“Narcan is as useful for me as a screen door on a submarine”

DEA proposes lowering opioid production quotas by 30% , expanding marijuana research

DEA proposes lowering opioid production quotas, expanding marijuana research

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2019/sep/11/dea-proposes-lowering-opioid-production-quotas-exp/

The Drug Enforcement Administration on Thursday proposed reducing the manufacturing quotas for the five most frequently abused opioids by an average of 30 percent in 2020.

Simultaneously, the DEA announced it would triple the amount of marijuana grown for research.


The moves signal the Trump administration is cracking down on opioid abuse while softening its hard-line stance on marijuana as a number of states continue to legalize its use.

DEA takes seriously its obligations to both protect the public from illicit drug trafficking and ensure adequate supplies to meet the legitimate needs of patients and researchers for these substances,” DEA acting Administrator Uttam Dhillon said in a statement.

The anti-drug agency said will reduce fentanyl production by 31 percent, hydrocodone by 19 percent, hydromorphone by 25 percent, oxycodone by nine percent and oxymorphone by 55 percent.

Combined with a reduction in morphine, the proposed quota would decrease opioid production by an average of 53 percent since 2016.

The DEA is requesting more than 3.2 million grams of marijuana to be grown legally in 2020, up nearly a third from the 2.4 million grown this year. The increased haul will be used for scientific research.

Both proposals are part of the DEA’s annual quota for manufacturing controlled substances to meet the nation’s medical, scientific, research and industrial needs.

800,000 GMS increase in MJ for RESEARCH… that is abt 1750 lbs.. or about 5 lbs/day.

Cut the availability of opiates for legal therapy, and increase MJ for RESEARCH… meaning that it could take 10-15 yrs before that research could get a meaningful MJ product for treating various health issues… NO GUARANTEES that anything will prove to be useful for treating any health issue.

So the DEA is determining the level of therapy that both acute and chronic pain pts require… without examining the FIRST PATIENT ?

Human Rights Watch Accuses Tennessee Of Over-Regulating Pain Management

Human Rights Watch Accuses Tennessee Of Over-Regulating Pain Management

https://www.nashvillepublicradio.org/post/human-rights-watch-accuses-tennessee-over-regulating-pain-management#stream/0

A report from Human Rights Watch accuses Tennessee of regulating opioids to the point of depriving patients in pain. Along with Washington State, the analysis focuses on Tennessee because of its new prescribing regulations, which are considered some of the strictest in the nation.

In its 109-page report, Human Rights Watch interviewed patients who were involuntarily weaned off of high-doses of powerful painkillers. Tennessee’s new law doesn’t directly impact so-called chronic pain patients, but it seems to have had a chilling effect. Several tell the advocacy organization that their doctors feel pressure to lower everyone’s dosages.

Gail Gray of Celina, Tennessee, tells HRW that her primary care physician cut her pain medication nearly in half but still felt like he could get in trouble. So Gray was forced to a clinic an hour away, which she worries might be a “pill mill” since they only take cash.

“I’m not comfortable with this. I feel like he [my primary care doctor] has pushed me into doing something that’s not right, and I don’t want to break the law,” she said.

More: Tennessee Doctors In Training Mode As Nation’s Tightest Opioid Restrictions Take Effect

HRW also interviewed clinicians, like a nurse practitioner from Vanderbilt’s hematology department who tells of her difficulty with insurance companies denying heavy prescriptions for a sickle cell patient.

A doctor in Knoxville describes how a new state law requiring physicians to try alternatives before turning to opioids has resulted in risky decisions. At times, he’s recommended surgery as a first course of action, just to avoid flack from regulators.

“It’s really against everything I was trained to do, but it’s the will of the legislators and regulators,” Dr. Joe Browder said.

The state did not respond to the study, which was funded by the U.S. Cancer Pain Relief Committee, a nonprofit with ties to pain management and the pharmaceutical industry. But Human Rights Watch says its top recommendation is for states to just limit the unintended consequences of cracking down on opioid prescribing.

Calling all CPP group leaders and CPP advocates

Calling all CPP group leaders and CPP advocates:
We are developing a questionnaire to send out to House, Senate, and Presidential Candidates to find out their positions on areas of our concern. By doing so, we also tell them those areas of concern, and hopefully get them to be vocal about them on the campaign trail. It’s time that the topic of the war on doctors and patients no longer be ignored by the political parties and their candidates.

This is a major undertaking, with hopefully 1000+ replies. We will need to have a data-evaluation service or some manner of organizing and reviewing the replies.

Are you willing to help? If so, reply on the Contact form on https://doctorsofcourage.org/communication-campaign/.
Right now, please give us questions you think are pertinent to be answered by the candidates. Tell us if you are willing to work on a panel to construct the questionnaire. If you know of anything like this that has been done before, please share. And last, but definitely not least, tell us if you have access to a data-evaluation program, or could get your hands on one. This is way over my level of IT capability. But computer data-crunching would be so much more time-effective than the old-fashioned way.
This is something that we can all do together with the greatest impact to make a difference in the War Against Doctors and Patients. I hope that all leaders get involved in one way or another. Please re-post to your own group as well, to spread the word. Share by email to all advocacy groups.

The Washington Post is interested in speaking with pharmacists and pharmacy technicians

The Washington Post is interested in speaking with pharmacists and pharmacy technicians who worked at chain drug stores during the opioid crisis between 2006 and 2014. If you want to talk to one of the reporters, reach out to Meryl Kornfield. Her cell is 305-798-6033 and her email is meryl.kornfield@washpost.com.
 

Medical Board Corruption is violating Your Constitutional Rights!

Medical Board Corruption is violating Your Constitutional Rights!

https://www.change.org/p/dr-arnold-feldman-medical-board-corruption-is-violating-your-constitutional-rights?recruiter=461102418&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=facebook_messenger_mobile&utm_campaign=psf_combo_share_initial&recruited_by_id=16638790-b554-11e5-b0b3-9db5ca0edfe4&share_bandit_exp=initial-17753323-en-US&share_bandit_var=v1&use_react=false

                                           Feldman v Federation
Patient Petition

For Patients and their families, friends and loved ones

We, the undersigned, submit this petition in support of the above lawsuit, filed by Drs. Feldman and Kaul. We are the patients, the people without whom the American healthcare system would not exist, and the people for whom the system was intended to serve. We all suffer from chronic debilitating pain, that has had devastating and tragic consequences on our lives, and those of our fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters and children. We, the voting public, the people of this country, have been forgotten by the politicians, the insurances companies and healthcare corporations, who have raped our healthcare system for profit, mercilessly and behind their faceless corporations, have, through their predatory pricing deprived us of life saving care. We are dying and no one cares, except our doctors, healers like Drs. Feldman and Kaul.
 
Within at least the last five years, our access to life saving treatment has been either severely reduced or completely eliminated. This is a direct consequence of rampant corruption within state medical boards and reckless, evidentially unsupported policies propagated by politically motivated state and federal bureaucrats. These agencies and the people who work within them do not care for our welfare, our lives and the unrelenting pain in which we now live, because of their own selfish economic and political agendas. We wake in pain, we live in pain, and when we can actually go to sleep, we know that our relief will be short lived. Many of us think about suicide every day. At least in death we will have relief from the excruciating agony that now plagues our existence, because corrupt medical boards have taken away the licenses of our doctors, and deprived us of care. For some of us, our doctors have been sent to jail for life, for simply doing their job, that of healing our pain. We are shocked, saddened and find it hard to believe we live in America, the supposed land  of the free and the brave. Well those brave enough to treat our complicated and debilitating pain have been mercilessly thrown into concrete cages, had their careers destroyed and left to rot, while we, and there are now many of us, have been abandoned by the profiteers and opportunists who now run our healthcare system. At the center of this cesspool of corruption are the state medical boards, who claim to “protect the public”. This is a massive lie.
 
These agencies abuse their power, unregulated, unsupervised and existing not to help the public, but to exploit and profit from the public, us. They use us as their excuse, their cover, to perpetrate their crimes against humanity. Their crimes contribute to the epidemic of physician suicides in the United States, reported as four hundred a year, although the number is likely much higher, and they kill patients, by taking away our doctors, jailing our doctors and causing them to commit suicide. Corrupt medical boards have permitted corrupt insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies and healthcare corporations to financially rape the American public, dictate local healthcare policy, and revoke the licenses of our doctors in the most cruel and arbitrary manner, with no regard for due process or the law. All of these events have caused us and our families immense suffering, and for too long we have suffered in silence, hoping that eventually sense would prevail, that our doctors would start to take care of us once again, without fear of jail or license revocation. We now see that hope in the lawsuit that Drs. Feldman and Kaul are about to file. We see two dedicated, courageous and committed men, whose fight is a righteous one, one for the people, for us, the American people, the people who pay taxes, who vote and who power, we are convinced, will cause Drs. Feldman and Kaul to prevail in their landmark case to end medical board corruption.
 
We will be victorious in our fight for justice.
 

 

You may have noticed that I have not been around as much

We have been at our Panama City Beach condo since Aug 2nd… Hurricane Michael took the metal roof off of our complex … some say that it was Michael’s Cat-5 status others have stated that it was a tornado that did the damage.  We have a top floor unit and our ceiling is a concrete slab… so water ran down the conduit runs and penetrations in that slab. The picture below is a satellite of our complex post Michael’s landfall Oct 10,2018 and the part of the roof missing – center left – is over out unit.  It is amazing how much damage a couple inches of water can cause..  it is also amazing how much damage that workman can do in the process of doing the repair work that they are in charge of doing…

The adjuster that the Association’s insurance company hired… – IMO – drug the Association’s Board of Directors around BY THE NOSE…  I am not going to mention any companies that were involved – not yet anyway… once everything is finalized… there will be another post… naming names..

The company hired as the primary remediation … brought in a moving company from 1000 miles away – from Michigan that was suppose to room center and wrap our furniture. Apparently the first company PROMISED the moving company a certain amount of $$ to be generated and when the legit business didn’t generate that amount they arbitrarily “pack out” units that it was determined that too much contents and too much dry wall damage… and we got chosen to be such a unit… and it was done without us signing a contract with the first company and they were the one who made the decision as to what unit were packed out…   I came down Dec 13th to find out unit COMPLETELY PACKED OUT… every piece of silverware, all dished, glasses & cups, the can goods in the pantry… they only thing left in the unit was a night stand and a dog bed…. and then we got a $25,000 moving bill… 

And they forced us to have our belonging moved back in Memorial Day week – before all the interior work had been done… they returned all of our “excessive belonging” and 170 boxes that they packed everything else in…

Luckily Florida has a “price gouging law” that goes into effect during a declared emergency and I have filed a complaint with the FL AG’s office and they are going after this company seriously and I may get a largest – or all  – of our money back for the moving expenses.

Our insurance company decided that since we did not have “wind insurance” – we have 150 MPH doors covered by 120 MPH metal hurricane shutters and nothing of any mass will get up this high… but our insurance denied any/all coverage – could have been as much as $120,000 because the water that got into our unit was INDIRECTLY WIND DRIVEN…

The people that did the drywall… only broke the kitchen sink faucet, broken half of our elec hurricane shutters and disconnected all of the R6 TV cables with WIRE CUTTERS..

I was able to hook up our TIVO system with the cable that comes into the unit and we have been able to STREAM shows from the TIVO and watched “TV” on our IPADS…

Because we didn’t know what monies that was going to come from the Association’s insurance… we built our own house 45 yrs ago… so the two of us have many VERY RUSTY skill sets … which we decided to start using… come to find out.. it is much like riding a bicycle… you never really forget the skill set.

BTW, the moving company brought back a RODENT INFESTATION back to the complex and the little varmints chewed the lines in the dish washer… causing it to leak…  looking at our dishwasher.. it was manufactured in 1998 ..but since we only stay here 2-3 months out of the year… so it was 20 yrs old… and decided to replace it…

I have not been posting much… and not been very prompt in responding to emails… and hope that everyone understands… we have been seriously preoccupied with all of the repair work on our condo. If I had the time… I could write a book … on how condo complexes and owners being on the Board of Directors – with limited experiences in a lot of areas – are “running the show “… and not doing a very good job…  But being only a single owner in a 134 unit complex… you have to go along with the crowd… and in our complex… the majority of the ownership … are more focused on what is good for their pocketbook and not what is good for the complex and the ownership as the whole.

About 100 units are rented by their owners, and since we are current been “closed” since Oct 10, 2018 and best estimate is that we will be back in the rental business Jan 1 , 2020… collectively the ownership has failed to generate AT LEAST 1.5 million in rental revenue… plus the cost of bringing their unit back to rental standards and not to mention the assessment – ours was $4700 – which may be the first of many.

USA: uses 2/3 of world supply of illegal opiates – mental health crisis ?

DOJ’s Aggressive Effort to Combat Opioid Crisis Places Everyone in the Crosshairs

DOJ’s Aggressive Effort to Combat Opioid Crisis Places Everyone in the Crosshairs

https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/doj-s-aggressive-effort-to-combat-90992/

A wave of recent indictments unsealed against opioid distributors and their executives signifies that the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”) has embarked on a criminal crackdown after years of civil enforcement efforts failed to staunch America’s opioid epidemic. In particular, the DOJ appears to have broadened its investigatory and enforcement activity to encompass not just customary bad actors, such as “pill mills,” drug trafficking organizations, and rogue prescribers, but also companies involved in the drug supply and distribution chain. Such companies include manufacturers, wholesale distributors, and retail pharmacies. In addition, the DOJ is increasingly pursuing criminal charges against senior executives at companies allegedly responsible for the overutilization or diversion of opioids. Recent victories in the DOJ opioid crackdown, such as the convictions of five top executives at Insys Therapeutics, Inc. (“Insys”), an opioid manufacturer, for racketeering conspiracy, as well as a related settlement by Insys with the federal government to resolve, in part, criminal investigations into the company’s marketing practices, likely will encourage and embolden federal prosecutors.

The increase in enforcement actions taken against these companies and their senior executives follows from the Trump administration’s public commitment to end the improper diversion and distribution of addictive opioids and deter similar malfeasance in the future. In October 2017, the Trump administration officially declared the opioid crisis a public health emergency.[1] Alex Azar II, Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, most recently renewed the public health emergency declaration on July 17, 2019.[2] As a result, the Trump administration has prioritized enhanced regulatory enforcement, including the investigation and prosecution of high-impact individuals and companies, as a tool to fight the opioid epidemic. For example, in February 2018, the DOJ announced the creation of a new task force, the Prescription Interdiction & Litigation Task Force, charged with “aggressively deploy[ing] and coordinat[ing] all available criminal and civil law enforcement tools to reverse the tide of opioid overdoses in the United States, with a particular focus on opioid manufacturers and distributors.”[3] More recently, on August 8, 2019, the DOJ announced the immediate suspension of the Certificate of Registration issued by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) to Oak Hill Hometown Pharmacy (“Oak Hill”), a West Virginia pharmacy alleged to have improperly filled large volumes of an addictive controlled narcotic, on grounds that the pharmacy posed an “imminent danger to the public health or safety.”[4]

Furthermore, according to the DEA’s Automation of Reports and Consolidated Orders System, which tracks all opioid purchases in the United States, 15 percent of pharmacies handled almost half of opioids that were distributed — a total of 35 billion opioids.[5] These pharmacies, largely comprised of small independent pharmacies in rural areas, “had annual double-digit growth in pain pills and bought far more opioids than competitors in the same counties.”[6] Although some of the pharmacies were previously subject to disciplinary actions or warnings from regulators, it is not clear whether all high-volume pharmacies were similarly sanctioned.[7] The pharmacies, some of which now operate under new ownership, are located in Kentucky, Idaho, Kansas, Illinois, Tennessee, West Virginia, Nevada, Utah, Oregon, Michigan, and Oklahoma. Government agencies are increasingly relying on data analytics in order to target so-called “bad actors” for further investigations. Accordingly, pharmacies that dispense opioids or other controlled substances in volumes or patterns that are aberrant to those of similarly situated pharmacies are at increased risk of government inquiries into their internal business operations and practices. A similar example of the current government focus on facilities or actors believed to be large contributors to the crisis involves Purdue Pharma, which is reportedly offering $10–$12 billion to settle all of the cases and a recent raid in which the DOJ charged 41 people for allegedly running a “pill mill” in Texas.[8]

In response to this increased government scrutiny, companies conducting business at any stage of the supply and distribution chain in the opioid space and investment firms that own portfolio companies in the industry should carefully evaluate corporate compliance programs, particularly with respect to marketing strategies, utilization review, and communications with health care prescribers, to determine whether they are effectively implemented or mere “paper programs.”

The Past

In the past, the DOJ’s enforcement efforts primarily involved civil settlements that included substantial fines. For example, in 2008, McKesson Corporation (“McKesson”), a distributor of pharmaceutical drugs, agreed to pay a civil penalty of $13,250,000 in order to settle alleged violations of the Controlled Substances Act.[9] The DOJ alleged that McKesson failed to properly report to the DEA suspicious purchases of controlled substances by pharmacies and clinics. In 2017, the DOJ alleged that McKesson again violated federal reporting requirements pertaining to suspicious orders for controlled substances it received from third parties. As a result, McKesson entered into another settlement agreement with the DOJ whereby the distributor agreed to a $150 million civil penalty and the suspension of controlled substances sales from certain noncompliant distribution centers, as well as adherence to an enhanced compliance program.[10] While this civil penalty constituted the largest settlement amount at that time, no criminal charges were filed against McKesson’s executives in either settlement.

The DOJ’s prior reliance on civil penalties to ensure compliance with drug control laws was not limited to McKesson. For example, in 2017, the DOJ announced a settlement with Mallinckrodt LLC (“Mallinckrodt”), one of the largest manufacturers of generic oxycodone, to resolve allegations that Mallinckrodt did not appropriately detect and report orders for controlled substances that were suspicious due to their frequency, size, or other factors. In announcing the settlement, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions stated:

. . . as a result of today’s settlement, we are sending a clear message to drug companies: this Department of Justice will hold you accountable for your legal obligations and we will enforce our laws. I believe that will prevent drug abuse, prevent new addictions from starting, and ultimately save lives.[11]

While past settlements have signaled the DOJ’s willingness to resolve opioid cases with a company “cutting a check,” those days appear to be long gone. The recent wave of criminal prosecutions shows that the DOJ is developing a playbook to charge companies and executives involved in over-prescribing and over-distributing opioids.

Recent and Ongoing Cases Reflect DOJ’s New Game Plan

Several ongoing cases demonstrate federal prosecutors’ aggressive new approach. Earlier this year, the DOJ pursued for the first time felony criminal charges against a pharmaceutical distributor.[12] In United States v. Rochester Drug Co. Operative, Inc., prosecutors brought drug-trafficking charges against two former executives and Rochester Drug Co. Operative, Inc. (“RDC”), one of the largest pharmaceutical distributors in the United States, alleging that RDC shipped millions of oxycodone pills, fentanyl, and other opioids to pharmacies that its executives knew were distributing the drugs illegally.[13] In particular, the DOJ charged RDC with conspiring to distribute drugs, conspiracy to defraud the United States, and failing to file suspicious order reports.[14] The company paid $20 million in penalties and entered into a deferred prosecution agreement.[15] During a press conference discussing the case, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Geoffrey Berman noted, “[t]his country is in the midst of a prescription drug abuse epidemic . . . [t]his epidemic has been driven by greed.”[16] The former CEO of RDC faces related charges and is scheduled for trial in May 2020.[17] The former chief compliance officer has pled guilty and is cooperating with prosecutors.[18]

Shortly after announcing charges against RDC and its executives, the DOJ pursued a criminal case against Miami-Luken, Inc. (“Miami-Luken”), an Ohio-based distributor, its former executives, and two pharmacists for an alleged scheme that resulted in the distribution of millions of opioids throughout various states.[19] Specifically, the DOJ alleged that Miami-Luken and its executives distributed “more than 2.3 million oxycodone pills and 2.6 [million] hydrocode pills” to a single pharmacy located in a town with a population of approximately 1,394.[20] According to the DOJ, “[the two executives] and Miami-Luken sought to enrich themselves by distributing millions of painkillers to doctors and pharmacies in rural Appalachia, where the opioid epidemic was at its peak.”[21] The indictment further alleged that the two executives and Miami-Luken “ignored obvious signs of abuse and diversion . . . .”[22] In connection with its investigation, the DOJ similarly charged two West Virginia pharmacists whose pharmacies had received significant amounts of opioids from Miami-Luken; the pharmacists now face 20 years in prison.

The two cases have striking similarities. First, both cases involve criminal charges against the compliance officers of opioid distributors. Second, both cases involve companies that serviced pharmacies that were previously terminated by other distributors or wholesalers. Third, both cases involved allegations that the distributor shipped opioids to pharmacies that were under investigation by the DEA. Finally, in both cases, the facts indicate that the compliance officer or other executives had knowledge of the opioids being provided illicitly or otherwise were aware of red flags.

In addition to the imposition of criminal charges, the government also is relying on administrative enforcement mechanisms to crack down on the opioid epidemic. This is most clearly demonstrated in the DOJ’s suspension of Oak Hill’s DEA registration due to allegations of improper dispensing activities dating back to December 2016. According to the DOJ, Oak Hill continued to fill 2,000 prescriptions of Subutex, a Schedule III controlled substance, despite multiple prescription abuse and diversion indicators.[23] In particular, the DOJ noted the frequency of prescriptions written by out-of-state physicians, cash payments, and long travel distances made by patients, as well as multiple prescriptions written on the same date. In its press release, the DOJ discussed pharmacies’ obligations and role in combating the prescription drug abuse by stating:

Every pharmacy that fills prescriptions of scheduled narcotics has a corresponding responsibility to assure that those prescriptions do not include unresolvable red flags and are for a legitimate medical purpose. It is the proper role of law enforcement and the Drug Enforcement Administration to ensure public safety with respect to the dispensing of controlled substances by pharmacists and providers. We take this responsibility seriously.[24]

The DOJ’s recent use of criminal as well as administrative actions against individuals and companies reflects that multiple factors and industry stakeholders contributed, and continue to contribute, to the opioid crisis. The DOJ approach further reflects the government’s view that various mechanisms and strategies are necessary to punish and deter future harm.

Massachusetts at the Forefront

The aggressive prosecution of key actors in the opioid industry may be most evident in Massachusetts. As noted, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts brought criminal and civil charges against Insys, which agreed in June 2019 to a $224 million settlement in connection with various civil and criminal investigations into the company’s promotion of its drugs.[25] To resolve the criminal investigation, Insys agreed in part to enter into a deferred prosecution agreement and pay $30 million in criminal penalties. A subsidiary of Insys also agreed to plead guilty to mail fraud. The government alleged that Insys violated the federal Anti-Kickback Statute, among other allegations, by utilizing a “sham speaker program” as a mechanism to bribe physicians and other health care practitioners into prescribing opioids.[26] Through these speaker programs, prescribers received kickbacks for generating new prescriptions for and increasing dosages of Subsys, a highly addictive opioid painkiller.[27] The DOJ settlement with Insys comes after a jury convicted five former Insys executives, including the company’s founder, of racketeering conspiracy charges.[28] In its press release regarding the convictions of the Insys executives, the government reiterated its focus on this new enforcement strategy. In particular, U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling stated:

Just as we would street-level drug dealers, we will hold pharmaceutical executives responsible for fueling the opioid epidemic by recklessly and illegally distributing these drugs, especially while conspiring to commit racketeering along the way . . . . This is a landmark prosecution that vindicated the public’s interest in staunching the flow of opioids into our homes and streets.[29]

Massachusetts also provides an example of how state agencies are getting involved in the opioid crackdown. In one of the first cases of its kind, the Massachusetts Attorney General brought charges against eight members of the Sackler family and Purdue Pharma (“Purdue”) for misleading doctors and patients about OxyContin. The complaint alleges that Purdue is responsible for 671 deaths in Massachusetts due to opioids manufactured and marketed by Purdue.[30] Specifically, the complaint states, “Purdue promoted its opioids to Massachusetts patients with marketing that was designed to obscure the risk of addiction and even the fact that[?] Purdue was behind the campaign.”[31] The case is currently pending, after a recent motion-to-dismiss hearing where the judge took the defendant’s motion under advisement.[32]

Conclusion

As the government ramps up enforcement efforts against business entities alleged to have contributed to the opioid crisis, all industry stakeholders are impacted. Continued success by the DOJ or state agencies in these areas undoubtedly will result in increased investigations of key pharmaceutical companies, not just “bad actors” that directly interact with patients. Businesses involved in the controlled substances supply chain, particularly relative to opioids, would be wise to thoroughly review existing compliance programs to ensure that appropriate and robust safeguards are in place to prevent the improper diversion and distribution of such drugs.

‘Profits over patients’: DEA Agents discuss how traditional pill mills are on a decline


 

‘Profits over patients’: DEA Agents discuss how traditional pill mills are on a decline

https://www.foxchattanooga.com/news/local/profits-over-patients-dea-agents-discuss-how-traditional-pill-mills-are-on-a-decline

Tennessee will receive $25 million in federal funding to help fight the opioid crisis.

We’re continue our 8-week series highlighting the opioid epidemic.

Just last month, a former doctor received a lengthy prison sentence after being convicted of running a pill mill in Hixson.

A Drug Enforcement Administration Assistant Special Agent says the owner was definitely one of the main contributors to the opioid crisis here in Hamilton County.

‘Profits over patients’: DEA Agents discuss how traditional pill mills are on a decline{p}{/p}

Fred Clelland is an attorney in Hixson.

His office is just a few doors down from where Tennessee Pain Institute once sat back in 2016.

“You would have an extra 5 to 10 cars mostly on a Monday mostly early that were dropping off people mostly stay in this parking lot or mostly move to different spots in the mall,” Clelland explained.

The owner, Timothy Gowder, was sentenced to more than a decade in federal prison last month.

Court documents say he prescribed narcotics in amounts and duration not medically necessary, advisable or justified for a diagnosed condition.

“Doctors who operate in this particular way are just the same as drug dealers on the street they are criminals,” said DEA Assistant Special Agent Brett Pritts.

Pritts says Gowder and the others in the case are responsible for distributing millions of illegal pills.

He says the result is communities filled with addicts not only in Tennessee, but in Kentucky where most of their clients came from.

“Profits, a lot of it is doctors putting profits over patient care,” Pritts added.

In Tennessee, Pritts says they removed more than 125 DEA registrations from medical professions since 2014.

DEA registrations are assigned to health care providers that allows them to write prescriptions for controlled substances.

“It could be just a doctor’s practice or a business owner decides there is a market for a certain area and they establish a business called a pain clinic, hire doctors to see patients and prescribe opioids outside of normal medical practices,” Pritts said.

Now, part of the goal is to educate doctors to show them what the DEA looks for and how it investigates to keep pill mills on a decline.

We asked Pritts what are pill mill signs. He says a waiting room filled with people in and out very quickly.

Also if doctors don’t offer any alternatives to your condition than pills, he recommends seeing another doctor.