Repost from the council’s Facebook page:
IMPORTANT FEDERAL UPDATE FOR EMS AGENCIES ![]()
On February 5, 2026, the DEA officially published its long-awaited final rule implementing the Protecting Patient Access to Emergency Medications Act of 2017 (PPAEMA). This rule goes into effect 30 days after publication and provides long-needed regulatory clarity for EMS agencies nationwide.
In short: DEA now formally recognizes EMS agencies, EMS medical control, and modern EMS operations involving controlled substances.
Key Highlights for EMS in Region 7:
New EMS Agency DEA Registration
DEA has created a dedicated “Emergency Medical Services Agency” registration
Agencies may use one registration per state (where allowed by state law)
3-year registration fee: $888
Hospital-based EMS may continue operating under hospital registrations
Stationhouses & Designated Locations
Vehicles no longer have to be physically housed inside a building
Agencies may designate stationhouses (including outdoor-staged units)
Designated locations must be listed with DEA and approved after 30 days
Vehicle, Jump Bag & Storage Clarity
Controlled substances may be carried in jump bags or on-person during active calls
When not actively engaged, medications must return to locked, fixed storage
Clear rules for vehicle locking during breaks, staging, and responses
Standing Orders & Verbal Orders Fully Authorized
EMS professionals may administer Schedule II-V medications under:
Written standing orders, or
Real-time verbal orders
Medical directors do NOT need to be physically present
This formally codifies modern EMS medical control at the federal level
Hospital Restocking & Emergency Transfers
EMS agencies may restock from hospitals after calls without DEA Form 222
Emergency inter-facility transfers are permitted during shortages, disasters, or MCIs with DEA approval
Clear Recordkeeping Standards
DEA provides detailed guidance on required documentation
Records may use last name OR initials
Medical directors do not need to initial every record if clearly identifiable
Why This Matters
For years, many common EMS practices existed in legal gray areas. This rule:
Aligns DEA regulations with real-world EMS operations
Reduces compliance uncertainty
Strengthens patient access to emergency medications
Next Steps
EMS leaders and medical directors should review the full rule and begin planning for compliance before the 30-day effective date.
We will continue to share guidance and resources as this is implemented.
Thank you,
Dave
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