Headlines suggests increased controlled substance production quotas – details suggests oral opiates – business as usual.

Exclusive: Opioid supply crunch for U.S. coronavirus patients prompts appeal to relax limits

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-usa-opioids-exclus-idUSKBN21K2ZJ

(Reuters) – U.S. doctors running out of narcotics needed for COVID-19 patients on ventilators are asking the federal government to raise production limits for drugmakers, according to a letter seen by Reuters, after national quotas had been tightened to address the opioid addiction crisis.

Health workers in protective gear peer from a tent which was constructed to test people for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outside the Brooklyn Hospital Center in Brooklyn, New York City, U.S., March 27, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly – RC2ESF9VPJJ5

The global coronavirus pandemic has led to more than 5,300 deaths nationwide, with over 227,000 confirmed cases, according to a Reuters tally, and has sent states and the federal government scrambling to obtain enough ventilators to treat patients struggling to get oxygen.

At the same time, hospitals are churning through drugs, including injectable fentanyl, used to safely place patients on ventilators and keep them sedated so their lungs can heal.

The U.S. government sets annual limits on how much tightly regulated narcotics can be produced by pharmaceutical companies, and then allocates portions to various manufacturers. Amid an outcry over opioid abuse, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) reduced the overall fentanyl quota by over 30% for 2020. 

In a letter to the DEA on Tuesday, groups including the American Medical Association and the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) said supplies of injectable fentanyl, morphine and hydromorphone are already in short supply and asked for increased company allocations. 

“We appreciate DEA’s work to protect against diversion and maintain control over the flow of opioids into our communities,” they wrote. “However, during this unprecedented health crisis, hospitals must have sufficient (drug) supply to treat patients.”

A senior DEA official told Reuters the agency currently believes the existing national quotas are “completely sufficient” to meet the spike in demand,

and there is still room for additional allocations to companies under the cap to make millions more injectable doses that hospitals use.

The agency is closely monitoring the situation, however, and has begun discussing steps it can take to expedite an overall quota hike if necessary, the official, who asked to remain anonymous, said.

“These are unprecedented times, and the DEA is taking unprecedented actions to make sure we support hospitals on the front lines,” the official said.

In a statement, Pfizer Inc (PFE.N) said it adjusted production schedules to prioritize injectable fentanyl in high demand. The DEA raised the company’s quota this week, it said.

U.S. hospitals are currently projected to need about 40,000 intensive care beds to treat patients with COVID-19, the highly contagious respiratory illness caused by the virus, according to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington. That could lead to a shortage of nearly 20,000, IHME said.

Nearly 32,000 ventilators may be needed, IHME said, although Governor Andrew Cuomo has said New York alone may need 30,000 to address the expected spike in cases in coming days and weeks at the outbreak’s current epicenter.

Doctors and nurses can use a range of drugs to help patients that need a ventilator. Some, such as anesthesia drug propofol, are not as tightly regulated as opioids like fentanyl. But hospital staff around the country have already begun reporting shortages of many of these drugs, and difficulty filling orders.

Demand for fentanyl, hydromorphone and morphine spiked 67% in March compared to January, according to Vizient, which helps healthcare providers manage their supply chains. At the same time, the fill rate for Vizient members had dropped to 73% by March 25.

‘A VERY SERIOUS ISSUE’

Dr. Michael Ganio, director of pharmacy practice and quality at ASHP, said doctors will be forced to use different and less common combinations of sedatives if shortages continue to mount. That increases the risk of medical errors, he said.

The DEA last week agreed to relax inventory controls for manufacturers, allowing them to produce and store more than 65% of their annual quota throughout the duration of the emergency.

“This exception does not authorize any manufacturer to exceed his previously established annual manufacturing quota,” the DEA wrote.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issued a request for information from drug manufacturers this week on their ability to rapidly produce the maximum number of ventilator medicines, with various quantity and price scenarios.

“The United States has a critical need to procure priority medicines for ventilated ICU (intensive care unit) patients in response to COVID-19,” it said.

Patients may receive paralyzing drugs, in addition to sedatives, to increase the ventilator’s effectiveness. If the sedatives are not effective, a patient could potentially gain consciousness but be unable to alert medical staff.

“It keeps me up at night,” Ganio said. “This is a very serious issue we’re seeing.”

If you read this article… everything that is being discussed is INJECTABLES POTENTIALLY having a INCREASE in INJECTABLE PRODUCTION QUOTAS. According to the article, NOTHING is being discussed about oral opiates.

And according to this UNNAMED DEA OFFICIAL…. supplies a of injectable controlled substances are COMPLETELY SUFFICIENT !!!

A senior DEA official told Reuters the agency currently believes the existing national quotas are “completely sufficient” to meet the spike in demand

30-45 days ago, there were a handful of words that was not in the vocabulary of the “average joe/jane”… COVID-19, Plaquenil (Hydroxychloroquine), Chloroquine, Ventilator, shelter in place for starters.

Many of us suspected that it would take some sort of catastrophe affected the average  joe/jane to maybe get some change to the way that the war on drugs/pts was being conducted.  Who could have predicted that the catastrophe would only potentially affect a very narrow list of controlled substances ?

How many deaths from complication of a pt’s existing comorbidity issues will be blamed on COVID-19 or if they have a legally prescribed opiate in their toxicology be labeled as a opiate related death and is there going to be a increase in suicides because of shortage of opiates that the DEA will not admit that it exists or take any prompt action to attempt to increase availability of controlled substances – ACROSS THE LINE OF PRODUCTS.

Most all opiate related DEAths …. have a common denominator !!!

 

 

2 Responses

  1. Hopefully after this crisis someone will see how inept most of the “alpha agencies” are and dismantle them…I can dream…..

  2. what kind of psycho idiots run that agency, anyway?!?!

    “How many deaths from complication of a pt’s existing comorbidity issues will be blamed on COVID-19 or if they have a legally prescribed opiate in their toxicology be labeled as a opiate related death”

    1st question: Probably all. We had a woman in the county have a heart attack, go to the hospital for the heart attack, & die. After she died, a CoVid test came up ambiguous (not sure if bad test or what, but it was not definitely positive). Headlines: “First coronavirus victim in [x] county dies!” & all news stories since say she died of the virus (I know someone at the hospital).

    Second: all of them. anything they can do to artificially inflate the number of opiate deaths. I have no idea what the truth is about the coronavirus, since I’ve been reading nothing but propaganda & blatant lies for years about something which I not only have lived for decades, but have read & understood the actual scientific literature on.

Leave a Reply to iamfbchCancel reply

Discover more from PHARMACIST STEVE

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading