21 N.C. Admin. Code 32R .0101 - CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION (CME) REQUIRED
(a) Continuing
Medical Education (CME) is defined as education, training, and activities to
increase knowledge and skills generally recognized and accepted by the
profession as within the basic medical sciences, the discipline of clinical
medicine, and the provision of healthcare to the public. The purpose of CME is
to maintain, develop, or improve the physician's knowledge, skills,
professional performance, and relationships a physician uses to provide
services for his or her patients and practice, the public, or
profession.
(b) A physician
licensed to practice medicine in the State of North Carolina, except those
physicians holding a residency training license, shall complete at least 60
hours of Category 1 CME relevant to the physician's current or intended
specialty or area of practice every 3 years. Every physician who prescribes
controlled substances, except those physicians holding a residency training
license, shall complete at least 3 hours of CME from the required 60 hours of
Category 1 CME designed specifically to address controlled substance
prescribing practices. The controlled substance prescribing CME shall include
instruction on controlled substance prescribing practices and controlled
substance prescribing for chronic pain management. CME that includes
recognizing signs of the abuse or misuse of controlled substances, or
non-opioid treatment options shall qualify for the purposes of this Rule.
Physicians who complete the federally required training under the Medication
Access and Training Expansion Act (MATE),
21 U.S.C.
823(l), shall be deemed in
compliance with the controlled substance prescribing requirements of this Rule
for the three-year CME period in which the MATE training was
completed.
(c) The three-year
period described in Paragraph (b) of this Rule begins on the physician's
birthday following the issuance of his or her license.
Notes
Eff. January 1, 2000;
Amended Eff. August 1, 2012; January 1, 2001;
Pursuant to G.S. 150B-21.3A rule is necessary without substantive public interest Eff. March 1, 2016;
Amended Eff. April 1, 2020; September 1, 2016.
Eff. January 1, 2000;
Amended Eff. August 1, 2012; January 1, 2001.
Pursuant to G.S. 150B-21.3A rule is necessary without substantive public interest Eff. March 1, 2016;
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.