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HomeBusiness and Professions CodeDiv. 2Ch. 9Art. 12§ 4170 Prescriber Dispensing Restrictions

§ 4170 Prescriber Dispensing Restrictions

Business and Professions Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 4170 Prescriber Dispensing Restrictions

Key Takeaways

  • •Doctors can give medicine directly to their patients, but only if they follow strict rules like labeling it right and not running a mini pharmacy.
  • •Doctors must tell patients they can choose to get their prescription filled at any pharmacy instead of getting it from the doctor.
  • •Nurses and other medical helpers can give pre-packaged medicine to patients, but only if a doctor has already prepared it correctly.
  • •Many medical boards work together to make sure these rules are followed.

Example

You go to the doctor for an ear infection, and the doctor gives you antibiotics right there in the office.

The doctor can do this, but they must label the medicine correctly, tell you that you could get it from any pharmacy instead, and follow all the other rules in the law.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 4170 Prescriber Dispensing Restrictions

(a) A prescriber shall not dispense drugs or dangerous devices to patients in the prescriber’s office or place of practice unless all of the following conditions are met: (1) The dangerous drugs or dangerous devices are dispensed to the prescriber’s own patient, and the drugs or dangerous devices are not furnished by a nurse or physician attendant. (2) The dangerous drugs or dangerous devices are necessary in the treatment of the condition for which the prescriber is attending the patient. (3) The prescriber does not keep a pharmacy, open shop, or drugstore, advertised or otherwise, for the retailing of dangerous drugs, dangerous devices, or poisons. (4) The prescriber fulfills all of the labeling requirements imposed upon pharmacists by Section 4076, all of the recordkeeping requirements of this chapter, and all of the packaging requirements of good pharmaceutical practice, including the use of childproof containers. (5) The prescriber does not use a dispensing device unless the prescriber personally owns the device and the contents of the device, and personally dispenses the dangerous drugs or dangerous devices to the patient packaged, labeled, and recorded in accordance with paragraph (4). (6) The prescriber, before dispensing, offers to give a written prescription to the patient that the patient may elect to have filled by the prescriber or by any pharmacy. (7) The prescriber provides the patient with written disclosure that the patient has a choice between obtaining the prescription from the dispensing prescriber or obtaining the prescription at a pharmacy of the patient’s choice. (b) A certified nurse-midwife who functions pursuant to a mutually agreed-upon policy or protocol described in Section 2746.5, a nurse practitioner who functions pursuant to a standardized procedure described in Section 2836.1, or protocol, a physician assistant who functions pursuant to Section 3502.1, or a naturopathic doctor who functions pursuant to Section 3640.5, may hand to a patient of the supervising physician and surgeon a properly labeled prescription drug prepackaged by a physician and surgeon, a manufacturer as defined in this chapter, or a pharmacist. (c) The Medical Board of California, the California State Board of Optometry, the California Board of Naturopathic Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the Podiatric Medical Board of California, the Osteopathic Medical Board of California, the Board of Registered Nursing, the Veterinary Medical Board, and the Physician Assistant Board shall have authority with the California State Board of Pharmacy to ensure compliance with this section, and those boards are specifically charged with the enforcement of this chapter with respect to their respective licensees. (d) “Prescriber,” as used in this section, means a person who holds a physician’s and surgeon’s certificate, a license to practice optometry, a license to practice naturopathic medicine, a license to practice dentistry, a license to practice veterinary medicine, a certificate to practice podiatry, a certificate to practice as a nurse practitioner practicing pursuant to Section 2837.103 or 2837.104, or a certificate to practice as a nurse-midwife, and who is duly registered by the Medical Board of California, the Osteopathic Medical Board of California, the California State Board of Optometry, the California Board of Naturopathic Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the Veterinary Medical Board, the Podiatric Medical Board of California, or the Board of Registered Nursing. (Amended by Stats. 2023, Ch. 497, Sec. 4. (SB 667) Effective January 1, 2024.)

Last verified: January 22, 2026

Key Terms

prescriptiontreatmentprescribermedicalpatientdangerhealthphysician

Related Statutes

  • § 4040 Prescription Order Requirements
  • § 4077 Prescription Drug Labeling Requirements
  • § 4175 Prescriber Drug Complaint Reporting
  • § 2241.5 Pain Treatment Prescription Protections
  • § 4019 Hospital Drug Order Authorization

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Business and Professions Code. Section 4170.
View Official Source