“The moral test of a government is how it treats those who are at the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the aged; and those who are in the shadow of life, the sick and the needy, and the handicapped.” – Hubert Humphrey
passionate pachyderms
Pharmacist Steve steve@steveariens.com 502.938.2414
Feb 28, 2018 — “In written testimony prepared for the congressional committees, the Legion’s Rohan called on lawmakers and the Trump administration to take three specific steps:
Immediately reschedule cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III on the DEA Controlled Substance Act Scheduling.
Direct departments and agencies within the administration to fully cooperate in all federally authorized scientific research and offer assistance as needed.
Authorize extensive research, conduct oversight hearings and support legislation that enables research on cannabis and the medical impact it could have for Americans suffering from opioid over-prescription, pain, depression and a host of other known ailments.”
In 2017, Maine set another record — 418 people died of drug overdoses. For all the talk in recent years about confronting the opioid crisis, this number shows that Maine leaders have completely failed.
There are many steps that could be taken, if lawmakers support them and are willing to override a veto from the governor, and stand up to his obstruction when necessary.
Gov. Paul LePage has still not signed off on rules allowing the overdose reversing drug naloxone, also known as Narcan, to be sold without a prescription. LePage let the rules languish for five months before demanding that the Board of Pharmacy change them to raise the Narcan purchase age from 18 to 21. The pharmacy board made the last-minute change in early February to appease the governor. But LePage still has not signed off on the rules.
The Maine Department of Health and Human Services could raise its reimbursement rates for medication-assisted treatment for recipients of the state’s Medicaid program, known as MaineCare. Maine has one of the lowest reimbursement rates in the nation for addiction treatment providers who treat patients who use Medicaid for health insurance. Maine’s $60-per-week reimbursement for methadone clinics has affected the quality of care at some clinics by limiting the amount of behavioral counseling available. In 2016, legislation to raise the reimbursement rate passed both chambers of the Legislature, only to die for lack of funding.
DHHS should also eliminate caps on methadone treatment. While MaineCare covers all three Food and Drug Administration-approved medications to treat opioid addictions, it limits access to the two most common medications — methadone and Suboxone — by initially limiting Medicaid patients to two years on the medication. It is one of only 10 states with a time limits on Suboxone treatment. Such time limits apply to no other medications, and there’s no scientific evidence showing that addiction patients should be time-limited. LePage signed this hurdle into law, and his administration has opposed eliminating it.
Together, the misguided two-year limit on medication-assisted treatment and Maine’s low reimbursement rates for this low rate puts the ability of many clinics to provide effective care for their patients in doubt.
The voter-approved expansion of Medicaid could also help increase access to treatment. The expansion will extend health insurance to about 70,000 Mainers, most of whom are working but don’t currently qualify for Medicaid or subsidies to purchase health insurance through the individual market. Many of these people are currently dealing with substance-use disorder but are unable to afford treatment. LePage continues to throw up roadblocks to compliance with the voter-approved law.
Instead of supporting any of these measures, LePage, in a belated press release about the record number of drug deaths in 2017, again emphasized the need for more law enforcement, treatment beds in correctional facilities, education of middle school students in hopes of keeping them away from drugs and faith-based treatment.
The LePage administration and the Legislature have already increased funding for law enforcement and more treatment in correctional facilities, but the number of overdose deaths continues to increase. Warning middle school students about the danger of drugs is fine, but does nothing to help the Mainers, many of them middle aged, who are dying daily of drug overdoses.
It is past time for state leaders to focus on what works. They have spent hours debating a bill to outlaw female circumcision, which is already illegal and may not be happening in Maine. LePage convened a special task force on animal abuse.
If they are truly concerned about Maine’s addiction epidemic, the state’s leaders will remove barriers to increase the availability of Narcan and medication-assisted treatment.
A couple of weeks ago, I got a refill for Barb at the local independent we patronize… It is a longtime available generic and the copay was $60.00 and they paid the pharmacy $16.72. I thought that purchasing generics was suppose to save everyone money…
We have Silver Scripts – which is part of CVS Health – and the PBM is also part of CVS Health (Caremark). I went to their website ( https://www.silverscript.com/ ) and found out that the independent that we patronize was NO LONGER A PREFERRED PHARMACY and if had it filled at a “preferred pharmacy” it would have been $32.xx. So I went thru into the website and found out who is a preferred pharmacy is… and guess what the only preferred pharmacies in the county (approx 80,000 population) was TWO CVS STORES… which are about 3 blocks apart (one is a former Target) and located on one of the most congested roads in town and 8+ miles from our house. – we live in a rural area – and the pharmacy we patronize is only about 2 miles away and will deliver, if I can drive over there. Barb only drives in emergencies any more.
I searched further and found out that out of three adjacent COUNTIES.. there are only TWO INDEPENDENT PHARMACIES that are preferred pharmacies in the Silver Scripts network. None in the country that we live in.
I filed a grievance with Medicare, feeling that we were being discriminated against and being financially fined, because we did not wish to patronize part of the CVS Health pharmacy chain.
And here is lawsuit that was finalized this week by a former CVS Pharmacist winning a age discrimination lawsuit against the chain… that took SIX YEARS because CVS kept appealing.
Today I got a call from a person who said that he was the CVS person who dealt with Medicare complaints.
Barb started using the first company Community Care Rx Part D back in 2006, when Part D’s first came on the scene.. and that company has changed hands several times over the years with CVS Health being the final owner.
This person’s only suggestion to resolve the issue was to either patronize a CVS pharmacy and he stated that he had been handling a lot of complaints from pts. Apparently CVS dramatically reduced their “preferred pharmacy network” the first of the year.
OR … just look for ANOTHER PART D PROVIDER that the particular pharmacy we patronize was a preferred pharmacy. Barb has a couple of meds that are being covered as exception to their formulary because she as been on them for 10-20 yrs.. and just because I found another Part D provider does not mean that those medications would be covered.
If this employee is properly reflecting CVS’ philosophy … apparently that philosophy is “our way or the highway”
It would appear that CVS Health is in the process of creating their own monopoly in as many markets as possible, and according to those issues on the above hyperlinks… their bottom line .. is all that really matters to them.
I was watching the TV news tonight and Pres Trump and a whole large table of members of Congress discussing “gun control”.. and the proposed solution of “enhanced background checks” on people who wish to purchase a gun..
There can be many parallels drawn between guns and opiates…
Both have manufacturers (guns and ammunition)
Both have wholesalers
Both have retail stores.
Both have databases to track who purchases them.
Both if used inappropriately – in the hands of some idiot – can cause death.
So why aren’t all the various law firms suing all those businesses involved with the making/selling of guns ? After all there are some 8600 homicide by gun every year…
Maybe just not enough TOMBSTONES or now that enhanced background checks will SOLVE THE PROBLEM ?
Why isn’t it time for ENHANCED ID CHECKS being available by those in healthcare who prescribe or dispense controlled meds ? – UNLESS, those in our judicial system is not really interested in trying to attempt to reduce overdose deaths…BUT… are they afraid that if they put processes in place where only verified people get legal prescription opiates… and the opiate OD’s continue to rise and it clearly demonstrates that all the OD’s have little/nothing to do with legal prescription opiates and the DEA actually has to start going after the illegal opiates that are flooding into our country from Mexico and China ?
Maybe it is time to ask those members of Congress who are interested in ENHANCED ID CHECKS for gun sales… shouldn’t they also be interested in those same ID checks for those who are seeking controlled medications ?
I just tried to get my morphine filled. I take six pill day 15 mg. the pharmacist said he can only fill 5.6 pills per day . So my dr has to write new prescription.
Any input Steve.
Forcing everyone on Hospice ?
Six Morphine 15 mg/day is 90 MME… which is the “recommended daily limit” by the CDC guidelines… so who is “playing doctor” ?
My suggestion to this pt and others who run into this.. is to have the pharmacist do a screen print of the rejection/statement sent by the insurance company or if it is the company’s policy … ask for a copy of that policy… if the pharmacist can’t/won’t… then one must presume that the pharmacist is “playing games”.
Otherwise, get the pharmacist’s name… there should be a license hanging on the wall in “view of the public” with their name on it… By that simple statement “doc will have to write a new prescription” … clears whoever dictated that reduced dosage… because the doc agreed and complied.. Otherwise the pharmacist could have reduced the quantity dispensed and should notify the prescriber of what transpired. But then, the pharmacist would be exceeding their “scope of practice” and violating the practice act… by… practicing medicine without a license.
Until pts start filing complaints with the various agencies that oversees this type of activity… it will continue and probably get worse.
PLEASE SHARE/Copy&Paste encouraged/please ask admins first before posting in other groups/FDA deadline Weds. 2/28/18
Andrew Kolodny and PROP has submitted a petition to the FDA that could threaten to limit your access to high dose opioid medications, regardless of your doctor’s prescriptions or your medical needs. The FDA is considering this petition which would remove ultra high dose (UDHU) opioids from the market. This is a very, very serious issue and 100% participation is needed before Wednesday, February 28th, 2018, to stop this from happening. The FDA already removed Opana ER, lets not let this happen to a medication YOU or your loved ones might need. Please remember, the FDA will toss if comments appear similar, so use this as a guide.
From: Valorie Hawk/Director/C-50/Coalition of 50 State Pain Advocacy Groups -Please join your state advocacy group and work alongside your neighbors at your state and local level. https://www.facebook.com/Coalition-of-State-Pain-Advocacy-…/
FDA RESPONSE
1.Check out the petition to the FDA here: http://www.supportprop.org/wp- content/uploads/2014/12/ Citizen-Petition-UHDU-Opioids- 8.30.17-final-signatures-2.pdf
3. In the large text box, enter your comments about WHY you oppose this petition and why the FDA should as well. These are some points you could make. Please tailor them to your own situation – if you copy these exactly the FDA will NOT consider them.
A. I am a chronic pain patient with ___________ (diagnosis)
B. I rely upon opioid medications to: manage my incurable pain, allow for increased function, preserve my way of life, and remain productive. Please explain how benefits outweigh risks.
If you are taking high dosage or extended release opioids, please discuss how they control your pain better/longer than other options, please be brief, clear and concise – no caps. Things you may want to include:
* benefits outweigh risks, over 95% of legitimate pain patients do not abuse * explain how opioid medications help(ed) you and how for long, especially if they are/were high dosage. * discuss function – the things you are able to do (work, chores, travel, enjoy life, sleep) with pain relief and what it is like (or would be like) without it. Mention if you have had to leave your job, lost your house, your family, car, etc. Share if you have had increased BP/pulse or other adverse health effects if your medications have been reduced/dropped. * discuss the non-opioid medications you have tried (and adverse reactions) – * explain you do not get high/euphoria * discuss all of the treatments you have tried – for example – PT, OT, Aqua T, Chiropractic, Osteopathic, TENs, MENs, mindfulness, yoga, CBT therapy, biofeedback, acupuncture, acupressure, CBD, Kratom, etc., and how they failed to ‘heal’ you or lessen your pain. * explain you have been a model, compliant patient, and if you have a pain contract (include how often you have UAs, pill counts, and if you have to use one pharmacy, avoid alcohol, etc.). Mention that it’s unlikely your condition will approve, and the effects of time and aging will make things worse. * Opioids and pain management were a last resort option.
D. I always secure my medications where they cannot be stolen, never allow others to borrow and do NOT have excess medication.
E. These proposed regulations are not supported by any reliable science.
* the 90 MME cutoff that defines what medications are ultra- high dose is arbitrary * everyone genetically metabolizes medications differently * the CDC guidelines were written outside the rules by non- pain management physicians, some who may have professionally or personally profited from the outcome * none of the petitioners are qualified or Board Certified in pain management *cancer patients need these, as well
F. Not everyone can just “swallow more pills” – *some pain patients have conditions (e.g. nausea, esophageal spasms) that make swallowing difficult
G. If enacted, these policies could:
* force even more doctors away from treating pain * force more patients onto Disability, Medicare and Medicaid * create more demand for emergency room and social services * increase the rate of expensive and possibly dangerous procedures * increase the rate of suicides * possibly put many more pills into circulation
3. Fill in the information at the end 4. You may choose to be anonymous or use your name 5. Do not write anything under the category “organization” 6. Choose SUBMIT. If you get a receipt, you have been successful! It will take a few days to see your comment posted.
AT LEAST 10,000 COMMENTS ARE NEEDED TO START BEING NOTICED. ASK EVERYONE YOU KNOW TO HELP. SHARE THIS POST EVERYWHERE
Democratic leaders in the House and the Senate cited ProPublica’s reporting into the DEA’s role in two operations in Mexico that resulted in dozens, perhaps hundreds, of deaths.
Powerful Democrats in both the House and Senate called Tuesday for an investigation into Drug Enforcement Administration-led operations in Mexico that played a role in triggering violent drug cartel attacks. These attacks left dozens, possibly hundreds, of people dead or missing, including many who had nothing to do with the drug trade.
The call was issued in a letter signed by ranking members of the committees that oversee America’s foreign law enforcement operations and draws heavily on two stories last year by ProPublica and National Geographic that documented the attacks and the DEA’s role. One story reconstructed a 2011 massacre by the Zetas cartel in the Mexican state of Coahuila. It revealed that the wave of killings was unleashed after sensitive information obtained during a DEA operation wound up in the hands of cartel leaders, who ordered a wave of retaliation against suspected traitors.
A second story investigated a 2010 cartel attack on a Holiday Inn in Monterrey, Mexico, and found that it, too, was linked to a DEA surveillance operation. Four hotel guests and a hotel clerk, none of whom were involved with the drug trade, were kidnapped and never seen again.
In both cases, the DEA never revealed its involvement or helped in the investigation of the slaughter of Mexican citizens. Until contacted by ProPublica, the family members of the victims never knew why their loved ones had been targeted.
Both operations involved a Mexican federal police unit that is specially trained and vetted by the DEA to work with U.S. law enforcement. ProPublica’s reporting found that despite that scrutiny, the Sensitive Investigative Unit had a record of leaking information to violent and powerful drug traffickers. The DEA, ProPublica found, had long been aware of this corruption and failed to address it, even when innocent lives were lost. The agency has similar units in 12 other countries.
“These operations raise serious questions about the practices of DEA-trained and funded SIU’s,” the congressional letter said, “and point to the need for greater accountability for these vetted units.”
The letter was signed by Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, vice chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, who has long pursued accountability for the DEA’s operations abroad, as well as Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee and one of the country’s leading authorities on national security matters, Rep. Eliot L. Engel, the ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Rep. Jerrold Nadler, the leading Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee. The two representatives are from New York, and their committees oversee the State and Justice departments.
The legislators asked the inspectors general at the Justice and State departments to investigate the attacks in Monterrey and Coahuila, as well as the DEA’s overall work with vetted units. They asked eight detailed questions about the two deadly incidents, including how information about the operations was leaked to the cartels and whether the DEA attempted to provide assistance to the families of those kidnapped or killed and whether the United States Ambassador to Mexico had been fully informed.
“In light of these incidents,” the letter said, “we believe that a thorough investigation into the practices of the DEA’s vetted units is essential.”
For two decades, the “Sensitive Investigative Unit Program” has been the DEA’s workaround method of battling drugs with foreign partners it doesn’t always trust. The agency sets up a unit under its supervision, choosing members from the host country’s police forces. Then it trains these foreign officers — often in the U.S. — polygraphs them, and, in some cases, works alongside them in the field.
Administrators at the agency have hailed them as the “bread and butter” of the DEA’s activities abroad.
In Mexico, however, the SIU has been plagued by corruption from the start. Since 2000, at least two supervisors have been assassinated after their identities and locations were leaked to drug traffickers by SIU members, according to allegations by current and former DEA agents who worked in Mexico. Earlier this year, another SIU supervisor, Ivan Reyes Arzate, flew to Chicago and surrendered to U.S. authorities, who charged him with collaborating with drug traffickers.
In interviews, current and former DEA agents who worked with the unit didn’t dispute the corruption within the Mexican unit’s ranks. Several agents said that part of “the game” of working in Mexico involves understanding that the vetted unit — and every other Mexican law enforcement agency — might leak to a specific cartel and reliably help pursue another. The trick, they said, was figuring out which cartel the vetted unit was helping, and then using the unit to pursue that cartel’s rivals.
When it works, the agents said, they bring down a cartel kingpin and garner headlines. But the investigations by ProPublica made clear that the game sometimes has tragic consequences, about which the DEA has remained largely silent.
Both Engel and Leahy have been seeking accountability for U.S. foreign law enforcement operations for years. Engel was among more than a dozen legislators who signed a letter to the Justice and State departments last year, expressing concern about the DEA’s role in the massacre in Coahuila. And Leahy was a driving force behind government efforts to investigate a botched DEA operation in Honduras in 2012 that left four unarmed people dead, and another four injured.
Earlier this year, Leahy sent a letter directly to the DEA’s Acting Administrator, Robert W. Patterson, to convey his concerns about ProPublica’s reports. The letter contained 22 questions about the DEA’s work with SIUs; questions that Leahy said warranted response, “given the reported history of corruption and misconduct by some members of the SIU.”
i hear his footsteps approach the exam room, my breath catches as thoughts race. my pulse quickens, i feel slightly sick…
memories flood past…playing with my children, grandchildren, babies chortling, making music with friends, farming…further back..giving birth, weddings, falling in love, childhood..
all accomplished with some level of pain, the last twenty years with proper treatment. happy and still productive, at sixty now i am in school, volunteering, advocating, caregiving, loving…or was. the change in my life has been head spinning these past few months.
he interrupts my thoughts as he enters. without making eye contact, he announces my medication will again be cut in half. i protest. i can’t spend more time in bed. i like to walk with my cane. to move. moving is important to be healthy.
i remind him i am a caregiver. my son cannot speak or move. who will care for him? for me? what have i done wrong?
he won’t risk his license for a patients function, he says. nothing personal. he shows me a printout. says i’m over a limit that never existed before. that someone, somewhere, says now they know the risk of addiction. after over twenty years of none. liars.
he never took his hand off the door handle. bastard. he grins. buffoon. it will be a transition, he says. fool. death is a transition, i reply, that doesn’t make it a desirable outcome. he quickly disappears, leaving a nurse to pick up the pieces, and hand me my sentence. coward.
as i leave, a protesting patient is escorted out by security. an old man asks what ‘non-opioid treatment’ means for his cancer pain. my chest feels tight.
outside, the addicted continue to die in record numbers. their pain is not physical. the escape they seek is not with any medication i am prescribed, yet this is somehow laid at my feet. the world has lost its collective mind.
Young survivors of Wednesday’s school shooting in Florida have announced a national march on Washington to demand political action on gun control.
Student organisers told US media that they were determined to make Wednesday’s shooting a turning point in the national gun debate.
The attack, which left 17 students and staff members dead, was the deadliest US school shooting since 2012.
Yesterday protestors chanted “shame on you” to US lawmakers and the president.
Mr Trump said last year he would “never” infringe on the right to keep arms – a long-running and contested debate within the US.
In his first public comments on the gun control issue since the attack, Mr Trump blamed the Democrats for not passing legislation when they controlled Congress during the early years of Barack Obama’s administration.
What are the students’ plans?
Speaking on US television networks on Sunday morning, student survivors from Marjory Stoneman Douglas announced their March for Our Lives campaign.
They are planning to march on Washington on 24 March to demand that children and their families “become a priority” to US lawmakers. They want other protests to happen simultaneously in other cities on the same day.
“We are losing our lives while the adults are playing around,” Cameron Kasky, a survivor from the school said.
It is one of many student-led protests amassing support on social media in the wake of Wednesday’s attack.
Image copyrightReutersImage caption The students from Parkland have demanded “never again” in response to the shooting
On Saturday students and their parents – as well as politicians – took part in an emotionally-charged rally in Fort Lauderdale, close to Parkland.
Arguably the most memorable moment came when high school student Emma Gonzalez took to the podium and attacked the US president and other politicians for accepting political donations from the National Rifle Association (NRA), a powerful gun rights lobby group.
“If the president wants to come up to me and tell me to my face that it was a terrible tragedy and… how nothing is going to be done about it, I’m going to happily ask him how much money he received from the National Rifle Association,” said Ms Gonzalez.
“It doesn’t matter because I already know. Thirty million dollars,” the 18-year-old said, referring to donations during Mr Trump’s presidential campaign.
Media captionInside the classroom: ‘We watched gunman shoot our friends’
“To every politician who is taking donations from the NRA – shame on you!” said Ms Gonzalez, who took cover on the floor of her secondary school’s auditorium during the attack.
According to the Center for Responsive Politics, the NRA spent $11.4m (£8.1m) supporting Mr Trump in the 2016 campaign, and $19.7m opposing Hillary Clinton.
“Because they didn’t want to, and now they just talk!” he wrote, referring to criticism from Democrats following Wednesday’s shooting.
Mr Trump – who on Friday met survivors of the attack – has also blamed the shooter’s mental health and the FBI’s failings.
The US news network CNN has invited Florida lawmakers and the president to attend a town hall event with survivors of the attack on Wednesday.
Saturday’s rally coincided with a gun show in Florida. Hundreds of people attended the event at the Dade County fairgrounds, despite calls to cancel it.
What do we know about the suspect?
Mr Cruz, 19, is a former student at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
He was reportedly investigated by local police and the Department of Children and Family Services in 2016 after posting evidence of self-harm on the Snapchat app, according to the latest US media reports.
Child services said he had planned to buy a gun, but authorities determined he was already receiving adequate support, the reports say.
The 5 January tip was not the only information the FBI received. In September, a Mississippi man reported to the law enforcement agency a disturbing comment left on a YouTube video under Mr Cruz’s name.
Florida Governor Rick Scott called for FBI director Christopher Wray to resign over the failures to act.
In a late tweet on Saturday, the President rebuked the organisation for their handling of tip-offs.
“Very sad that the FBI missed all of the many signals sent out by the Florida school shooter. This is not acceptable. They are spending too much time trying to prove Russian collusion with the Trump campaign.”
Listening to the interviews with politicians on the nightly news, doesn’t appear that all of the FACE to FACE meetings with our elected representatives will do little/nothing about getting things changed.
So it looks like these students are learning a very valuable lesson that if you can’t vote for them or donating money to their re-election campaign.. they are not going to listen to your concerns.
Is there little wonder why the lobbyists spend 9+ million/day to get the 535 members of Congress to see things the way that who the lobbyist is working for.
Sooner of later those in chronic pain community is going to figure it all out… you either raise a lot of money to hire lobbyists and/or file lawsuits or just VOTE THE BUMS OUT…
It would appear that 17 tombstones from innocent teenage victims … is not enough to register with those in Congress..
The Justice Department said Tuesday it will support local officials in hundreds of lawsuits against manufacturers and distributors of powerful opioid painkillers that are fueling the nation’s drug abuse crisis.
The move is part of a broader effort to more aggressively target prescription drugmakers for their role in the epidemic, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said. The Justice Department will file a statement of interest in the multidistrict lawsuit, arguing the federal government has borne substantial costs as a result of the crisis that claimed more than 64,000 lives in 2016.
The Trump administration has said it is focusing intensely on fighting drug addiction, but critics say its efforts fall short of what is needed. Trump signed off this month on a bipartisan budget deal to provide a record $6 billion over the next two years to fight opioids, but it’s not yet decided how that will be allocated.
The statement of interest was the latest move by the Justice Department, which has also sought to crack down on black market drug peddlers and doctors who negligently prescribe.
It could increase the role of the federal government in talks aimed at reaching a settlement between government entities, drugmakers, distributors and others. A federal judge in Cleveland is overseeing the talks as an attempt to resolve the case rather than hold a trial involving more than 370 plaintiffs, mostly county and local governments. The talks also include a group of about 40 states that are conducting a joint investigation of the crisis but which have not yet sued, as well as states that have sued in state courts.
Targets of the lawsuits include drugmakers such as Allergan, Johnson & Johnson, and Purdue Pharma, and the three large drug distribution companies, Amerisource Bergen, Cardinal Health and McKesson. Drug distributors and manufacturers named in these and other lawsuits have said they don’t believe litigation is the answer but have pledged to help solve the crisis.
Any settlement deal could include billions of dollars in payments that could be used for treatment programs, abuse prevention and to cover some of the costs incurred by government dealing with the crisis. A filing could also put the federal government in line to receive some of the payouts in a deal. But any settlement is not likely to cover the cost of the crisis. A White House report last year estimated the annual cost at about $500 billion, including deaths, health care, lost productivity and criminal justice costs.
“It’s a game-changer,” Ohio‘s attorney general Mike DeWine said of the Justice Department’s involvement. “It’s a real realization of what has been going on.”
The latest effort by the Justice Department targets powerful, but legal, prescription painkillers OxyContin and Vicodin, which have been widely blamed for ushering in the drug crisis. But prescribing of those drugs has been falling since 2011 due to policies by government, medical and law enforcement officials designed to reverse years of overprescribing.
The majority of opioid deaths now involve illegal drugs, especially the ultra-potent opioid fentanyl. Deaths tied to those fentanyl and related drugs doubled in 2016, to more than 19,000, dragging down Americans’ life expectancy for the second year in a row.
Guess who is going to get all the “gold” if these attorneys are going to be able to win these cases for SELLING A LEGAL PRODUCT ? What product is next… Caffeine …. Sugar… Chocolate… Fast Food… Soda ?