
What You Should Know:
– In a significant move for the “tele-prescribing” landscape, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) have announced a fourth temporary extension of telemedicine flexibilities.
– This extension allows practitioners to prescribe controlled medications—including Schedule II–V drugs—via audio-video encounters without a prior in-person medical evaluation through December 31, 2026.
A Transitional Safety Net
The policy is a critical “lifeline” for roughly 7 million Americans who received remote prescriptions for controlled substances in 2024 alone. This fourth extension is less about a final decision and more about managing “regulatory debt.” By pushing the deadline to the end of 2026, the administration is buying time to finalize a permanent Special Registration for Telemedicine framework.
The “Special Registration” Horizon
The DEA is using this extension to refine a “Special Registration” that would likely require:
- Identity Verification: Use of state/federal government ID to verify patient identity during the tele-treatment.
- PDMP Checks: Mandatory review of Prescription Drug Monitoring Program data before any remote prescription is issued.
- Recordkeeping: Detailed documentation of “legitimate medical purpose” for Schedule II medications, which remain the highest-risk category for diversion.
While the extension provides “breathing room,” practitioners must stay vigilant about state-level laws, which are not preempted by this federal extension. In some jurisdictions, state-specific in-person requirements may still apply despite this federal “green light.”
“Telehealth prescribing flexibilities have become a lifeline for millions of Americans,” said HHS Deputy Secretary Jim O’Neill. “Extending them ensures continuity of care while we finish the work of putting permanent, commonsense policies in place. This action protects patients, preserves access, and maintains strong controls against diversion.”
