OBOT Program Changes: New Tennessee Laws Allow NPs and PAs to Prescribe Buprenorphine and Impose New Financial

As Tennessee continues to look for options to expand access to opioid treatment services, a new Tennessee law expands the types of providers who may prescribe medication-assisted treatment and imposes certain financial obligations on all providers who prescribe buprenorphine.

Under Tennessee HB1980, certain non-physician practitioners – such as nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) (collectively, NPPs) – may prescribe buprenorphine in Office Based Opioid Treatment (OBOT) programs if certain criteria are met (OBOT Law). It is the second bill passed by the Tennessee General Assembly during this year’s legislative session to expand access to medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder. The first bill, HB0656, allowed certain NPPs to prescribe buprenorphine but was limited to those employed by a community mental health center or a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) with clinical protocols for medication-assisted treatment (Mental Health and FQHC Law).

The OBOT Law, which goes into effect August 1, expands authorization to prescribe buprenorphine to include NPPs who have practiced as a family, adult or psychiatric NPP in Tennessee and who are currently employed or contracted with a nonresidential office-based opiate treatment facility.

OBOTs planning to use NPPs in this role must meet several strict requirements, including the following:

An NPP prescribing medication-assisted treatment also is subject to a number of requirements, including the following: