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Updated: January 22, 2026

How to Find a Doctor Who Can Prescribe Felbamate Near You [2026 Guide]

Author

Peter Daggett

Peter Daggett

Doctor with prescription pad and location pin

Felbamate requires a specialist prescription. Here's how to find a neurologist or epileptologist near you who can evaluate whether felbamate is right for your condition.

Felbamate is not a medication your primary care physician can simply write a prescription for. Because of its black box warnings for aplastic anemia and hepatic failure, and its FDA status as a last-resort antiepileptic drug, felbamate must be prescribed by a specialist with expertise in epilepsy—typically a neurologist or epileptologist. If you or a loved one has treatment-resistant epilepsy and are exploring all available options, here's how to find the right provider.

Who Can Prescribe Felbamate?

Technically, any licensed physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant with prescribing authority can write a prescription for felbamate—it is not a controlled substance with special prescribing restrictions like a DEA schedule. However, in practice, felbamate is almost always prescribed by:

Neurologists with a subspecialty in epilepsy (epileptologists)

Pediatric neurologists managing children with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome or other severe pediatric epilepsy syndromes

Epilepsy center specialists at academic medical centers or comprehensive epilepsy programs

The requirement for written informed consent before the first prescription, combined with mandatory baseline labs (CBC with reticulocyte count, liver function tests) and ongoing monitoring, means felbamate is appropriately managed in a specialty care setting. Primary care providers may continue prescribing felbamate for a stable patient with whom they've had a longstanding relationship, but new prescriptions are almost always initiated by specialists.

How to Find a Neurologist or Epileptologist Near You

Here are the most reliable ways to find a qualified epilepsy specialist near you:

Epilepsy Foundation's "Find a Doctor" tool. The Epilepsy Foundation (epilepsy.com) maintains a directory of epilepsy specialists searchable by location. This is one of the most targeted resources for finding someone with direct experience in treatment-resistant epilepsy.

NAEC-accredited epilepsy centers. The National Association of Epilepsy Centers (naec-epilepsy.org) lists accredited epilepsy centers by state and level of care. Level 4 centers handle the most complex cases, including those being considered for felbamate.

Your insurance plan's provider directory. Search for "neurologist" or "epilepsy" in your plan's online provider finder. Calling to confirm a provider actively manages drug-resistant epilepsy is worth the extra step.

Referral from your current neurologist. If you see a general neurologist, ask for a referral to an epileptologist or epilepsy center if your seizures are not well controlled. This is the most common pathway to felbamate evaluation.

Academic medical centers. University hospitals and academic medical centers almost always have epilepsy programs with neurologists who have experience with rare and restricted antiepileptic drugs, including felbamate.

Can I Get Felbamate Through Telehealth?

In general, telehealth is not an appropriate pathway for initiating felbamate. Here's why:

Felbamate requires baseline blood tests (CBC, liver function) before the first prescription—these cannot be ordered in a telehealth-only setting without a physical lab order coordination.

The written informed consent form (Patient/Physician Acknowledgment) is a regulatory requirement that should be reviewed face-to-face given the serious nature of the risks involved.

Ongoing monitoring (frequent CBC and liver function tests) requires coordination with a laboratory setting that telehealth services cannot reliably supervise.

That said, telehealth can play a complementary role for established felbamate patients. A neurologist you already see in person may offer telehealth follow-up visits for medication management checks between in-person appointments, which can reduce the burden of frequent clinic visits for stable patients.

What to Tell Your Doctor When Asking About Felbamate

Felbamate is not something a specialist will prescribe at a first appointment without a thorough review of your seizure history. To prepare for a productive evaluation, bring the following:

A complete list of all antiepileptic medications you have tried, the doses used, the duration of use, and the reason for discontinuation (insufficient efficacy vs. side effects)

Your seizure diary or frequency history—how many seizures per month, types of seizures, and any recent changes

Recent bloodwork (CBC, liver function tests), if available

EEG and MRI results, if relevant to your diagnosis

For a comprehensive overview of felbamate's uses, dosing, and what to expect, see our guide: What Is Felbamate? Uses, Dosage, and What You Need to Know in 2026. And once you have your prescription, if you need help finding a pharmacy with it in stock, medfinder can help.

Frequently Asked Questions

Felbamate is almost always prescribed by neurologists or epileptologists—physicians with specialized training in epilepsy. Pediatric neurologists may prescribe it for children with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. While it is not a controlled substance, its black box warnings and monitoring requirements make it appropriate only for specialist prescribing in most cases.

Technically yes—felbamate is not a controlled substance, so any licensed prescriber can write for it. However, given its black box warnings for aplastic anemia and liver failure, mandatory baseline and ongoing lab monitoring, and required written consent forms, most primary care providers appropriately defer to a neurologist or epileptologist for prescribing and management.

Initiating felbamate via telehealth alone is generally not appropriate because it requires baseline blood tests, written informed consent documentation, and ongoing lab monitoring that requires in-person coordination. Established patients who are stable on felbamate may use telehealth for follow-up management, but new prescriptions should involve in-person evaluation.

Use the Epilepsy Foundation's Find a Doctor tool (epilepsy.com) or the National Association of Epilepsy Centers directory (naec-epilepsy.org) to find accredited epilepsy specialists and centers by location. Your insurance plan's provider directory and referrals from your current neurologist are also reliable pathways.

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