South Carolina Statutes

§ 44-53-360 — Prescriptions.

South Carolina § 44-53-360
JurisdictionSouth Carolina
Title 44HEALTH
Ch. 53POISONS, DRUGS, AND OTHER CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES

This text of South Carolina § 44-53-360 (Prescriptions.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.C. Code Ann. § 44-53-360 (2026).

Text

(a)Except when dispensed directly by a practitioner, other than a pharmacist, to an ultimate user, or in emergency situations as prescribed by the department by regulation, no controlled substance included in Schedule II may be dispensed without the written or electronic prescription of a practitioner. Prescriptions shall be retained in conformity with the requirements of Section 44-53-340. No prescription for a controlled substance in Schedule II may be refilled.
(b)A pharmacist may dispense a controlled substance included in Schedule III, IV, or V pursuant to either a written or electronic prescription signed by a practitioner, or a facsimile of a written, signed prescription, transmitted by the practitioner or the practitioner's agent to the pharmacy, or pursuant to an oral prescripti

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Related

§ 1396r
42 U.S.C. § 1396r

Legislative History

HISTORY: 1962 Code SECTION 32-1510.48; 1971 (57) 800; 1974 (58) 2228; 1975 (59) 104; 1981 Act No. 79, SECTION 7; 2000 Act No. 355, SECTION 10; 2002 Act No. 365, SECTIONS 2, 3, eff September 26, 2002; 2006 Act No. 396, SECTION 2, eff June 14, 2006; 2007 Act No. 71, SECTIONS 1 to 3, eff June 13, 2007; 2018 Act No. 201 (S.918), SECTION 1, eff May 15, 2018; 2018 Act No. 243 (H.3826), SECTION 1, eff July 16, 2018; 2019 Act No. 65 (H.3728), SECTIONS 5, 6, eff January 1, 2021; 2020 Act No. 160 (H.4938), SECTION 1, eff January 1, 2021; 2021 Act No. 23 (H.3179), SECTION 1, eff April 26, 2021. Editor's Note 2019 Act No. 65, preamble, provides as follows: "Whereas, the South Carolina General Assembly is committed to combatting the opioid epidemic occurring within this State; and "Whereas, the South Carolina General Assembly has enacted and is working to enact legislation aimed at stemming the misuse of opioids in South Carolina; and "Whereas, collecting information related to opioid use and misuse helps those working to better understand the complexities of substance abuse disorders and enables those working with patients suffering from this disease to develop strategies for treatment, education, and care; and "Whereas, the purpose of this legislation is to provide data to health care professionals treating patients who have been diagnosed with an opioid overdose and received an antidote in response to that overdose; and "Whereas, the South Carolina General Assembly intends for the information collected pursuant to this law to be used by health care professionals to assist patients in getting appropriate treatment including, but not limited to, treatment for substance abuse disorder; and "Whereas, the General Assembly intends further that the information collected pursuant to this law should not be used as the sole determining factor in a decision regarding whether to treat or refuse to treat a patient suffering from an opioid misuse. Now, therefore, [text of act]." Effect of Amendment 2018 Act No. 201, SECTION 1, added (j), establishing limitations for initial opioid prescriptions. 2018 Act No. 243, SECTION 1, added (k), requiring written prescriptions for controlled substances to be written on tamper-resistant prescription pads, with exceptions. 2019 Act No. 65, SECTION 5, in (a), in the first sentence, substituted "department" for "Department" and inserted "or electronic" following "written"; in (b), in the first sentence, inserted "or electronic" following "written"; and in (d), in the first sentence, inserted "or noted in the electronic prescription". 2019 Act No. 65, SECTION 6, in (j), added (5), providing for the use of electronic prescriptions. 2020 Act No. 160, SECTION 1, in (j), redesignated (5) as (k) and rewrote (k), and redesignated former (k) as (l). 2021 Act No. 23, SECTION 1, in (e), in the first sentence, substituted "and surgically implanted drug delivery systems, must not exceed a thirty-one-day supply" for ", must not exceed a thirty-one day supply".

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Bluebook (online)
South Carolina § 44-53-360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/sc/53/44-53-360.