Narcotics, Alcohol and Drug Division
The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation takes excessive alcohol use, non-prescriptive narcotic use and narcotic diversion extremely serious. If you believe you have an issue, the best solution is to get professional help.
What are the most likely ways the IDFPR will discover these issues?
The following are the most common ways this will occur:
- DUI arrest
- Narcotic Diversion report from facility
- Complaint by patient, client, or staff
- Marijuana, cocaine or opiates in system during any required drug screen
- Family member or loved one making a report to IDFPR regarding disease
What will happen next?
- Seek help
- Consult with your internist or psychiatrist regarding your prescriptions
- Consult with the Illinois Professional Health Programs “IPHP”
- Commit to random screening
- Enter a 12-step program
- Consult with a licensing attorney
Often times the IDFPR will send you a probationary consent order to sign prior to instituting a case against you. Most practitioners describe these consent orders as “death sentences” because they make it next to impossible to practice with the probationary terms it provides. It is wise to show this consent order to an attorney who focuses in the area of licensing.
Narcotics, Alcohol and Drug Division
The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation takes excessive alcohol use, non-prescriptive narcotic use and narcotic diversion extremely serious. If you believe you have an issue, the best solution is to get professional help.
What are the most likely ways the IDFPR will discover these issues?
The following are the most common ways this will occur:
- DUI arrest
- Narcotic Diversion report from facility
- Complaint by patient, client, or staff
- Marijuana, cocaine or opiates in system during any required drug screen
- Family member or loved one making a report to IDFPR regarding disease
What will happen next?
- Seek help
- Consult with your internist or psychiatrist regarding your prescriptions
- Consult with the Illinois Professional Health Programs “IPHP”
- Commit to random screening
- Enter a 12-step program
- Consult with a licensing attorney
Often times the IDFPR will send you a probationary consent order to sign prior to instituting a case against you. Most practitioners describe these consent orders as “death sentences” because they make it next to impossible to practice with the probationary terms it provides. It is wise to show this consent order to an attorney who focuses in the area of licensing.