means a person who is licensed pursuant to this chapter.

74.  "Pharmacy technician trainee" means a person who is licensed pursuant to this chapter.

75.  "Poison" or "hazardous substance" includes, but is not limited to, any of the following if intended and suitable for household use or use by children:

(a)  Any substance that, according to standard works on medicine, pharmacology, pharmacognosy or toxicology, if applied to, introduced into or developed within the body in relatively small quantities by its inherent action uniformly produces serious bodily injury, disease or death.

(b)  A toxic substance.

(c)  A highly toxic substance.

(d)  A corrosive substance.

(e)  An irritant.

(f)  A strong sensitizer.

(g)  A mixture of any of the substances described in this paragraph, if the substance or mixture of substances may cause substantial personal injury or substantial illness during or as a proximate result of any customary or reasonably foreseeable handling or use, including reasonably foreseeable ingestion by children.

(h)  A substance that is designated by the board to be a poison or hazardous substance.  This subdivision does not apply to radioactive substances, economic poisons subject to the federal insecticide, fungicide and rodenticide act or the state pesticide act, foods, drugs and cosmetics subject to state laws or the federal act or substances intended for use as fuels when stored in containers and used in the heating, cooking or refrigeration system of a house.  This subdivision applies to any substance or article that is not itself an economic poison within the meaning of the federal insecticide, fungicide and rodenticide act or the state pesticide act, but that is a poison or hazardous substance within the meaning of this paragraph by reason of bearing or containing an economic poison or hazardous substance.

76.  "Practice of pharmacy":

(a)  Means furnishing the following health care services as a medical professional:

(i)  Interpreting, evaluating and dispensing prescription orders in the patient's best interests.

(ii)  Compounding drugs pursuant to or in anticipation of a prescription order.

(iii)  Labeling drugs and devices in compliance with state and federal requirements.

(iv)  Participating in drug selection and drug utilization reviews, drug administration, drug or drug-related research and drug therapy monitoring or management.

(v)  Providing patient counseling necessary to provide pharmaceutical care.

(vi)  Properly and safely storing drugs and devices in anticipation of dispensing.

(vii)  Maintaining required records of drugs and devices.

(viii)  Offering or performing acts, services, operations or transactions necessary in the conduct, operation, management and control of a pharmacy.

(ix)  Initiating, monitoring and modifying drug therapy pursuant to a protocol‑based drug therapy agreement with a provider as outlined in section 32‑1970.

(x)  Initiating and administering immunizations or vaccines pursuant to section 32‑1974.

(b)  Does not include initiating a prescription order for any medication, drug or other substance used to induce or cause a medication abortion as defined in section 36‑2151.

77.  "Practitioner" means any physician, dentist, veterinarian, scientific investigator or other person who is licensed, registered or otherwise permitted to distribute, dispense, conduct research with respect to or administer a controlled substance in the course of professional practice or research in this state, or any pharmacy, hospital or other institution that is licensed, registered or otherwise permitted to distribute, dispense, conduct research with respect to or administer a controlled substance in the course of professional practice or research in this state.

78.  "Preceptor" means a pharmacist who is serving as the practical instructor of an intern and complies with section 32‑1923.

79.  "Precursor chemical" means a substance that is:

(a)  The principal compound that is commonly used or that is produced primarily for use and that is an immediate chemical intermediary used or likely to be used in the manufacture of a controlled substance, the control of which is necessary to prevent, curtail or limit manufacture.

(b)  Listed in section 13‑3401, paragraph 26 or 27.

80.  "Prescription" means either a prescription order or a prescription medication.

81.  "Prescription medication" means any drug, including label and container according to context, that is dispensed pursuant to a prescription order.

82.  "Prescription‑only device" includes:

(a)  Any device that is limited by the federal act to use under the supervision of a medical practitioner.

(b)  Any device required by the federal act to bear on its label essentially the legend "Rx only".

83.  "Prescription‑only drug" does not include a controlled substance but does include:

(a)  Any drug that because of its toxicity or other potentiality for harmful effect, the method of its use, or the collateral measures necessary to its use is not generally recognized among experts, qualified by scientific training and experience to evaluate its safety and efficacy, as safe for use except by or under the supervision of a medical practitioner.

(b)  Any drug that is limited by an approved new drug application under the federal act or section 32‑1962 to use under the supervision of a medical practitioner.

(c)  Every potentially harmful drug, the labeling of which does not bear or contain full and adequate directions for use by the consumer.

(d)  Any drug, other than a controlled substance, required by the federal act to bear on its label the legend "Rx only".

84.  "Prescription order" means any of the following:

(a)  An order to a pharmacist for drugs or devices issued and signed by a duly licensed medical practitioner in the authorized course of the practitioner's professional practice.

(b)  An order transmitted to a pharmacist through word of mouth, telephone or other means of communication directed by that medical practitioner.  Prescription orders received by word of mouth, telephone or other means of communication shall be maintained by the pharmacist pursuant to section 32‑1964, and the record so made by the pharmacist constitutes the original prescription order to be dispensed by the pharmacist.  This paragraph does not alter or affect laws of this state or any federal act requiring a written prescription order.

(c)  An order initiated by a pharmacist pursuant to a protocol-based drug therapy agreement with a provider as outlined in section 32‑1970, or immunizations or vaccines administered by a pharmacist pursuant to section 32‑1974.

(d)  A diet order or an order for enteral feeding, nutritional supplementation or parenteral nutrition that is initiated by a registered dietitian or other qualified nutrition professional in a hospital pursuant to section 36‑416.

85.  "Professionally incompetent" means:

(a)  Incompetence based on a variety of factors, including a lack of sufficient pharmaceutical knowledge or skills or experience to a degree likely to endanger the health of patients.

(b)  When considered with other indications of professional incompetence, a pharmacist or pharmacy intern who fails to obtain a passing score on a board‑approved pharmacist licensure examination or a pharmacy technician or pharmacy technician trainee who fails to obtain a passing score on a board‑approved pharmacy technician licensure examination.

86.  "Radioactive substance" means a substance that emits ionizing radiation.

87.  "Remote dispensing site pharmacy" means a pharmacy where a pharmacy technician or pharmacy intern prepares, compounds or dispenses prescription medications under remote supervision by a pharmacist.

88.  "Remote supervision by a pharmacist" means that a pharmacist directs and controls the actions of pharmacy technicians and pharmacy interns through the use of audio and visual technology.

89.  "Revocation" or "revoke" means the official cancellation of a license, permit, registration or other approval authorized by the board for a period of two years unless otherwise specified by the board.  A request or new application for reinstatement may be presented to the board for review before the conclusion of the specified revocation period upon review of the executive director.

90.  "Safely engage in employment duties" means that a permittee or the permittee's employee is able to safely engage in employment duties related to the manufacture, sale, distribution or dispensing of drugs, devices, poisons, hazardous substances, controlled substances or precursor chemicals.

91.  "Satellite pharmacy" means a work area located within a hospital or on a hospital campus that is not separated by other commercial property or residential property, that is under the direction of a pharmacist, that is a remote extension of a centrally licensed hospital pharmacy, and that is owned by and dependent on the centrally licensed hospital pharmacy for administrative control, staffing and drug procurement and that is not required to be separately permitted.

92.  "Symbol" means the characteristic symbols that have historically identified pharmacy, including show globes and mortar and pestle, and the sign "Rx".

93.  "Third‑party logistics provider" means an entity that provides or coordinates warehousing or other logistics services for a prescription or over‑the‑counter dangerous drug or dangerous device in intrastate or interstate commerce on behalf of a manufacturer, wholesaler or dispenser of the prescription or over‑the‑counter dangerous drug or dangerous device but that does not take ownership of the prescription or over‑the‑counter dangerous drug or dangerous device or have responsibility to direct its sale or disposition.

94.  "Toxic substance" means a substance, other than a radioactive substance, that has the capacity to produce injury or illness in humans through ingestion, inhalation or absorption through any body surface.

95.  "Ultimate user" means a person who lawfully possesses a drug or controlled substance for that person's own use, for the use of a member of that person's household or for administering to an animal owned by that person or by a member of that person's household. END_STATUTE

Sec. 7.  Section 32-1969, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE32-1969.  Filling foreign prescription orders; records; exception

A.  This chapter does not prohibit a pharmacist or an intern under a pharmacist's supervision from filling a new written prescription order for a drug or device issued by a medical practitioner licensed by the appropriate licensing board of a foreign country.

B.  The proprietor, manager or pharmacist in charge of a pharmacy shall keep a separate record of prescriptions filled pursuant to this section.

C.  A pharmacist or intern shall not fill a prescription order issued by a medical practitioner licensed by the appropriate licensing board of a foreign country for a controlled substance as defined pursuant to title 36, chapter 27, article 2 or the rules adopted pursuant to title 36, chapter 27, article 2. END_STATUTE

Sec. 8.  Section 32-2901, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE32-2901.  Definitions

In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:

1.  "Acupuncture" means a medical therapy in which ailments are diagnosed and treated by the specific application of needles, heat or physical and electromagnetic impulses or currents to specific anatomic points on the body through any of the following:

(a)  The diagnosis and treatment of ailments according to the systematic principles of traditional Asian medicine.

(b)  The diagnosis and treatment of pain, neuromuscular disorders and other ailments based on the body's biophysics and neuroanatomic structure.

(c)  The use of devices to determine the biologic electrical response pattern of acupuncture points as a guide to diagnose bodily ailments and to guide the prescription of homeopathic substances, orthomolecular therapy or pharmaceutical medicine.

2.  "Adequate records" means legible medical records that contain at a minimum sufficient information to identify the patient, support the diagnosis, document the treatment, accurately describe the results, indicate advice, cautionary warnings and informed consent discussions with the patient and provide sufficient information for another licensed health care practitioner to assume continuity of the patient's care and to continue or modify the treatment plan.

3.  "Approved internship" means that the applicant has completed training in a hospital that was approved for internship, fellowship or residency training by the council on medical education in hospitals of the American medical association, the association of American medical colleges, the royal college of physicians and surgeons of Canada, the American osteopathic association or any board approved similar body in the United States or Canada that approves hospitals for internship, fellowship or residency training.

4.  "Approved school of medicine":

(a)  As it relates to a person who is seeking licensure pursuant to section 32‑2912, subsection A, means a school or college that offers a course of study that on successful conclusion results in a degree of doctor of medicine or doctor of osteopathy osteopathic medicine and that offers a course of study that is approved or accredited by the association of American medical colleges, the association of Canadian medical colleges, the American medical association, the American osteopathic association or any board‑approved similar body in the United States or Canada that accredits this course of study.

(b)  As it relates to a person who is seeking licensure pursuant to section 32‑2912, subsection B, means a school or college that on successful completion results in a degree of doctor of homeopathy and that is approved or accredited by the accreditation commission for homeopathic education in North America or any board‑approved similar body that accredits this course of study.

5.  "Board" means the board of homeopathic and integrated medicine examiners.

6.  "Chelation therapy" means an experimental medical therapy to restore cellular homeostasis through the use of intravenous, metal‑binding and bioinorganic agents such as ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid. Chelation therapy is not an experimental therapy if it is used to treat heavy metal poisoning.

7.  "Controlled substance" means a drug or substance or a drug's or substance's immediate precursor that is defined or listed in title 36, chapter 27, article 2 or the rules adopted pursuant to title 36, chapter 27, article 2.

8.  "Drug" means a medication or substance that is any of the following:

(a)  Recognized in the official compendia or for which standards or specifications are prescribed in the official compendia.

(b)  Intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment or prevention of human diseases.

(c)  Articles other than food that are intended to affect the structure or function of the human body.

9.  "Homeopathic medication" means a substance of animal, vegetable or mineral origin that is prepared according to homeopathic pharmacology and that is given usually in a homeopathic microdosage.

10.  "Homeopathic microdosage" means a substance prepared so that it is diluted from ten to the minus one to ten to the minus ten thousandth or higher of its original concentration.

11.  "Homeopathy" means a system of medicine that employs homeopathic medication in accordance with the principle that a substance that produces symptoms in a healthy person can cure those symptoms in an ill person.

12.  "Immediate family" means a person's spouse, natural or adopted children, parents and siblings and the natural or adopted children, parents and siblings of the person's spouse.

13.  "Letter of concern" means an advisory letter to notify a licensee that, while there is insufficient evidence to support disciplinary action, the board believes the licensee should modify or eliminate certain practices.

14.  "Licensee" means a person who is licensed pursuant to this chapter.

15.  "Medical assistant" means an unlicensed person who has completed an educational program approved by the board, who assists in a homeopathic practice under the supervision of a doctor of homeopathy and who performs delegated procedures commensurate with the assistant's education and training but who does not diagnose, interpret, design or modify established treatment programs or violate any statute.

16.  "Medical incompetence" means the lack of sufficient medical knowledge or skill by a licensee to a degree that is likely to endanger a patient's health.  Medical incompetence includes the range of knowledge expected for basic licensure pursuant to this chapter or as a medical or osteopathic physician in any professional regulatory jurisdiction of the United States and additional knowledge of homeopathic treatments and modalities expected of persons who are licensed pursuant to this chapter.

17.  "Minor surgery" means surgical procedures that are conducted by a licensee who is licensed pursuant to section 32‑2912, subsection A in an outpatient setting and that involve the removal or repair of lesions or injuries to the skin, mucous membranes and subcutaneous tissues, the use of topical, local or regional anesthetic agents, the treatment by stabilizing or casting nondisplaced and uncomplicated fractures of the extremities and diagnostic endoscopies of the intestinal tract, nasopharynx and vagina.  Minor surgery also includes diagnostic aspiration of joints and subcutaneous cysts, therapeutic injections of muscular trigger points, tendons, ligaments and scars and the subcutaneous implantation of medical therapeutic agents.  Minor surgery does not include the use of general, spinal or epidural anesthesia, the opening of body cavities, the repair of blood vessels and nerves or the biopsy by incision, excision or needle aspiration of internal organs, the breast or the prostate.

18.  "Neuromuscular integration" means musculoskeletal therapy that uses any combination of manual methods, physical agents and physical medicine procedures and devices to improve physiological function by normalizing body structure.

19.  "Nutrition" means the recommendation by a licensee of therapeutic or preventative dietary measures, food factor concentrates, fasting and cleansing regimens and the rebalancing by a licensee of digestive system function to correct diseases of malnutrition, to resolve conditions of metabolic imbalance and to support optimal vitality.

20.  "Orthomolecular therapy" means therapy to provide the optimum concentration of substances normally present in the human body such as vitamins, minerals, amino acids and enzymes.  Orthomolecular therapy includes the diagnosis of ailments or physiologic stresses that occur as a result of genetic or environmental influences as well as acquired or inherited allergy and hypersensitivity responses.

21.  "Pharmaceutical medicine" means a drug therapy that uses prescription‑only and nonprescription pharmaceutical agents as well as medicinal agents of botanical, biological or mineral origin and that is based on current scientific indications or traditional or historical usage indications.

22.  "Practice of homeopathic medicine":

(a)  For the purposes of a person who is licensed pursuant to section 32‑2912, subsection A, means the practice of medicine in which a person purports to diagnose, treat or correct real or imagined human diseases, injuries, ailments, infirmities and deformities of a physical or mental origin and includes acupuncture, chelation therapy, homeopathy, minor surgery, neuromuscular integration, nutrition, orthomolecular therapy and pharmaceutical medicine.

(b)  For the purposes of a person who is licensed pursuant to section 32‑2912, subsection B, means the practice of medicine in which a person purports to diagnose, treat or correct real or imagined human diseases, injuries, ailments, infirmities and deformities of a physical or mental origin by means of homeopathy or nutrition.

23.  "Preceptorship" means an extended period of individual study with one or more experienced homeopathic physicians or institutions.

24.  "Prescription‑only drug" does not include a controlled substance but does include:

(a)  A drug that is generally regarded by medical experts to be unsafe if its use and dosage are not supervised by a medical practitioner.

(b)  A drug that is approved for use under the supervision of a medical practitioner pursuant to the federal new drug application law or section 32‑1962.

(c)  A potentially harmful drug if its labeling does not contain full directions for its use by the patient.

(d)  A drug that is required by federal law to bear on its label the following words:  "Caution:  Federal law prohibits dispensing without prescription."

25.  "Professional negligence" means any of the following:

(a)  That a licensee administers treatment to a patient in a manner that is contrary to accepted practices and that harms the patient if it can be shown to the board's satisfaction that accepted practices are inherently less hazardous.

(b)  That a licensee commits an act of unprofessional conduct or displays an unreasonable lack of professional skill or fidelity.

(c)  That a licensee's negligence, carelessness or disregard of established principles or practice results in a patient's injury, unnecessary suffering or death.

26.  "Special purpose licensing examination" means an examination developed by the national board of medical examiners on behalf of the federation of state medical boards for use by state licensing boards to test the basic medical competence of physicians who are applying for licensure and who have been in practice in another jurisdiction of the United States and to determine the competence of a physician under investigation by a state licensing board. END_STATUTE

Sec. 9.  Section 32-2933, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE32-2933.  Definition of unprofessional conduct

A.  In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires, "unprofessional conduct" includes the following acts, whether occurring in this state or elsewhere:

1.  Performing an invasive surgical procedure not specifically permitted by this chapter or by board rules or pursuant to a license issued under chapter 13 or 17 of this title.

2.  Wilfully betraying a professional secret or wilfully violating a privileged communication except as either of these may otherwise be required by law.  This paragraph does not prevent members of the board from the full and free exchange of information with the licensing and disciplinary boards of other states, territories or districts of the United States or with foreign countries or with the Arizona homeopathic and integrative medical association or any of its component organizations or with the homeopathic medical organizations of other states, counties, districts or territories or with those of foreign countries.

3.  Committing a felony, whether or not involving moral turpitude, or a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude.  In either case, conviction by any court of competent jurisdiction or a plea of no contest is deemed conclusive evidence of guilt.

4.  Exhibiting habitual intemperance in the use of alcohol or habitual substance abuse.

5.  Violating federal, state, county or municipal laws or regulations applicable to the practice of medicine or relating to public health.

6.  Prescribing a controlled substance for other than accepted therapeutic purposes.

7.  Committing conduct that the board determines is gross professional negligence, repeated professional negligence or any negligence that causes the death of a patient.

8.  Impersonating another person licensed pursuant to this chapter.

9.  Acting or assuming to act as a member of the board if this is not true.

10.  Procuring or attempting to procure a license to practice homeopathic medicine by fraud, by misrepresentation or by knowingly taking advantage of the mistake of another.

11.  Having professional connection with or lending one's name to an illegal practitioner of homeopathic medicine or of any of the other healing arts.

12.  Representing that a manifestly incurable disease, injury, ailment or infirmity can be permanently cured or that a curable disease, injury, ailment or infirmity can be cured within a stated time if this is not true.

13.  Offering, undertaking or agreeing to cure or treat a disease, injury, ailment or infirmity by a secret means, method, device or instrumentality.

14.  Refusing to divulge to the board on demand the means, method, device or instrumentality used in the treatment of a disease, injury, ailment or infirmity.

15.  Giving or receiving or aiding or abetting the giving or receiving of rebates, either directly or indirectly.

16.  Knowingly making any false or fraudulent statement, written or oral, in connection with the practice of homeopathic medicine except as the same may be necessary for accepted therapeutic purposes.

17.  Exhibiting immorality or misconduct that tends to discredit the profession.

18.  Being disciplined by another regulatory jurisdiction because of the licensee's mental or physical inability to engage safely in the practice of medicine, medical incompetence or unprofessional conduct as defined by that jurisdiction and that corresponds directly or indirectly with an act of unprofessional conduct prescribed by this section.  The disciplinary action may include refusing, denying, revoking or suspending a license, issuing a formal reprimand, issuing a decree of censure or otherwise limiting, restricting or monitoring the licensee or placing the licensee on probation.

19.  Committing any conduct or practice contrary to recognized standards of ethics of the homeopathic medical profession, any conduct or practice that does or might constitute a danger to the health, welfare or safety of the patient or the public or any conduct, practice or condition that does or might impair the ability to practice homeopathic medicine safely and skillfully.

20.  Failing or refusing to maintain adequate records on a patient or to make patient records promptly available to another licensee on request and receipt of proper authorization.

21.  Advertising in a false, deceptive or misleading manner.

22.  Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of or conspiring to violate this chapter or any board rule.

23.  Using a controlled substance unless it is prescribed by a physician for use during a prescribed course of treatment.

24.  Prescribing, dispensing or administering anabolic androgenic steroids for other than therapeutic purposes.

25.  Prescribing or dispensing controlled substances to members of the licensee's immediate family.

26.  Prescribing, dispensing or administering schedule II controlled substances as defined in prescribed by section 36‑2513 or the rules adopted pursuant to section 36‑2513, including amphetamines and similar schedule II sympathomimetic drugs in the treatment of exogenous obesity for a period in excess of thirty days in any one year, or the nontherapeutic use of injectable amphetamines.

27.  Dispensing a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid.

28.  Using experimental forms of diagnosis and treatment without adequate informed patient consent, without a board approved written disclosure that the form of diagnosis and treatment to be used is experimental and without conforming to generally accepted experimental criteria, including protocols, detailed records, periodic analysis of results and periodic review by a peer review committee.

29.  Engaging in sexual intimacies with a patient.

30.  Using the designation "M.D." or "D.O." in a way that would lead the public to believe that a person is licensed by the Arizona medical board or the Arizona board of osteopathic examiners in medicine and surgery in this state if this is not the case.

31.  Falsely or fraudulently representing or holding oneself out as being a homeopathic medical specialist.

32.  Failing to dispense drugs and devices in compliance with article 4 of this chapter.

33.  Violating a formal board order, terms of probation or a stipulation issued or entered into by the board or its designee under this chapter.

34.  Charging a fee for services not rendered or charging and collecting a clearly unreasonable fee.  In determining the reasonableness of the fee, the board shall consider the fee customarily charged in this state for similar services in relation to modifying factors such as the time required, the complexity of the service and the skill required to perform the service properly.  This paragraph does not apply if there is a clearly written contract for a fixed fee between the licensee and the patient that is entered into before the licensee provides the service.

35.  Failing to appropriately direct, collaborate with or supervise a licensed, certified or registered health care provider, a homeopathic medical assistant or office personnel employed or assigned to the licensee to assist in the medical care of patients.

36.  Knowingly making a false or misleading statement on a form required by the board or in written correspondence with the board.

37.  Failing to furnish legally requested information in a timely manner to the board or its investigators or representatives.

38.  Failing to allow properly authorized board personnel to examine or have access to a licensee's documents, reports or records that relate to the licensee's medical practice or medically related activities.

39.  Signing a blank, undated or predated prescription form.

40.  Refusing to submit to a body fluid examination required under section 32‑2941 or pursuant to a board investigation into the licensee's substance abuse.

41.  Prescribing, dispensing or furnishing a prescription medication or a prescription-only device as defined in section 32‑1901 to a person unless the licensee first conducts a comprehensive physical or mental health status examination of that person or has previously established a doctor-patient relationship.  This paragraph does not apply to:

(a)  A licensee who provides temporary patient supervision on behalf of the patient's regular treating licensed health care professional.

(b)  Emergency medical situations as defined in section 41‑1831.

(c)  Prescriptions written to prepare a patient for a medical examination.

(d)  Prescriptions written or prescription medications issued for use by a county or tribal public health department for immunization programs or emergency treatment or in response to an infectious disease investigation, a public health emergency, an infectious disease outbreak or an act of bioterrorism.  For the purposes of this subdivision, "bioterrorism" has the same meaning prescribed in section 36‑781.

42.  Failing to obtain from a patient before an examination or treatment a signed informed consent that includes language that makes it clear the licensee is providing homeopathic medical treatment instead of or in addition to standard conventional allopathic or osteopathic treatment.

B.  If a person is licensed pursuant to section 32‑2912, subsection B, unprofessional conduct also includes the following:

1.  Performing an invasive procedure, including performing intravenous therapy, drawing bodily fluids or ordering genetic testing.

2.  Prescribing, dispensing or administering any controlled substance.

3.  Prescribing, dispensing or administering a prescription drug.

4.  Using the title "physician", "medical doctor-homeopathic", "doctor of osteopathy‑homeopathic", "doctor of medicine (homeopathic)" or "homeopathic physician" or otherwise implying that the licensee is a licensed allopathic or osteopathic physician.

5.  Failing to correct a known misunderstanding regarding the licensee's licensure status.

6.  Failing to obtain from a patient before an examination or treatment a signed informed consent that includes language that makes it clear the licensee is not an allopathic or osteopathic physician and is providing homeopathic treatment under the limited scope of practice of homeopathic medicine pursuant to this chapter.

7.  Failing to consult with or refer patients to other health care providers when appropriate.

8.  Discontinuing or advising a patient to discontinue a physician's treatment or medicine without first consulting the prescribing or treating physician.

9.  Failing to refer a patient with a life threatening illness to a licensed allopathic or osteopathic physician currently practicing homeopathic, allopathic or osteopathic medicine. END_STATUTE

Sec. 10.  Heading change

The chapter heading of title 36, chapter 27, Arizona Revised Statutes, is changed from "UNIFORM CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES ACT" to "CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES ACT".

Sec. 11.  Section 36-2501, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2501.  Definitions

A.  In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:

1.  "Board" means the Arizona state board of pharmacy.

2.  "Cannabis" means the following substances under whatever names they may be designated:

(a)  Marijuana.

(b)  All parts of any plant of the genus cannabis, whether growing or not, its seeds, the resin extracted from any part of such plant, and every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture or preparation of such plant, its seeds or resin, but shall not include the mature stalks of such plant, fiber produced from such stalks, oil or cake made from the seeds of such plant, any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture or preparation of such mature stalks (except the resin extracted therefrom), fiber, oil, or cake or the sterilized seed of such plant which is incapable of germination.

(c)  Every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture or preparation of such resin, tetrahydrocannabinol (T.H.C.), or of such plants from which the resin has not been extracted.

3.  "Controlled substance" means a drug, substance or immediate precursor in schedules I through V of article 2 of this chapter and the rules adopted pursuant to article 2 of this chapter.

4.  "Department" means the department of public safety.

5.  "Drug dependent person" means a person who is using a controlled substance and who is in a state of psychic or physical dependence, or both, arising from the use of that substance on a continuous basis.  Drug dependence is characterized by behavioral and other responses which include a strong compulsion to take the substance on a continuing basis in order to experience its psychic effects or to avoid the discomfort caused by its absence.

6.  "Drug enforcement administration" means the drug enforcement administration of the department of justice of the United States or its successor agency.

7.  "Immediate precursor" means a substance which that the board has found to be and by rule designates as being the principal compound commonly used or produced primarily for use and which that is an immediate chemical intermediary used or likely to be used in the manufacture of a controlled substance, the control of which is necessary to prevent, curtail or limit manufacture.

8.  "Narcotic drug" means any of the following whether produced directly or indirectly by extraction from substances of vegetable origin or independently by means of chemical synthesis or by a combination of extraction and chemical synthesis:

(a)  Opium and opiate and any salt, compound, derivation or preparation of opium or opiate.

(b)  Any salt, compound, isomer, derivative or preparation which that is chemically equivalent or identical with any of the substances referred to in subdivision (a) of this paragraph but not including the isoquinoline alkaloids of opium.

(c)  Opium poppy and poppy straw.

(d)  Coca leaves and any salt, compound, derivation or preparation of coca leaves including cocaine and its optical isomers and any salt, compound, isomer, derivation or preparation which that is chemically equivalent or identical with any of these substances but not including decocainized coca leaves or extractions of coca leaves which do not contain cocaine or ecgonine.

(e)  Cannabis.

9.  "Opiate" means any substance having an addiction‑forming or addiction‑sustaining liability similar to morphine or being capable of conversion into a drug having addiction‑forming or addiction‑sustaining liability. It does not include the dextrorotatory isomer of 3‑methoxy‑n‑methylmorphinan and its salts (dextromethorphan).  It does include its racemic and levorotatory forms.

10.  "Opium poppy" means the plant of the genus papaver, except its seeds.

11.  "Poppy straw" means all parts, except the seeds, of the opium poppy after mowing.

12.  "Production" means the manufacture, planting, cultivating, growing or harvesting of a controlled substance.

13.  "Registrant" means a person registered under the provisions of the federal controlled substances act (P.L. 91‑513; 84 Stat. 1242; 21 U.S.C. sec. 801 et seq.).

14.  "Schedule I controlled substances" means the controlled substances identified, defined prescribed or listed in or adopted by rule pursuant to section 36‑2512.

15.  "Schedule II controlled substances" means the controlled substances identified, defined prescribed or listed in or adopted by rule pursuant to section 36‑2513.

16.  "Schedule III controlled substances" means the controlled substances identified, defined prescribed or listed in or adopted by rule pursuant to section 36‑2514.

17.  "Schedule IV controlled substances" means the controlled substances identified, defined prescribed or listed in or adopted by rule pursuant to section 36‑2515.

18.  "Schedule V controlled substances" means the controlled substances identified, defined prescribed or listed in or adopted by rule pursuant to section 36‑2516.

19.  "Scientific purpose" means research, teaching or chemical analysis.

20.  "State", when applied to a part of the United States, means any state, district, commonwealth, territory or insular possession of the United States and any area subject to the legal authority of the United States of America.

B.  Words or phrases in this chapter, if not defined in subsection A of this section, have the definitions given them in title 32, chapter 18, article 1, unless the context otherwise requires. END_STATUTE

Sec. 12.  Section 36-2511, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2511.  Nomenclature

The controlled substances listed or to be listed in the schedules in sections 36‑2512, 36‑2513, 36‑2514, 36‑2515, 36‑2516 and 36‑2517 or the rules adopted pursuant to this article are included by whatever official, common, usual, chemical or trade name designated. END_STATUTE

Sec. 13.  Section 36-2512, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2512.  Substances in schedule I; rules

A.  The following controlled substances, unless specifically excepted, are included in schedule I:

1.  Any of the following, including opiates and their isomers, esters, ethers, salts and salts of isomers, esters and ethers, unless specifically excepted, whenever the existence of these isomers, esters, ethers and salts is possible within the specific chemical designation:

(a)  Acetyl‑alpha‑methylfentanyl.

(b)  Acetylmethadol.

(c)  Allylprodine.

(d)  Alphacetylmethadol, except levo‑alphacetylmethadol or LAAM.

(e)  Alphameprodine.

(f)  Alphamethadol.

(g)  Alpha‑methylfentanyl.

(h)  Alpha‑methylthiofentanyl.

(i)  Benzethidine.

(j)  Betacetylmethadol.

(k)  Beta‑hydroxyfentanyl.

(l)  Beta‑hydroxy‑3‑methylfentanyl.

(m)  Betameprodine.

(n)  Betamethadol.

(o)  Betaprodine.

(p)  Clonitazene.

(q)  Dextromoramide.

(r)  Diampromide.

(s)  3, 4‑dichloro‑N‑[2‑(dimethylamino)cyclohexyl]‑N‑methylbenzamide (U‑47700).

(t)  Diethylthiambutene.

(u)  Difenoxin.

(v)  Dimenoxadol.

(w)  Dimepheptanol.

(x)  Dimethylthiambutene.

(y)  Dioxaphetyl butyrate.

(z)  Dipipanone.

(aa)  Ephenidine.

(bb)  Ethylmethylthiambutene.

(cc)  Etonitazene.

(dd)  Etoxeridine.

(ee)  Furethidine.

(ff)  Hydroxypethidine.

(gg)  Isophenidine.

(hh)  Ketobemidone.

(ii)  Lefetamine.

(jj)  Levomoramide.

(kk)  Levophenacylmorphan.

(ll)  3‑methylfentanyl.

(mm)  3‑methylthiofentanyl.

(nn)  Morpheridine.

(oo)  MPPP(1‑methyl‑4‑phenyl‑4‑propionoxypiperidine).

(pp)  Noracymethadol.

(qq)  Norlevorphanol.

(rr)  Normethadone.

(ss)  Norpipanone.

(tt)  Para‑fluorofentanyl.

(uu)  PEPAP (1‑(2‑phenethyl)‑4‑phenyl‑4‑acetoxypiperidine).

(vv)  Phenadoxone.

(ww)  Phenampromide.

(xx)  Phenomorphan.

(yy)  Phenoperidine.

(zz)  Piritramide.

(aaa)  Proheptazine.

(bbb)  Properidine.

(ccc)  Propiram.

(ddd)  Racemoramide.

(eee)  Thiofentanyl.

(fff)  Tilidine.

(ggg)  Trimeperidine.

2.  Any of the following opium derivatives and their salts, isomers and salts of isomers, unless specifically excepted, whenever the existence of these salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible within the specific chemical designation:

(a)  Acetorphine.

(b)  Acetyldihydrocodeine.

(c)  Benzylmorphine.

(d)  4‑chloro‑n‑[‑1‑[2‑(4‑nitrophenyl)ethyl]‑2‑piperidinylidene] benzenesulfonamide (W-18).

(e)  4-chloro-n-[1-(2-pheylethyl)-2-piperidinylidene] benzenesulfonamide (W‑15).

(f)  Codeine methylbromide.

(g)  Codeine‑n‑oxide.

(h)  1-cyclohexyl-4-(1,2-diphenylethyl)piperazine (MT-45).

(i)  Cyprenorphine.

(j)  Desomorphine.

(k)  3,4‑dichloro‑n‑(‑[1‑(dimethylamino)cyclohexyl] methyl)‑benzamide (AH-7921).

(l)  Dihydromorphine.

(m)  Drotebanol.

(n)  Etorphine, except hydrochloride salt.

(o)  Heroin.

(p)  Hydromorphinol.

(q)  Methyldesorphine.

(r)  Methyldihydromorphine.

(s)  Morphine methylbromide.

(t)  Morphine methylsulfonate.

(u)  Morphine‑n‑oxide.

(v)  Myrophine.

(w)  Nicocodeine.

(x)  Nicomorphine.

(y)  Normorphine.

(z)  Pholcodine.

(aa)  Thebacon.

3.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation that contains any quantity of the following hallucinogenic substances and their salts, isomers and salts of isomers, unless specifically excepted or unless listed in another schedule, whenever the existence of these salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible within the specific chemical designation (for the purposes of this paragraph, "isomer" includes the optical, position and geometric isomers):

(a)  Alpha‑ethyltryptamine (AET).

(b)  4‑bromo‑2, 5‑dimethoxyamphetamine.

(c)  4‑bromo‑2,5‑dimethoxyphenethylamine (2C‑B, Nexus).

(d)  2, 5‑dimethoxyamphetamine.

(e)  2,5-dimethoxy-4-ethylamphetamine (DOET).

(f)  2,5-dimethoxy-4-(n)-propylthiophenethylamine (2C-T-7).

(g)  4‑methoxyamphetamine.

(h)  5‑methoxy‑3, 4‑methylenedioxyamphetamine.

(i)  4‑methyl‑2, 5‑dimethoxyamphetamine.

(j)  3,4-methylenedioxy amphetamine.

(k)  3, 4‑methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA).

(l)  3, 4‑methylenedioxy‑N‑ethylamphetamine (N-ethyl MDA, MDE, MDEA).

(m)  N‑hydroxy‑3,4‑methylenedioxyamphetamine (N-hydroxy MDA).

(n)  3, 4, 5‑trimethoxy amphetamine.

(o)  5-methoxy-N,N,-dimethyltryptamine (5-MeO-DMT).

(p)  Alpha-methyltryptamine (AMT).

(q)  Bufotenine.

(r)  Diethyltryptamine.

(s)  Dimethyltryptamine.

(t)  5-methoxy-N,N-diisopropyltryptamine (5-MeO-DIPT).

(u)  Ibogaine.

(v)  Lysergic acid diethylamide.

(w)  Cannabis, except the synthetic isomer of delta‑9‑

tetraydrocannabinol.

(x)  Mescaline.

(y)  Parahexyl.

(z)  Peyote.

(aa)  N‑ethyl‑3‑piperidyl benzilate.

(bb)  N‑methyl‑3‑piperidyl benzilate.

(cc)  Psilocybin.

(dd)  Psilocyn.

(ee)  Ethylamine analog of phencyclidine.

(ff)  Pyrrolidine analog of phencyclidine.

(gg)  1‑(1‑(2‑thienyl)cyclohexyl)pyrrolidine.

(hh)  Thiophene analog of phencyclidine.

(ii)  4-methylmethcathinone (Mephedrone).

(jj)  3,4-methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV).

(kk)  2-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-ethylphenyl)ethanamine (2C-E).

(ll)  2-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-methylphenyl)ethanamine (2C-D).

(mm)  2-(4-chloro-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)ethanamine (2C-C).

(nn)  2-(4-iodo-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)ethanamine (2C-I).

(oo)  2-[4-(ethylthio)-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl]ethanamine (2C-T-2).

(pp)  2-[4-(isopropylthio)-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl]ethanamine (2C-T-4).

(qq)  2-(2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)ethanamine (2C-H).

(rr)  2-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-nitro-phenyl)ethanamine (2C-N).

(ss)  2-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-(n)-propylphenyl)ethanamine (2C-P).

(tt)  3,4,-methylenedioxy-N-methylcathinone (Methylone).

(uu)  2-(4-iodo-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)-N-(2-methoxybenzyl)ethanamine (25I-NBOMe, Cimbi-5).

(vv)  2-(4-chloro-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)-N-(2- methoxybenzyl)ethanamine (25C-NBOMe, Cimbi-82).

(ww)  2‑(4-bromo-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)‑N‑(2- methoxybenzyl)ethanamine (25B-NBOMe, Cimbi-36).

(xx)  (2-ethylaminopropyl)-benzofuran (EAPB).

(yy)  (2-methylaminopropyl)-benzofuran (MAPB).

(zz)  Diphenidine (DEP).

(aaa)  Methoxphenidine (MXP).

4.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation which contains any quantity of cannabimimetic substances and their salts, isomers, whether optical, positional or geometric, and salts of isomers, unless specifically excepted, whenever the existence of such salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible within the specific chemical designation.  For the purposes of this subdivision, "cannabimimetic substances" means any substances within the following structural classes:

(a)  2‑(3-hydroxycyclohexyl)phenol with substitution at the 5‑position of the phenolic ring by alkyl or alkenyl, whether or not substituted on the cyclohexyl ring to any extent.  Substances in the 2‑(3‑hydroxycyclohexyl)phenol generic definition include CP‑47,497, CP‑47,497 C8‑Homolog, CP‑55,940 and CP‑56,667.

(b)  3-naphthoyl-indazole or 3-(naphthylmethane)‑indazole by substitution at one or both of the nitrogen atoms of the indazole ring, whether or not further substituted on the indazole ring to any extent, whether or not substituted on the naphthoyl ring to any extent.  Substances in the 3-naphthoyl-indazole or 3-(naphthylmethane)-indazole generic definition include THJ2201 and THJ-018.

(c)  3-(naphthoyl)indole or 3-(naphthylmethane)indole by substitution at the nitrogen atom of the indole ring, whether or not further substituted on the indole ring to any extent, whether or not substituted on the naphthoyl or naphthyl ring to any extent.  Substances in the 3‑(naphthoyl)indole generic definition include AM-678, AM-2201, JWH-004, JWH‑007, JWH-009, JWH‑015, JWH-016, JWH-018, JWH-019, JWH-020, JWH-046, JWH‑047, JWH-048, JWH‑049, JWH-050, JWH-070, JWH-071, JWH-072, JWH-073, JWH‑076, JWH-079, JWH‑080, JWH-081, JWH-082, JWH-094, JWH-096, JWH-098, JWH‑116, JWH-120, JWH‑122, JWH-148, JWH-149, JWH-175, JWH-180, JWH-181, JWH‑182, JWH-184, JWH‑185, JWH-189, JWH-192, JWH-193, JWH-194, JWH-195, JWH‑196, JWH-197, JWH‑199, JWH-200, JWH-210, JWH-211, JWH-212, JWH-213, JWH‑234, JWH-235, JWH‑236, JWH-239, JWH-240, JWH-241, JWH-242, JWH-262, JWH‑386, JWH-387, JWH‑394, JWH-395, JWH-397, JWH-398, JWH-399, JWH-400, JWH‑412, JWH-413, JWH‑414 and JWH-415.

(d)  3-(naphthoyl)pyrrole by substitution at the nitrogen atom of the pyrrole ring, whether or not further substituted in the pyrrole ring to any extent, whether or not substituted on the naphthoyl ring to any extent. Substances in the 3-(naphthoyl)pyrrole generic definition include JWH-030, JWH-145, JWH-146, JWH-147, JWH-150, JWH-156, JWH-243, JWH-244, JWH‑245, JWH‑246, JWH-292, JWH-293, JWH-307, JWH-308, JWH-346, JWH-348, JWH‑363, JWH‑364, JWH-365, JWH-367, JWH-368, JWH-369, JWH-370, JWH-371, JWH‑373 and JWH-392.

(e)  1-(naphthylmethylene)indene by substitution of the 3‑position of the indene ring, whether or not further substituted in the indene ring to any extent, whether or not substituted on the naphthyl ring to any extent. Substances in the 1-(naphthylmethylene)indene generic definition include JWH‑176.

(f)  3-(phenylacetyl)indole or 3-(benzoyl)indole by substitution at the nitrogen atom of the indole ring, whether or not further substituted in the indole ring to any extent, whether or not substituted on the phenyl ring to any extent.  Substances in the 3‑(phenylacetyl)indole generic definition include AM-694, AM‑2233, JWH‑167, JWH‑201, JWH‑202, JWH‑203, JWH‑204, JWH‑205, JWH‑206, JWH‑207, JWH‑208, JWH‑209, JWH‑237, JWH‑248, JWH‑250, JWH‑251, JWH‑253, JWH‑302, JWH‑303, JWH‑304, JWH‑305, JWH‑306, JWH‑311, JWH‑312, JWH‑313, JWH‑314, JWH‑315, JWH‑316, RCS-4, RCS-8, SR‑18 and SR‑19.

(g)  3-(cyclopropylmethanone) indole or 3-(cyclobutylmethanone) indole or 3‑(cyclopentylmethanone) indole by substitution at the nitrogen atom of the indole ring, whether or not further substituted in the indole ring to any extent, whether or not substituted on the cyclopropyl, cyclobutyl or cyclopentyl rings to any extent.  Substances in the 3‑(cyclopropylmethanone) indole generic definition include UR‑144, Fluoro‑UR‑144 and XLR‑11.

(h)  Other substances:

(i)  (6ar,10ar)-9-(hydroxymethyl)-6,6-dimethyl-3-(2-methyloctan2-yl)-6a,7,10,10a‑tetrahydrobenzo[c]chromen-1-ol) (HU-210).

(ii)  N-(1-adamantyl)-1-pentyl-1H-indazole-3-carboxamide (APINACA, AKB48).

(iii)  Quinolin-8-yl 1-pentyl-1H-indole-3-carboxylate (PB‑22).

(iv)  Quinolin-8-yl 1-(5-fluoropentyl)-1H-indole-3-carboxylate (5F‑PB‑22).

(v)  N‑(1‑amino‑3‑methyl‑1‑oxobutan‑2‑yl)‑1‑(4‑fluorobenzyl)‑1H‑indazole‑3‑carboxamide (AB-FUBINACA).

(vi)  N‑(1‑amino‑3,3‑dimethyl‑1‑oxobutan‑2‑yl)‑1‑pentyl‑1H‑indazole‑3‑carboxamide (ADB-PINACA).

(i)  Indole-3-carboxamide or indazole-3-carboxamide with substitution at the nitrogen atom of the indole ring or by substitution at one or both of the nitrogen atoms of the indazole ring, whether or not further substituted on the indole ring or the indazole ring to any extent, whether or not substituted on the nitrogen of the carboxamide to any extent.  Substances in the indole-3-carboxamide or indazole-3-carboxamide generic definition include AKB-48, fluoro-AKB-48, APINACA, AB-PINACA, AB‑FUBINACA, ABICA AND ADBICA.

(j)  8‑Quinolinyl-indole-3-carboxylate or 8‑quinolinyl‑

indazole‑3-carboxylate by substitution at the nitrogen atom of the indole ring or by substitution at one or both of the nitrogen atoms of the indazole ring, whether or not further substituted in the indole ring or indazole ring to any extent, whether or not substituted on the quinoline ring to any extent.  Substances in the 8‑quinolinyl-indole-3-carboxylate or the 8‑quinolinyl‑indazole‑3‑carboxylate generic definition include PB‑22, fluoro‑PB-22, NPB‑22 and fluoro-NPB-22.

(k)  Naphthalenyl-indole-3-carboxylate or naphthalenyl‑

indazole‑3-carboxylate by substitution at the nitrogen atom of the indole ring or by substitution at one or both of the nitrogen atoms of the indazole ring, whether or not further substituted in the indole or indazole ring to any extent, whether or not substituted on the naphthalenyl ring to any extent.  Substances in the naphthalenyl-indole-3-carboxylate or naphthalenyl-indazole-3-carboxylate generic definition include NM2201, FDU‑PB-22, SDB‑005 and fluoro SDB-005.

5.  Any of the following substances having a depressant effect on the central nervous system, including their salts, isomers and salts of isomers, unless specifically excepted or listed in another schedule, whenever the existence of such salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible within the specific chemical designation:

(a)  Etizolam.

(b)  Mecloqualone.

(c)  Methaqualone.

6.  Gamma‑hydroxybutyric acid, any salt, hydroxybutyric compound, derivative or preparation of gamma‑hydroxybutyric acid, including any isomers, esters and ethers and salts of isomers, esters and ethers of gamma‑hydroxybutyric acid, except gamma‑butyrolactone if the existence of the isomers, esters and salts is possible within the specific chemical designation.  Notwithstanding any other provision of the federal food, drug, and cosmetic act, for purposes of security requirements imposed by law or regulation on registered distributors and registered manufacturers, this substance if manufactured, distributed or processed in accordance with an exemption approved under section 505 of the federal food, drug, and cosmetic act is a controlled substance in schedule III pursuant to section 36‑2514.

7.  Any of the following stimulants including their salts, isomers and salts of isomers, unless specifically excepted or listed in another schedule, whenever the existence of these salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible within the specific chemical designation:

(a)  Alpha-methylaminovalerophenone (Pentedrone).

(b)  Alpha-pyrrolidinobutiophenone (Alpha-PBP).

(c)  Alpha-pyrrolidinopropiophenone (Alpha-PPP).

(d)  Alpha-pyrrolidinovalerophenone (Alpha-PVP).

(e)  Aminorex.

(f)  N-benzylpiperazine (BZP).

(g)  Beta-keto-n‑methylbenzodioxolylbutanamine (Butylone).

(h)  Beta-keto-n‑methylbenzodioxolylpentanamine (Pentylone).

(i)  Cathinomimetic substances which are any substances derived from cathinone, (2-amino-1-phenyl-1-propanone) by any substitution at the phenyl ring, any substitution at the 3 position, any substitution at the nitrogen atom or any combination of the above substitutions.

(j)  (+)cis‑4‑methylaminorex((+)cis‑4,5‑dihydro‑4‑methyl‑5‑phenyl-2-oxazolamine).

(k)  Dihydro-5H-indeno-(5,6-d)-1,3-dioxol-6-amine) (MDAI).

(l)  Dimethylcathinone (Metamfepramone).

(m)  Ethcathinone.

(n)  Fenethylline.

(o)  3‑fluoro‑N‑methylcathinone (3-FMC).

(p)  4‑fluoro‑N‑methylcathinone (4-FMC, Flephedrone).

(q)  Methcathinone.

(r)  Methoxy-alpha-pyrrolidinopropiophenone (MOPPP).

(s)  Methoxyphenethylamine mimetic substances which are any substances derived from 2, 5-dimethoxy-phenethylamine by any substitution at the phenyl ring, any substitution at the nitrogen atom or any combination of the above substitutions.

(t)  Methyl‑a‑pyrrolidinobutiophenone (MPBP).

(u)  4‑methyl‑alpha-pyrrolidinopropiophenone (4‑MePPP).

(v)  4‑methyl‑N‑ethylcathinone (4-MEC).

(w)  Methylenedioxy‑alphapyrrolidinopropiophenone (MDPPP).

(x)  Methylenedioxyethcathinone (Ethylone).

(y)  N‑ethylamphetamine.

(z)  Naphthypyrovalerone (Naphyrone).

(aa)  N,N‑dimethylamphetamine.

A.  The board shall adopt by rule the schedule I controlled substances listed in 21 Code of Federal Regulations section 1308.11 and section 13‑3401 and shall amend the rules, as necessary, to reflect any changes in the schedule I controlled substance designations.

B.  The board may except by rule any compound, mixture or preparation containing any substance listed in this section adopted by rule pursuant to this section from the application of all or any part of this chapter if the compound, mixture or preparation contains one or more active medicinal ingredients and if the admixtures are included therein in combinations, quantity, proportion or concentration that vitiates the potential for abuse. END_STATUTE

Sec. 14.  Section 36-2513, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2513.  Substances in schedule II; rules

A.  The following controlled substances, unless specifically excepted, are included in schedule II:

1.  Any of the following substances, whether produced directly or indirectly by extraction from substances of vegetable origin or independently by means of chemical synthesis or by combination of extraction and chemical synthesis:

(a)  Opium and opiate and any salt, compound, derivative or preparation of opium or opiate, excluding apomorphine, thebaine-derived butorphanol, dextrorphan, nalbuphine, nalmefene, naloxone and naltrexone and their respective salts, but including the following:

(i)  Raw opium.

(ii)  Opium extracts.

(iii)  Opium fluid extracts.

(iv)  Powdered opium.

(v)  Granulated opium.

(vi)  Tincture of opium.

(vii)  Codeine.

(viii)  Dihydroetorphine.

(ix)  Ethylmorphine.

(x)  Etorphine hydrochloride.

(xi)  Hydrocodone.

(xii)  Hydromorphone.

(xiii)  Metopon.

(xiv)  Morphine.

(xv)  Oripavine.

(xvi)  Oxycodone.

(xvii)  Oxymorphone.

(xviii)  Thebaine.

(b)  Any salt, compound, derivative or preparation thereof which is chemically equivalent or identical with any of the substances referred to in subdivision (a) of this paragraph, except that these substances shall not include the isoquinoline alkaloids of opium.

(c)  Opium poppy and poppy straw.

(d)  Coca leaves and any salt, compound, derivative or preparation of coca leaves, including cocaine and ecgonine and their salts, isomers, derivatives and salts of isomers and derivatives, and any salt, compound, derivative or preparation thereof which is chemically equivalent or identical with any of these substances, except that the substances shall not include decocainized coca leaves or extraction of coca leaves, which extractions do not contain cocaine or ecgonine.

(e)  Concentrate of poppy straw (the crude extract of poppy straw in either liquid, solid or powder form which contains the phenanthrene alkaloids of the opium poppy).

2.  Any of the following opiates, including isomers, esters, ethers, salts and salts of isomers, esters and ethers, whenever the existence of these isomers, esters, ethers and salts is possible within the specific chemical designation, dextrorphan and levopropoxyphene excepted:

(a)  Alfentanil.

(b)  Alphaprodine.

(c)  Anileridine.

(d)  Bezitramide.

(e)  Bulk dextropropoxyphene (nondosage forms).

(f)  Carfentanil.

(g)  Dihydrocodeine.

(h)  Diphenoxylate.

(i)  Fentanyl.

(j)  Fentanyl immediate precursor, 4-anilino-N-phenethyl-4-piperidine (ANPP).

(k)  Isomethadone.

(l)  Levo-alphacetylmethadol (LAAM).

(m)  Levomethorphan.

(n)  Levorphanol.

(o)  Metazocine.

(p)  Methadone.

(q)  Methadone-‑intermediate, 4‑cyano‑2‑dimethylamino‑4,

4‑diphenylbutane.

(r)  Moramide‑‑intermediate, 2‑methyl‑3‑morpholino‑1,

1‑diphenylpropane‑carboxylic acid.

(s)  Pethidine (meperidine).

(t)  Pethidine‑‑intermediate‑‑A, 4-cyano-1-methyl-

4-phenylpiperidine.

(u)  Pethidine‑‑intermediate‑‑B, ethyl-4-phenylpiperidine-

4-carboxylate.

(v)  Pethidine‑‑intermediate‑‑C, 1-methyl-4-phenylpiperidine-

4‑carboxylic acid.

(w)  Phenazocine.

(x)  Piminodine.

(y)  Racemethorphan.

(z)  Racemorphan.

(aa)  Remifentanil.

(bb)  Sufentanil.

(cc)  Tapentadol.

3.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation which contains any quantity of the following substances having a potential for abuse associated with a stimulant effect on the central nervous system:

(a)  Amphetamine and its salts, optical isomers and salts of its optical isomers.

(b)  Methamphetamine, including its salts, isomers and salts of isomers.

(c)  Phenmetrazine and its salts.

(d)  Methylphenidate.

(e)  Phenylacetone (immediate precursor to amphetamine and methamphetamine).

(f)  Lisdexamfetamine, and its salts, isomers and salts of isomers.

4.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation which contains any quantity of the following substances having a potential for abuse associated with a depressant effect on the central nervous system, including its salts, isomers and salts of isomers whenever the existence of such salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible within the specific chemical designation:

(a)  Amobarbital.

(b)  Glutethimide.

(c)  Pentobarbital.

(d)  Phencyclidine.

(e)  Phencyclidine immediate precursors:

(i)  1‑phenylcyclohexylamine.

(ii)  1‑piperidinocyclohexanecarbonitrile (PCC).

(f)  Secobarbital.

5.  Nabilone (hallucinogenic substance).

A.  The board shall adopt by rule the schedule II controlled substances listed in 21 Code of Federal Regulations section 1308.12 and shall amend the rules, as necessary, to reflect any changes in the schedule II controlled substance designations.

B.  The board may except by rule any compound, mixture or preparation containing any substance listed in adopted by rule pursuant to this section from the application of all or any part of this chapter if the compound, mixture or preparation contains one or more active medicinal ingredients and if the admixtures are included therein in combinations, quantity, proportion or concentration that vitiates the potential for abuse. END_STATUTE

Sec. 15.  Section 36-2514, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2514.  Substances in schedule III; rules; definition

A.  The following controlled substances, unless specifically excepted, are included in schedule III:

1.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation which contains any quantity of the following substances having a potential for abuse associated with a stimulant effect on the central nervous system, including its salts, isomers, whether optical, position or geometric, and salts of such isomers whenever the existence of such salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible within the specific chemical designation:

(a)  Benzphetamine.

(b)  Chlorphentermine.

(c)  Clortermine.

(d)  Phendimetrazine.

2.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation which contains any quantity of the following substances having a potential for abuse associated with a depressant effect on the central nervous system:

(a)  Any compound, mixture or preparation containing amobarbital, secobarbital, pentobarbital or any salt thereof and one or more other active medicinal ingredients which are not listed in any schedule.

(b)  Any suppository dosage form containing amobarbital, secobarbital, pentobarbital or any salt of any of these drugs and approved by the federal act for marketing only as a suppository.

(c)  Any substance which contains any quantity of a derivative of barbituric acid or any salt thereof.

(d)  Chlorhexadol.

(e)  Embutramide.

(f)  Any drug product containing gamma hydroxybutyric acid, including its salts, isomers and salts of isomers, for which an application is approved under section 505 of the federal food, drug, and cosmetic act.

(g)  Ketamine, and its salts, isomers and salts of isomers.

(h)  Lysergic acid.

(i)  Lysergic acid amide.

(j)  Methyprylon.

(k)  Perampanel, and its salts, isomers and salts of isomers.

(l)  Sulfondiethylmethane.

(m)  Sulfonethylmethane.

(n)  Sulfonmethane.

(o)  Tiletamine/zolazepam (telazol) or any salt thereof.

3.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation containing the narcotic drug nalorphine  or any of its salts.

4.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation containing the narcotic drug buprenorphine or any of its salts.

5.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation containing limited quantities of any of the following narcotic drugs or any salts thereof, calculated as the free anhydrous base or alkaloid:

(a)  Not more than one point eight grams of codeine, or any of its salts, per one hundred milliliters or not more than ninety milligrams per dosage unit with an equal or greater quantity of an isoquinoline alkaloid of opium.

(b)  Not more than one point eight grams of codeine, or any of its salts, per one hundred milliliters or not more than ninety milligrams per dosage unit with one or more active, nonnarcotic ingredients in recognized therapeutic amounts.

(c)  Not more than one point eight grams of dihydrocodeine, or any of its salts, per one hundred milliliters or not more than ninety milligrams per dosage unit with one or more active, nonnarcotic ingredients in recognized therapeutic amounts.

(d)  Not more than three hundred milligrams of ethylmorphine, or any of its salts, per one hundred milliliters or not more than fifteen milligrams per dosage unit with one or more active, nonnarcotic ingredients in recognized therapeutic amounts.

(e)  Not more than five hundred milligrams of opium per one hundred milliliters or per one hundred grams or not more than twenty‑five milligrams per dosage unit with one or more active, nonnarcotic ingredients in recognized therapeutic amounts.

(f)  Not more than fifty milligrams of morphine, or any of its salts, per one hundred milliliters or per one hundred grams with one or more active, nonnarcotic ingredients in recognized therapeutic amounts.

6.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation containing any of the following anabolic steroids but not including an anabolic steroid that is expressly intended for administration through implants to cattle or other nonhuman species and that has been approved by the United States food and drug administration for such administration:

(a)  3beta, 17-dihydroxy-5a-androstane.

(b)  3alpha, 17beta-dihydroxy-5a-androstane.

(c)  5alpha-androstan-3, 17-dione.

(d)  3beta, 17beta-dihydroxy-5alpha-androst-1-ene.

(e)  3alpha, 17beta-dihydroxy-5alpha-androst-1-ene.

(f)  4-androstenediol.

(g)  5-androstenediol.

(h)  1-androstenedione.

(i)  4-androstenedione.

(j)  5-androstenedione.

(k)  Bolasterone.

(l)  Boldenone.

(m)  Boldione.

(n)  Calusterone.

(o)  Clostebol.

(p)  Dehydrochlormethyltestosterone.

(q)  Desoxymethyltestosterone.

(r)  Delta1-dihydrotestosterone.

(s)  4-dihydrotestosterone.

(t)  Drostanolone.

(u)  Ethylestrenol.

(v)  Fluoxymesterone.

(w)  Formebolone.

(x)  Furazabol.

(y)  13beta-ethyl-17beta-hydroxygon-4-en-3-one.

(z)  4-hydroxytestosterone.

(aa)  4-hydroxy-19-nortestosterone.

(bb)  Mestanolone.

(cc)  Mesterolone.

(dd)  Methandienone.

(ee)  Methandriol.

(ff)  Methasterone.

(gg)  Methenolone.

(hh)  17alpha-methyl-3beta, 17beta-dihydroxy-5a-androstane.

(ii)  17alpha-methyl-3alpha, 17beta-dihydroxy-5a-androstane.

(jj)  17alpha-methyl-3beta, 17beta-dihydroxyandrost-4-ene.

(kk)  17alpha-methyl-4-hydroxynandrolone.

(ll)  Methyldienolone.

(mm)  Methyltrienolone.

(nn)  Methyltestosterone.

(oo)  Mibolerone.

(pp)  17alpha-methyl-delta1-dihydrotestosterone.

(qq)  Nandrolone.

(rr)  3beta, 17beta-dihydroxyestr-4-ene.

(ss)  3alpha, 17beta-dihydroxyestr-4-ene.

(tt)  3beta, 17beta-dihydroxyestr-5-ene.

(uu)  3alpha, 17beta-dihydroxyestr-5-ene.

(vv)  19-nor-4,9(10)-androstadienedione.

(ww)  19-nor-4-androstenedione.

(xx)  19-nor-5-androstenedione.

(yy)  Norbolethone.

(zz)  Norclostebol.

(aaa)  Norethandrolone.

(bbb)  Normethandrolone.

(ccc)  Oxandrolone.

(ddd)  Oxymesterone.

(eee)  Oxymetholone.

(fff)  Prostanozol.

(ggg)  Stanozolol.

(hhh)  Stenbolone.

(iii)  Testolactone.

(jjj)  Testosterone.

(kkk)  Tetrahydrogestrinone.

(lll)  Trenbolone.

(mmm)  Any salt, ester or isomer of a drug or substance described or listed in this paragraph, if that salt, ester or isomer promotes muscle growth.

7.  Dronabinol, (synthetic delta-9-tetrahyrocannabinol) in sesame oil and encapsulated in a soft gelatin capsule in a United States food and drug administration approved product (hallucinogenic substance).

A.  The board shall adopt by rule the schedule III controlled substances listed in 21 Code of Federal Regulations sections 1300.01 and 1308.13 and shall amend the rules, as necessary, to reflect any changes in the schedule III controlled substance designations.

B.  If any person prescribes, dispenses or distributes an anabolic steroid for human use that has been approved by the United States food and drug administration for the express intent of administration through implants to cattle or other nonhuman species, the person shall be considered to have prescribed, dispensed or distributed an anabolic steroid within the meaning of this section.

C.  The board may except by rule any compound, mixture or preparation containing any substance listed in adopted by rule pursuant to this section from the application of all or any part of this chapter if the compound, mixture or preparation contains one or more active medicinal ingredients and if the admixtures are included therein in combinations, quantity, proportion or concentration that vitiates the potential for abuse.

D.  For the purposes of this section, "anabolic steroid" means a growth promoting any drug or hormonal substance that is chemically or pharmacologically related to testosterone, other than estrogens, progestins, corticosteroids and dehydroepiandrosterone. END_STATUTE

Sec. 16.  Section 36-2515, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2515.  Substances in schedule IV; rules

A.  The following controlled substances, unless specifically excepted, are included in schedule IV:

1.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation that contains any quantity of the following substances having a potential for abuse associated with a stimulant effect on the central nervous system, including its salts, isomers, whether optical, position or geometric, and salts of such isomers whenever the existence of such salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible within the specific chemical designation:

(a)  Cathine (+(4)‑norpseudoephedrine).

(b)  Diethylpropion.

(c)  Fencamfamin.

(d)  Fenproporex.

(e)  Mazindol.

(f)  Mefenorex.

(g)  Modafinil.

(h)  Pemoline (including organometallic complexes and chelates thereof).

(i)  Phentermine.

(j)  Pipradrol.

(k)  Sibutramine.

(l)  SPA((‑)‑1‑dimethylamino‑1, 2‑diphenylethane).

2.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation that contains any quantity of the following substances having a potential for abuse associated with a depressant effect on the central nervous system, including its salts, isomers and salts of isomers whenever the existence of such salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible within the specific chemical designation:

(a)  Alfaxalone.

(b)  Alprazolam.

(c)  Barbital.

(d)  Bromazepam.

(e)  Camazepam.

(f)  Carisoprodol.

(g)  Chloral betaine.

(h)  Chloral hydrate.

(i)  Chlordiazepoxide.

(j)  Clobazam.

(k)  Clonazepam.

(l)  Clorazepate.

(m)  Clotiazepam.

(n)  Cloxazolam.

(o)  Delorazepam.

(p)  Diazepam.

(q)  Dichloralphenazone.

(r)  Estazolam.

(s)  Ethchlorvynol.

(t)  Ethinamate.

(u)  Ethyl loflazepate.

(v)  Fludiazepam.

(w)  Flunitrazepam.

(x)  Flurazepam.

(y)  Fospropofol.

(z)  Halazepam.

(aa)  Haloxazolam.

(bb)  Ketazolam.

(cc)  Loprazolam.

(dd)  Lorazepam.

(ee)  Lormetazepam.

(ff)  Mebutamate.

(gg)  Medazepam.

(hh)  Meprobamate.

(ii)  Methohexital.

(jj)  Methylphenobarbital (methobarbital).

(kk)  Midazolam.

(ll)  Nimetazepam.

(mm)  Nitrazepam.

(nn)  Nordiazepam.

(oo)  Oxazepam.

(pp)  Oxazolam.

(qq)  Paraldehyde.

(rr)  Petrichloral.

(ss)  Phenobarbital.

(tt)  Pinazepam.

(uu)  Prazepam.

(vv)  Quazepam.

(ww)  Suvorexant.

(xx)  Temazepam.

(yy)  Tetrazepam.

(zz)  Triazolam.

(aaa)  Zaleplon.

(bbb)  Zolpidem.

(ccc)  Zopiclone.

3.  Fenfluramine, and its salts, isomers, whether optical, position or geometric, and its salts of isomers, whenever the existence of such salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible.

4.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation containing any of the following narcotic drugs, or their salts, calculated as the free anhydrous base or alkaloid, in limited quantities as set forth below:

(a)  Not more than one milligram of difenoxin and not less than twenty‑five micrograms of atropine sulfate per dosage unit.

(b)  Dextropropoxyphene (alpha-(+)-4-dimethylamino-1,2-diphenyl-3-methyl‑2-propionoxybutane).

(c)  Tramadol, 2-[(dimethylamino)methyl]-1-(3-methoxyphenyl) cyclohexanol, and its salts, optical and geometric isomers, and its salts of isomers.

5.  Any material, compound, mixture or preparation that contains any quantity of the following substances, including its salts:

(a)  Pentazocine.

(b)  Butorphanol, including its optical isomers.

6.  Lorcaserin, and its salts, isomers and salts of isomers, whenever the existence of such salts, isomers and salts of isomers is possible.

A.  The board shall adopt by rule the schedule IV controlled substances listed in 21 Code of Federal Regulations section 1308.14 and shall amend the rules, as necessary, to reflect any changes in the schedule IV controlled substance designations.

B.  The board may except by rule any compound, mixture or preparation containing any substance listed in adopted by rule pursuant to this section from the application of all or any part of this chapter if the compound, mixture or preparation contains one or more active medicinal ingredients and if the admixtures are included therein in combinations, quantity, proportion or concentration that vitiates the potential for abuse. END_STATUTE

Sec. 17.  Section 36-2516, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2516.  Substances in schedule V; rules

The following controlled substances or controlled substance precursors are included in schedule V:

1.  Any compound, mixture or preparation containing limited quantities of any of the following narcotic drugs or their salts, calculated as the free anhydrous base or alkaloid, which also contains one or more nonnarcotic active medicinal ingredients in sufficient proportion to confer upon the compound, mixture or preparation valuable medicinal qualities other than those possessed by the narcotic drug alone:

(a)  Not more than two hundred milligrams of codeine, or any of its salts, per one hundred milliliters or per one hundred grams.

(b)  Not more than one hundred milligrams of dihydrocodeine, or any of its salts, per one hundred milliliters or per one hundred grams.

(c)  Not more than one hundred milligrams of ethylmorphine, or any of its salts, per one hundred milliliters or per one hundred grams.

(d)  Not more than 2.5 milligrams of diphenoxylate and not less than twenty‑five micrograms of atropine sulfate per dosage unit.

(e)  Not more than one hundred milligrams of opium per one hundred milliliters or per one hundred grams.

(f)  Not more than 0.5 milligram of difenoxin and not less than twenty‑five micrograms of atropine sulfate per dosage unit.

2.  Unless specifically excepted or listed in another schedule, any material, compound, mixture or preparation containing pyrovalerone.

A.  The board shall adopt by rule the schedule V controlled substances listed in 21 Code of Federal Regulations section 1308.15 and shall amend the rules, as necessary, to reflect any changes in the schedule V controlled substance designations.

3.  B.  Any compound or preparation containing the single active ingredient ephedrine or any of its salts is included in schedule V.

4.  Unless specifically excepted or listed in another schedule in this article, any material, compound, mixture or preparation that contains any quantity of the following substances having a depressant effect on the central nervous system, including its salts:

(a)  Ezogabine.

(b)  Lacosamide.

(c)  Pregabalin. END_STATUTE

Sec. 18.  Section 36-2525, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2525.  Prescription orders; labels; packaging; definition

A.  In addition to the requirements of section 32‑1968 pertaining to prescription orders for prescription‑only drugs, the prescription order for a controlled substance shall bear the name, address and federal registration number of the prescriber.  A prescription order for a schedule II controlled substance drug other than a hospital drug order for a hospital inpatient shall contain only one drug order per prescription blank.  If authorized verbally by the prescriber, the pharmacist may make changes to a written or electronic schedule II controlled substance prescription order, except for any of the following:

1.  The patient's name.

2.  The prescriber's name.

3.  The drug name.

B.  The pharmacist must document on the original prescription order the changes that were made pursuant to the verbal authorization and record the time and date the authorization was granted.

C.  A person who is registered to dispense controlled substances under this chapter must keep and maintain prescription orders for controlled substances as follows:

1.  Prescription orders for controlled substances listed in schedules I and II must be maintained in a separate prescription file for controlled substances listed in schedules I and II only.

2.  Prescription orders for controlled substances listed in schedules III, IV and V must be maintained either in a separate prescription file for controlled substances listed in schedules III, IV and V only or in a form that allows them to be readily retrievable from the other prescription records of the registrant.  For the purposes of this paragraph, "readily retrievable" means that, when the prescription is initially filed, the face of the prescription is stamped in red ink in the lower right corner with the letter "C" in a font that is not less than one inch high and that the prescription is filed in the usual consecutively numbered prescription file for noncontrolled substance prescriptions.  The requirement to stamp the hard copy prescription with a red "C" is waived if a registrant employs an electronic data processing system or other electronic recordkeeping system for prescriptions that permits identification by prescription number and retrieval of original documents by the prescriber's name, patient's name, drug dispensed and date filled.

D.  Except in emergency situations in conformity with subsection E of this section, under the conditions specified in subsections F and G of this section or when dispensed directly by a medical practitioner to an ultimate user, a controlled substance in schedule II shall not be dispensed without either the written prescription order in ink or indelible pencil or typewritten and manually signed by the medical practitioner or an electronic prescription order as prescribed by federal law or regulation.  Beginning January 1, 2020, a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid may be dispensed only with an electronic prescription order as prescribed by federal law or regulation.  A prescription order for a schedule II controlled substance shall not be dispensed more than ninety days after the date on which the prescription order was issued.  Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a pharmacy may sell and dispense a schedule II controlled substance prescribed by a medical practitioner who is located in another county in this state or in another state if the prescription was issued to the patient according to and in compliance with the applicable laws of the state of the prescribing medical practitioner and federal law.  A prescription order for a schedule II controlled substance shall not be refilled.  A pharmacist is not in violation of this subsection and may dispense a prescription order in the following circumstances:

1.  During any time period in which an established electronic prescribing system or a pharmacy management system is not operational or available in a timely manner.  If the electronic prescribing system or a pharmacy management system is not operational or available, the pharmacist may dispense a prescription order that is written for a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid.  The pharmacist must maintain a record, for a period of time prescribed by the board, of when the electronic prescribing system or pharmacy management system is not operational or available in a timely manner.

2.  The prescription order for a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid is in writing and indicates that the medical practitioner who issued the prescription order provided care for the patient in a veterans administration facility, a health facility on a military base, an Indian health services hospital or other Indian health service facility, or a tribal‑owned clinic.

E.  In emergency situations, emergency quantities of schedule II controlled substances may be dispensed on an oral prescription order of a medical practitioner.  Such an emergency prescription order shall be immediately reduced to writing by the pharmacist and shall contain all the information required for schedule II controlled substances except for the manual signing of the order by the medical practitioner.  Within seven days after authorizing an emergency oral prescription order, the prescribing medical practitioner shall cause a written prescription order manually signed for the emergency quantity prescribed to be delivered to the dispensing pharmacist or an electronic prescription order to be transmitted to the dispensing pharmacist.  In addition to conforming to other requirements for prescription orders for schedule II controlled substances, the prescription order shall indicate electronically or have written on its face "authorization for emergency dispensing" and the date of the oral order.  If the prescribing medical practitioner fails to deliver such an emergency prescription order within seven days in conformance with board rules, the pharmacist shall notify the board.  Failure of the pharmacist to notify the board voids the authority conferred by this subsection to dispense without a prescription order of a medical practitioner that is electronic or that is written and manually signed.

F.  Notwithstanding subsections D and N of this section, a patient's medical practitioner or the medical practitioner's agent may transmit to a pharmacy by fax a prescription order written for a schedule II controlled substance, including opioids, if the prescription order is any of the following:

1.  To be compounded for the direct administration to a patient by parenteral, intravenous, intramuscular, subcutaneous or intraspinal infusion.

2.  For a resident of a long-term care facility.

3.  For a patient who is enrolled in a hospice care program that is certified or paid for by medicare under title XVIII or a hospice program that is licensed by this state.  The medical practitioner or the medical practitioner's agent must note on the prescription that the patient is a hospice patient.

G.  A fax transmitted pursuant to subsection F of this section is the original written prescription order for purposes of this section and must be maintained as required by subsection C of this section.

H.  Except when dispensed directly by a medical practitioner to an ultimate user, a controlled substance included in schedule III or IV that requires a prescription order as determined under state or federal laws shall not be dispensed without a written or oral prescription order of a medical practitioner or an electronic prescription order as prescribed by federal law or regulation.  The prescription order shall not be filled or refilled more than six months after the date on which the prescription order was issued.  A prescription order authorized to be refilled shall not be refilled more than five times.  Additional quantities may only be authorized by the prescribing medical practitioner through issuance of a new prescription order that shall be treated by the pharmacist as a new and separate prescription order.

I.  Except when dispensed directly by a medical practitioner to an ultimate user, a controlled substance that is included in schedule V and that requires a prescription order as determined under state or federal laws shall not be dispensed without a written or oral prescription order of a medical practitioner.  The prescription order may be refilled as authorized by the prescribing medical practitioner but shall not be filled or refilled more than one year after the date of issuance.

J.  A controlled substance that is listed in schedule III, IV or V and that does not require a prescription order as determined under state or federal laws may be dispensed at retail by a pharmacist or a pharmacy intern under the pharmacist's supervision without a prescription order to a purchaser who is at least eighteen years of age if all of the following are true:

1.  It is for a legitimate medical purpose.

2.  Not more than two hundred forty cubic centimeters (eight ounces) of any such controlled substance containing opium, nor more than one hundred twenty cubic centimeters (four ounces) of any other such controlled substance, nor more than forty‑eight dosage units of any such controlled substance containing opium, nor more than twenty‑four dosage units of any other controlled substance may be dispensed at retail to the same purchaser in any given forty‑eight-hour period.

3.  No more than one hundred dosage units of any single active ingredient ephedrine preparation may be sold, offered for sale, bartered or given away to any one person in any one thirty‑day period.

4.  The pharmacist or pharmacy intern requires every purchaser of a controlled substance under this subsection who is not known to that person to furnish suitable identification, including proof of age if appropriate.

5.  A bound record book for dispensing controlled substances under this subsection is maintained by the pharmacist and contains the name and address of the purchaser, the name and quantity of the controlled substance purchased, the date of each purchase and the name or initials of the pharmacist or pharmacy intern who dispensed the substance to the purchaser.  The book shall be maintained in conformity with the recordkeeping requirements of section 36‑2523.

K.  In the absence of a law requiring a prescription for a schedule V controlled substance, the board, by rules, may require, or remove the requirement of, a prescription order for a schedule V controlled substance.

L.  The label on a container of a controlled substance that is directly dispensed by a medical practitioner or pharmacist and that is not for the immediate administration to the ultimate user, such as a bed patient in a hospital, shall bear the name and address of the dispensing medical practitioner or pharmacist, the serial number, the date of dispensing, the name of the prescriber, the name of the patient or, if an animal, the name of the owner of the animal and the species of the animal, the directions for use and cautionary statements, if any, contained in the prescription order or required by law.  If the controlled substance is included in schedule II, III or IV, the label shall bear a transfer warning to the effect:  "Caution:  federal law prohibits the transfer of this drug to any person other than the patient for whom it was prescribed".  The container of a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid that is directly dispensed by a pharmacist and that is not for the immediate administration to the ultimate user shall have a red cap and a warning label prescribed by the board about potential addiction.  The board or the executive director, if delegated by the board, may waive the red cap requirement if implementing the requirement is not feasible because of the specific dosage form or packaging type.

M.  Controlled substances in schedules II, III, IV and V may be dispensed as electronically transmitted prescriptions if the prescribing medical practitioner is all of the following:

1.  Properly registered by the United States drug enforcement administration.

2.  Licensed in good standing in the United States jurisdiction in which the medical practitioner practices.

3.  Authorized to issue such prescriptions in the jurisdiction in which the medical practitioner is licensed.

N.  Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, beginning January 1, 2020, each prescription order, except a prescription order under subsection F of this section, that is issued by a medical practitioner for a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid shall be transmitted electronically to the dispensing pharmacy.  A medical practitioner is not in violation of this subsection:

1.  During any time in which an established electronic prescribing system or a pharmacy management system is not operational or available in a timely manner.  If the electronic prescribing system or a pharmacy management system is not operational or available, the medical practitioner may write a prescription order for a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid.  The medical practitioner shall indicate on the written prescription order that the electronic prescribing system or pharmacy management system is not operational or available.  The medical practitioner must maintain a record, for a period of time prescribed by the board, of when the electronic prescribing system or pharmacy management system is not operational or available in a timely manner.

2.  If the medical practitioner writes a prescription order for a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid that will be dispensed for the patient from a veterans administration facility, a health facility on a military base, an Indian health services hospital or other Indian health service facility, or a tribal‑owned clinic.

O.  The requirement in subsections D and N of this section for an electronic prescription order does not apply to a prescription order for a schedule II controlled substance that is an opioid that is issued for medication-assisted treatment for a substance use disorder.

P.  The board, by rule, may provide additional requirements for prescribing and dispensing controlled substances.

Q.  In consultation with the task force established pursuant to section 36‑2603, the board may prescribe by rule additional exceptions to the electronic prescribing requirements specified in this section for both pharmacists and medical practitioners.

R.  Notwithstanding subsections D and N of this section, a medical practitioner who is licensed pursuant to title 32, chapter 21 is not required to comply with the electronic prescribing requirements of subsections D and N of this section until the Arizona state veterinary medical examining board determines that electronic prescribing software is widely available for veterinarians and notifies the Arizona state board of pharmacy of that determination.

S.  For the purposes of this section, "medication‑assisted treatment" has the same meaning prescribed in section 32‑3201.01. END_STATUTE

Sec. 19.  Section 36-2531, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2531.  Prohibited acts; classification

A.  It is unlawful for any person:

1.  Who is subject to article 3 of this chapter to intentionally or knowingly distribute or dispense a controlled substance in violation of section 36‑2525.

2.  Who is a registrant to intentionally or knowingly manufacture a controlled substance not authorized by that person's registration or to intentionally or knowingly distribute or dispense a controlled substance not authorized by that person's registration to another registrant or other authorized person.

3.  To intentionally or knowingly refuse or fail to make, keep or furnish any record, notification, order form, statement, invoice or information required under this chapter.

4.  To intentionally or knowingly refuse an entry into any premises for any inspection authorized by this chapter.

5.  To knowingly dispense or deliver anabolic steroids without a written prescription or for a nontherapeutic use.

6.  To intentionally or knowingly sell, buy, exchange or give away any preparation subject to section 36‑2516 or the rules adopted pursuant to section 36‑2516, unless the preparation is to be used for a legitimate medical purpose and in compliance with this chapter.

B.  Notwithstanding any other law, any person who violates any provision of subsection A of this section is guilty of a class 4 felony.

C.  It is unlawful for any person intentionally or knowingly:

1.  To distribute as a registrant a controlled substance classified in schedule I or II, except pursuant to an order form as required by section 36‑2524.

2.  To furnish false or fraudulent material information in, or omit any material information from, any application, report or other document required to be kept or filed under this chapter or any record required to be kept by this chapter.

D.  A person who violates any provision of subsection C of this section is guilty of a class 4 felony.

E.  A person shall not provide a false prescription for a controlled substance or knowingly or intentionally acquire or obtain possession of a controlled substance by means of forgery, fraud, deception or subterfuge, including the forgery or falsification of a prescription or the nondisclosure of a material fact.  A person who violates this subsection is guilty of a class 4 felony.

F.  Controlled substances, vehicles and items used or intended for use in violation of this chapter are subject to seizure and forfeiture in the manner provided in title 13, chapter 39. END_STATUTE

Sec. 20.  Section 36-2608, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2608.  Reporting requirements; waiver; exceptions

A.  If a medical practitioner dispenses a controlled substance listed in section 36‑2513, 36‑2514, 36‑2515 or 36‑2516 or the rules adopted pursuant to chapter 27, article 2 of this title, or if a prescription for a controlled substance listed in any of those sections is dispensed by a pharmacy in this state, a health care facility in this state for outpatient use or a board‑permitted nonresident pharmacy for delivery to a person residing in this state, the medical practitioner, health care facility or pharmacy must report the following information as applicable and as prescribed by the board by rule:

1.  The name, address, telephone number, prescription number and United States drug enforcement administration controlled substance registration number of the dispenser.

2.  The name, address and date of birth of the person for whom the prescription is written.

3.  The name, address, telephone number and United States drug enforcement administration controlled substance registration number of the prescribing medical practitioner.

4.  The name, strength, quantity, dosage and national drug code number of the schedule II, III, IV or V controlled substance dispensed.

5.  The date the prescription was dispensed.

6.  The number of refills, if any, authorized by the medical practitioner.

B.  Except as provided in subsection D of this section, a dispenser must use the September 28, 2011 version 4, release 2 latest version of the standard implementation guide for prescription monitoring programs published by the American society for automation in pharmacy or any subsequent version or release of that guide to report the required information.

C.  The board shall allow the reporter to transmit the required information by electronic data transfer if feasible or, if not feasible, on reporting forms as prescribed by the board.  The reporter shall submit the required information once each day.

D.  A dispenser who does not have an automated recordkeeping system capable of producing an electronic report in the established format may request a waiver from electronic reporting by submitting a written request to the board.  The board shall grant the request if the dispenser agrees in writing to report the data by submitting a completed universal claim form as prescribed by the board by rule.

E.  The board by rule may prescribe the prescription form to be used in prescribing a schedule II, III, IV or V controlled substance if the board determines that this would facilitate the reporting requirements of this section.

F.  The reporting requirements of this section do not apply to the following:

1.  A controlled substance that is administered directly to a patient.

2.  A controlled substance that is dispensed by a medical practitioner at a health care facility licensed by this state if the quantity dispensed is limited to an amount adequate to treat the patient for a maximum of seventy‑two hours with not more than two seventy‑two‑hour cycles within any fifteen-day period.

3.  A controlled substance sample.

4.  The wholesale distribution of a schedule II, III, IV or V controlled substance.  For the purposes of this paragraph, "wholesale distribution" has the same meaning prescribed in section 32‑1981.

5.  A facility that is registered by the United States drug enforcement administration as a narcotic treatment program and that is subject to the recordkeeping provisions of 21 Code of Federal Regulations section 1304.24.END_STATUTE