Unprofessional Conduct

Utah Administrative Code

Section: R156-37-502

Jurisdiction: UT

Bluebook Citation: Utah Admin. Code r. 156-37-502

"Unprofessional conduct" includes: (1) as a licensee with authority to prescribe or administer controlled substances: (a) prescribing or administering to oneself any Schedule II or III controlled substance that is not lawfully prescribed by another licensed practitioner having authority to prescribe the drug; (b) prescribing or administering a controlled substance for a condition that the licensee is not licensed or competent to treat; (2) violating a federal or state law relating to controlled substances; (3) failing to deliver to the Division each controlled substance license certificate issued by the Division upon an action that revokes, suspends, or limits the license; (4) failing to maintain controls over controlled substances that a prudent licensee would maintain as effective against diversion, theft, or shortage of controlled substances; (5) failing to account for shortages of controlled substance inventory for which the licensee has responsibility; (6) knowingly prescribing, selling, giving away, or administering, directly or indirectly, or offering to prescribe, sell, furnish, give away, or administer any controlled substance to a drug dependent person, as defined in Subsection 58-37-2(1)(s), except for legitimate medical purposes as permitted by law; (7) refusing to make available for inspection controlled substance stock, inventory, or records as required under Rule R156-37 or other law regulating controlled substances and controlled substance records; (8) failing to submit controlled substance prescription information to the Database Manager after being notified in writing by the Division to do so; (9) failing to get a DEA registration within the time frame in Section R156-37-305; (10) as a prescribing practitioner, failing to seek to correct a technical difficulty or electronic failure under Subsection 58-37-22(1)(d) that is reasonably within the prescribing practitioner's control; or (11) as a pharmacy, failing to seek to correct a technical difficulty or electronic failure under Subsection 58-37-22(1)(d) that is reasonably within the pharmacy's control.

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