May I Prescribe Controlled Substances to Family Members

Todd Spodek, Managing Partner

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The answer requires a careful distinction between what is legally prohibited, what is professionally discouraged, and what is clinically inadvisable, because the three categories do not perfectly overlap.

No federal statute or DEA regulation categorically prohibits a practitioner from prescribing controlled substances to family members. The DEA’s regulations require that a controlled substance prescription be issued for a legitimate medical purpose by a practitioner acting in the usual course of professional practice. Those requirements apply equally to prescriptions issued to family members as to any other patient. The additional considerations that apply to family member prescribing are professional and clinical, derived from medical ethics standards and state medical practice guidelines, rather than from a flat federal prohibition.

The Professional Standard

The American Medical Association’s Code of Medical Ethics advises that physicians generally should not treat themselves or immediate family members and that when the care of a family member is unavoidable due to geography, emergency, or other circumstances, the physician should provide only short-term or emergency care and should not prescribe controlled substances except in emergencies. Most state medical boards have adopted similar guidance, and several states have enacted specific regulations addressing physician prescribing for family members.

A physician who prescribes controlled substances regularly and on a long-term basis to immediate family members, outside of a formal treating relationship with an established medical record, has departed from the professional standard in a manner that investigators and prosecutors characterize as evidence of prescribing without a legitimate medical purpose. The family member who is prescribed controlled substances without examination, without documented medical history, and without the clinical oversight the practice maintains for non-family patients is a prescribing pattern that looks less like medical treatment and more like personal supply.

The Investigative Risk

Prescriptions to family members are visible in the PDMP under the family members’ names. Investigators reviewing a practitioner’s prescribing history will identify prescriptions to individuals sharing the practitioner’s surname or address and will assess those prescriptions against the same clinical standards applied to other patients. In the absence of medical records reflecting a legitimate treating relationship, those prescriptions are difficult to defend.

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In several opioid fraud cases I have reviewed, prescriptions to family members formed a specific count in the indictment or provided evidence that the practitioner applied a different standard to prescriptions for personal or family use than the standard they maintained for other patients. That differential is the evidence that most directly undermines the claim that all of the prescribing was based on legitimate medical judgment.

Emergency Exceptions

The professional guidance that discourages routine prescribing for family members recognizes that emergency circumstances may make some prescribing appropriate. A practitioner who prescribes an antibiotic for a family member with an acute infection, or who prescribes a brief course of pain medication following a family member’s surgery, is operating within the emergency and short-term exception that most professional guidelines recognize.

Controlled substance prescribing to family members in emergency circumstances should be documented in the same manner as controlled substance prescribing to any other patient: with a record of the clinical basis for the prescription, the examination findings if any were conducted, and the therapeutic rationale for the specific medication and dose. The documentation creates the clinical context that distinguishes emergency prescribing from personal supply.

Todd Spodek
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The family member who needs controlled substance medication should receive it through the same clinical process as any other patient: a formal evaluation, a documented medical record, a treatment plan, and monitoring appropriate to the therapy. The practitioner who provides that level of care to a family member, and who documents it with the same rigor applied to other patients, has prescribing that is defensible. The practitioner who prescribes to family members informally, without documentation, outside the usual clinical process, has created the kind of prescribing record that investigations treat as evidence of the practitioner’s willingness to prescribe outside legitimate medical indications.

Practical Guidance

The most protective approach to controlled substance prescribing for family members is to ensure that any family member receiving controlled substance prescriptions from the practitioner has a formal patient record with the same documentation as any other patient in the practice, that the prescribing occurred within the context of a formal treating relationship with documented clinical rationale, and that the prescribing falls within the short-term and emergency parameters that professional guidelines recognize as appropriate. Long-term chronic opioid therapy for family members should be managed by another provider, with the practitioner’s involvement limited to the consultation and coordination that the treating relationship appropriately includes.

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Todd Spodek
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Todd Spodek

Managing Partner

With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

Bar Admissions: New York State Bar New Jersey State Bar U.S. District Court, SDNY U.S. District Court, EDNY
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Community Discussion

Real questions and discussions from readers about this topic.

39
SO spouse_of_doc 2w ago

My wife is a doctor and I’m terrified after reading this

My wife is a pain management specialist and got a call from a federal agent last week. We have a mortgage. I don't know anything about criminal defense. How do we even start? How much does this cost? Can they take our house?

44
FM fed_med_lawyer Attorney 2w ago

I understand the fear. Here's what you need to know:

1. Attorney fees: Federal healthcare fraud defense typically costs $25,000-75,000 depending on the stage and complexity. Pre-investigation work is on the lower end.

2. Your home: In most states, homestead exemptions protect your primary residence. Federal forfeiture requires a direct connection between the property and the alleged criminal activity — simply being a doctor who's investigated doesn't put your house at risk.

3. First step: Call a federal healthcare fraud defense attorney this week. Not a general lawyer. Someone who has handled DEA/OIG cases before. Most will do a free phone consultation to assess the situation.

4. Don't panic: Investigation ≠ charges. Charges ≠ conviction. Many investigations are closed without action.

27
DS doc_spouse_survivor 2w ago

I'm the spouse of a physician who went through a 2-year DEA investigation. It was resolved favorably. The emotional toll is real — please consider therapy for both of you. We found a support group for medical professionals under investigation that helped enormously. You're not alone in this.

35
WP worried_physician MD 3w ago

Going through exactly what this article describes — anyone else?

Just read this article about "May I Prescribe Controlled Substances to Family Members" and it hit close to home. I'm a internal medicine doctor and I've been losing sleep over this. A colleague in my practice group just got investigated. I haven't been contacted directly by any agency yet but the anxiety is crushing. Anyone been through something similar?

51
HD healthcare_defense_atty Attorney 3w ago

First: do NOT speak to any federal agent without counsel. Period. Not the DEA, not the OIG, not the FBI. You have the right to counsel and exercising that right cannot be held against you.

Second: get a consultation NOW, before anything formal happens. Pre-investigation counsel is dramatically more effective (and less expensive) than post-indictment defense. Many healthcare fraud defense attorneys offer free initial consultations.

Third: do NOT alter any records. Do NOT destroy any documents. Do NOT discuss this with staff beyond what's necessary for patient care. Any of those actions can become separate criminal charges (obstruction, evidence tampering) even if the underlying prescribing was entirely legitimate.

32
SI survived_investigation Physician — Investigated & Cleared 3w ago

Went through a DEA investigation 3 years ago. It was the worst 18 months of my life but I came out clean. Best advice: get a lawyer who specifically handles federal healthcare cases (not a general criminal attorney), follow their instructions to the letter, and keep practicing medicine. The investigation itself is not a conviction and most of your patients still need you.

24
CO compliance_officer_RN PharmD 3w ago

If you haven't already, start documenting everything meticulously going forward. Every prescribing decision should have clear clinical justification in the chart. This protects you regardless of whether an investigation materializes.

33
SD solo_doc_2025 Family Medicine 3w ago

How much does a federal healthcare fraud attorney actually cost?

I need to talk to someone but I'm a solo practitioner. I don't have a hospital legal department behind me. What does it actually cost to retain a federal healthcare defense attorney? Just a consultation vs. ongoing representation? Can I even afford this?

55
FM fed_med_lawyer Attorney 3w ago

Typical ranges:

- Initial consultation: Free to $500. Many firms offer free phone consultations.
- Pre-investigation advisory/compliance review: $3,000–$10,000
- Responding to a subpoena: $5,000–$15,000
- Full investigation representation: $25,000–$75,000+
- Trial defense: $100,000–$500,000+

The earlier you engage, the less it costs. A $5,000 consultation that prevents a $50,000 investigation is the best money you'll ever spend. Most attorneys will work out payment plans for solo practitioners.

30
SI survived_investigation Physician — Investigated & Cleared 3w ago

I paid about $35k total for my defense over 18 months. Was it painful? Yes. Would I do it again? In a heartbeat. The alternative — trying to handle it myself or hiring a cheap general attorney — would have cost me my license and my freedom.

27
JG just_graduated_MD Resident 2w ago

Just started practice — is this something I should worry about from day one?

I just finished fellowship and started at a hospital-based practice. Reading about "May I Prescribe Controlled Substances to" is terrifying for someone just starting out. Should I be getting my own malpractice attorney from day one? What should I be doing differently as a new practitioner to protect myself?

29
SP senior_physician Physician — 20yr 2w ago

The fact that you're thinking about this early is a good sign. Three things:\n\n1. Document meticulously. Every prescribing decision should have clear clinical justification. "Patient reports pain" is not enough. Physical exam findings, functional assessments, treatment plans.\n\n2. Get familiar with your state PDMP and check it for every controlled substance prescription. Make it a habit from day one.\n\n3. Find a mentor in your practice who models good prescribing practices. Observe how they handle difficult patients, how they document, how they say no when needed.\n\nYou don't need a defense attorney on retainer, but knowing who you'd call if needed is smart.

25
HD healthcare_defense_atty Attorney 2w ago

I'll add: make sure your malpractice insurance includes regulatory defense coverage (not just civil malpractice). Many policies exclude coverage for DEA/licensing board actions. Ask your carrier specifically. If they don't cover it, supplemental regulatory defense insurance is available and relatively inexpensive for new practitioners.

27
NI NP_in_pain_mgmt Nurse Practitioner 3w ago

Does this apply to NPs and PAs too, or just physicians?

I'm a physician assistant with prescriptive authority. Does what this article discusses about "May I Prescribe Controlled Substances to" apply equally to mid-level providers? I prescribe psychiatric medications including benzos under my collaborating physician's DEA number. If something goes wrong, who is at risk — me, the supervising physician, or both?

34
FM fed_med_lawyer Attorney 2w ago

Both. If you have your own DEA registration, you bear independent responsibility for your prescribing. If you're prescribing under a collaborating physician's DEA number, the supervising physician also has exposure. The DEA does not limit investigations to physicians — NPs, PAs, dentists, podiatrists, and veterinarians have all been targets of federal prescribing investigations.

The same standard applies: prescriptions must be issued for a legitimate medical purpose in the usual course of professional practice. Document your clinical reasoning for every controlled substance prescription.

16
FM fellow_midlevel NP 2w ago

I got my own DEA number specifically so I wouldn't be dragged into my collaborating physician's issues. Worth considering if you haven't already. It also makes your prescribing cleaner from a documentation standpoint.

25
IP infusion_practice_doc Anesthesiologist 2w ago

Anyone running a ketamine clinic dealing with these issues?

I operate a ketamine infusion clinic and the regulatory landscape feels like it changes monthly. DEA just visited a clinic two towns over. How are other ketamine providers navigating this?

27
FK fellow_ketamine_doc Anesthesiologist 1w ago

Running a ketamine clinic since 2021. The key is airtight protocols and documentation. We have:
- Written treatment protocols for every indication
- Informed consent that specifically addresses off-label use
- Pre-treatment screening including psychological evaluation
- Monitoring during and after infusion
- Follow-up documentation
- Clear exclusion criteria

The DEA has been more interested in compounding pharmacies than individual clinics so far, but that could change. Stay current with ASA and APA guidelines.

27
PA pharma_attorney Attorney 1w ago

Ketamine clinics are an emerging enforcement target. The Schedule III classification gives you more flexibility than Schedule II, but the "legitimate medical purpose" standard still applies. The biggest risk areas I see: (1) inadequate patient screening, (2) lack of follow-up care, (3) advertising that makes medical claims beyond what's supported, (4) corporate practice of medicine violations if non-physicians have ownership stakes. Get a compliance review done proactively.

22
AM anonymous_medical_staff Practice Administrator 4w ago

What should clinic staff know about this topic?

I'm a practice manager at a family medicine office. After reading about "May I Prescribe Controlled Substances to" — what should front-line staff (receptionists, medical assistants, billing staff) know? We want to make sure we're not inadvertently creating problems. Should we be training staff differently?

30
CO compliance_officer_RN Compliance 3w ago

Key things for staff:

1. Never alter medical records after the fact for any reason
2. If a federal agent shows up, be polite but say "I need to contact our attorney before providing any information"
3. Don't discuss patient cases with anyone outside the practice
4. Follow your office's prescription verification protocol exactly — no shortcuts
5. Document any patient behavior that seems concerning (doctor shopping, lost prescriptions, etc.)

Annual compliance training for all staff is worth every penny.

16
PA podiatrist_anon DDS 1mo ago

Does this apply to podiatrists too?

I'm a veterinarian with a DEA registration. Most of the articles I see focus on physicians and pain management. Are dentists really at risk for DEA scrutiny?

24
HD healthcare_defense_atty Attorney 4w ago

Yes. Any DEA registrant who prescribes controlled substances is subject to the same federal standards. Dentists are increasingly scrutinized for opioid prescribing — the CDC's prescribing guidelines have been applied to dental practice. Veterinarians have seen a rise in diversion cases (drugs prescribed for animals being diverted to human use). The DEA does not distinguish by specialty — they look at prescribing patterns and whether they're consistent with legitimate medical practice.

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