You may be surprised how heroin makes its way into your community

You may be surprised how heroin makes its way into your community

http://www.cleveland19.com/story/35385436/you-may-be-surprised-how-heroin-makes-its-way-into-your-community

Apparently Bob Walling — a drug investigator with the Westshore Enforcement Bureau. – is CLUELESS about fake/false/forged ID’s  floating around out there…since…  In 2013, Walling testified in Columbus in favor of a bill that would require pharmacists to get a name, ID and number from the ID before handing out pills.

So if the person picking up a prescription presents a fake/forged/false ID… that serves what purpose if someone is trying to track down who is getting prescription. Who believes that a person is going to use the same fake/false/forged ID if they are doctor shopping, pharmacy shopping or forging prescriptions

DOWNTOWN CLEVELAND, OH (WOIO) –

Those who think opioids enter their neighborhoods by way of late night drug deals are likely mistaken.

Bob Walling is a drug investigator with the Westshore Enforcement Bureau. He was surprised when he took a friend’s prescription to be filled at a pharmacy. Knowing that drugs are well-tracked from manufacturer to pharmacy, he still got the prescription with no ID asked for.

“Each question they asked of me, I didn’t know and I didn’t know, and I still walked out with a prescription,” he said.

“The one exception is when it leaves the pharmacy. We don’t know exactly who takes the pill out of the pharmacy because anyone can pick up a prescription from a pharmacy for someone else,” he said of the tracking.

In 2013, Walling testified in Columbus in favor of a bill that would require pharmacists to get a name, ID and number from the ID before handing out pills.

Pharmaceutical companies got it shot down, so tracking pills remains nearly impossible. A recent case where the person who wrote a fake prescription to obtain 6,200 pills proved it.

Currently, most prescriptions are written on tamper proof paper — they all have some kind of tampering device on them. In one case there’s an RX on the
back, you can scratch it off and that tells you it’s an actual prescription.

Another challenge are doctors running lucrative pill mills.

“Doctor would ask two questions,” says Greg Mehling with the Lorain County Drug Task Force, describing a recent case. “What’s your name and what do you want, and prescriptions would be $100 each or six for $500. That’s medical prostitution — that’s not good medicine.”

These days Mehling says Percocet 10 is the drug of choice. In effect, it is clinical heroin.

In the case of opioids, the hangover is more and more often death.

Health|Express Scripts to Offer Cheaper Drugs for Uninsured Customers

Health|Express Scripts to Offer Cheaper Drugs for Uninsured Customers         

www.nytimes.com/2017/05/08/health/express-scripts-drug-prescriptions-prices.html

It is one of the most acute indignities of being uninsured in this country: Those with the least ability to pay are asked to spend the most for their prescription drugs.

That’s because people without health insurance are forced to pay the list price for brand-name drugs, while insurers have access to a lower, negotiated rate for the same products.

On Monday, one of the biggest pharmacy benefit managers in the drug world, Express Scripts, said it would begin offering a lower rate for a select group of frequently used drugs to people without health insurance, or to those who are stuck in plans with such high deductibles they couldn’t otherwise afford their medications.

The move by Express Scripts, which has been widely criticized as one of the major drivers of rising drug costs, is particularly well timed. It comes just days after Republicans passed a health care bill that some estimate could leave millions of Americans without health insurance, and when there is considerable uncertainty among various layers of the nation’s health care industries.

Prices of medicines available from InsideRx, a subsidiary of Express Scripts. Credit Inside Rx

Timothy C. Wentworth, the chief executive of Express Scripts, said about 30 million Americans either have no insurance or high deductible plans. He said the program was not initiated with the changes to the health care law in mind, but rather to help people who are in need. “We launched this with an idea that we can get those 30 million people similar discounts to what good-sized payers get, and provide them relief,” he said in an interview.
Continue reading the main story

The program, InsideRx, is a subsidiary of Express Scripts and will work when consumers sign up for the service, which is free, and present a discount card or a mobile app to pharmacies around the country — including major chains like CVS and Walgreens, and at Kroger supermarkets — to get discounts that average around one-third off the list price. Commonly prescribed drugs, including the cholesterol treatment Crestor and some brands of insulin, are included on the list about 40 products. The program will allow Express Scripts to expand its customer base. A company spokesman said it would take a “small fee” from pharmacies for every transaction.

It is being started in partnership with GoodRx, a technology company that has been offering similar discounts on mostly generic drugs through deals it previously struck with competitors to Express Scripts.

The new program was greeted with skepticism by Ben Wakana, executive director of Patients for Affordable Drugs, a nonprofit that does not accept funding from organizations that profit from the development or distribution of prescription drugs.

“Drug prices are so high that even with a discount, medication will unfortunately be out of reach for many uninsured or underinsured Americans,” Mr. Wakana said, questioning the motives of pharmacy benefit managers such as Express Scripts, which are known as P.B.M.s. “We continue to believe the most effective way to make drugs more affordable is to bring down drug prices, not to give P.B.M.s more leverage and hope for the best.”

InsideRx members would present a card, similar to this one, in order to obtain discounts on medications. Credit Insider Rx

Adam J. Fein, a drug-distribution expert with Pembroke Consulting, noted that some of the drugs on the list, like Nexium, have similar versions that are available as prescription generics or over-the-counter drugs. Still, he said, the program “is a positive development because the system is set up to soak the poor, and this is a way to pass some of the rebates down to the point of sale.”

But the plan comes with important caveats. Patients who are covered by government programs such as Medicare and Medicaid will not be able to use it because drug companies, which helped negotiate the rates, could be seen as violating anti-kickback laws. And the payments also may not count toward a consumer’s deductible, which could end up raising costs for them in the long run.

The move could also be a way for Express Scripts to find new business. The company recently announced that its biggest customer, the insurance giant Anthem, would not renew its contract in 2020, news that sent Express Scripts stock down significantly and has raised questions about whether the company needs to change its business model. Express Scripts is the nation’s largest pharmacy benefit manager — its main business is negotiating with drug companies on behalf of insurers and large employers — but other top players are part of larger companies with other businesses. CVS Health, for example, also has a large pharmacy chain, and OptumRx, the third-largest player, is part of the health insurer UnitedHealth.

The news that Express Scripts was offering a program to help offset the high prices of prescription drugs struck some as odd, given that the company has been criticized for contributing to those high costs in the first place. Express Scripts and other benefit managers design plans that help insurers and employers reduce costs, and in recent years those companies have opted to shift much of that burden to consumers. Critics of pharmacy benefit managers have also noted that Express Scripts and others keep a slice of the rebates that are negotiated with drug companies and are based on a percentage of the list price — meaning that they make more money when drug prices go up.

Mr. Wentworth disputed the idea that Express Scripts contributes to rising drug costs and said the InsideRx plan is evidence that it is acting in consumers’ interests. “From our standpoint, we see the challenges, and that’s why we are trying to do something about it,” he said.

Tracking opioid supply chain “not enough” to fight illicit trade

Tracking opioid supply chain “not enough” to fight illicit trade

https://www.securingindustry.com/pharmaceuticals/tracking-opioid-supply-chain-not-enough-to-fight-illicit-trade/s40/a4190/

Diversion of opioid analgesics into the black market is fuelling an addiction epidemic that cannot be solved by the traceability system being developed for the US, says an addiction specialist.

A far bigger problem – according to Bryn Wesch of Novus Medical Detox Center – is that companies are knowingly oversupplying the market and not being held to account for their actions, claiming the supply chain is too fragmented and complex to be monitored effectively.

Some manufacturers are citing the upcoming serialization and tamper-evidence provisions of the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA) as evidence they are meeting their ethical requirements to make sure the products are used responsibly, but Wesch is unimpressed.

“Tracking [opioids] will only help if we require the manufacturers and wholesalers to be held liable for over supplying and not knowing the customers sufficiently enough to prevent the medication from getting into the hands of doctors and pharmacies that are not responsibly prescribing,” she tells SecuringIndustry.com.

“When a company like Mallinckrodt can supply 500m pills to the state of Florida in a five year period of time – which represents 66 per cent of all oxycodone sold in the state – and not be held liable for ‘not knowing the customer’ … claiming it is too hard to manage the number of companies in their channels – we can’t call that enforcement,” she continues.

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) took Mallinckrodt to task over the situation, launching the first-ever lawsuit against a pharma manufacturer for allegedly violating laws designed to prevent diversion. Six years later the company settled for $34m – admitting no wrongdoing.

In similar cases, wholesale distributor McKesson was fined $150m in January while its rival Cardinal Health settled for $44m in January – having already agreed to pay $20m to West Virginia which has been hard hit by the opioid epidemic. The DEA – which has itself come in for accusations that its leadership blocked efforts to tackle the problem – thinks those numbers show the tide is turning and that distributors are “getting the message” that pleading ignorance is no longer a valid defence.

It doesn’t go far enough for Wesch, who wants the opioid manufacturers in the frame as well as tougher laws and penalties. “We have to get to the manufacturers to pay. If the DEA can’t successfully prosecute them because they are within the limits of the law, then we have to change the laws. Until the legislation can catch up, I support the idea of taxing them for all their controlled substance sales and using the money to support treatment for all the people addicted in the US.”

According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 42 Americans died every day in 2015 from opiate overdoses. And it is equally clear is that the opioid addiction epidemic is having a dramatic impact on communities in the US, and seems to disproportionately affect some demographic groups including those on a low-income or otherwise disadvantaged.

Last month, the Cherokee Nation filed a lawsuit against six drug distributors and pharmacies, including Wal-Mart, CVS and Walgreens and the three biggest wholesalers AmerisourceBergen, McKesson and Cardinal Health, accusing them of not doing enough to stop millions of addictive painkiller tablets flooding their communities and harming their people.

The numbers in the lawsuit make for stark reading. Drug overdose deaths have soared 167 per cent of late, and Oklahoma – where the Cherokee Nation is based – leads the US for opioid prescription rates.

All told, 845m milligrams of opioids were distributed in the 14 counties that span Cherokee Nation in 2015 – which according to some sources means that each prescription opioid user in the Cherokee Nation received between 360 and 720 pills.

The pharma industry “uses lobbyists to put pressure on Washington on their behalf and lessen the penalties like in the Cardinal Health and Mallinkrodt cases [and this] is only fuelling the problem,” says Wesch.

“They need to start paying for their lack of social responsibility. I support Cherokee Nation bringing the cause of action against the pharmacies and believe we should bring more legal pressure to all levels involved from manufacturers to distributors.”

For adults within the Cherokee Nation, overdose deaths now outnumber deaths due to car accidents, according to tribal leaders.

“These companies must be held accountable for their gross negligence, which has fuelled the opioid epidemic. We deserve better,” said Cherokee Nation Attorney General Todd Hembree.

“They enabled prescription opioids to fall into illicit distribution channels, failed to alert regulators of extreme volume, and incentivized sales of these drugs with financial bonuses. We will not stand by while children are born addicted to opioids and our citizens die.”

TV documentary on pain treatment funded by doctor with industry ties

TV documentary on pain treatment funded by doctor with industry ties

www.statnews.com/2017/03/24/pain-documentary-public-television/

Public television stations across the country have begun airing a documentary about pain treatment produced by a doctor with significant financial ties to the manufacturers of opioid medications — a fact not disclosed in the program.

“The Painful Truth” chronicles the plight of several patients struggling to find effective treatment for chronic pain. Throughout the 57-minute-long program, politicians, federal agencies, and others are depicted as having overreacted to the epidemic of opioid-related overdoses; the documentary suggests pain specialists have been discouraged from prescribing opioids to patients who genuinely need them.

The program accuses the US Drug Enforcement Agency of unfairly targeting pain doctors and putting a “bounty” on pain clinics the agency aims to shut down.

“The political culture has declared war against opioids and those who prescribe them,” the narrator of the program says. “The DEA is the army. The pain patients are the civilians caught in the middle.”

The producer, Dr. Lynn Webster of Utah, and several of the experts he quotes in the program, have long-standing and extensive financial relationships with pain medicine makers. When asked why these relationships are not disclosed to viewers, Webster told STAT that he did not receive any drug industry funding for the documentary. He said it was funded entirely by himself and his wife.

“I am cognizant of that issue, but I think I dealt with it as carefully as I could,” he said in an interview. If viewers want to know whether any of the individual doctors associated with the documentary have financial relationships with pharmaceutical makers, Webster said they can search for that information on the web.

Institute for Clinical and Economic Review: accepting public comments

Important:. ESPECIALLY FOR PATIENTS WHO MAY HAVE DIFFICULTY ABSORBING OR METABOLIZING ABUSE DETERRENT OPIOIDS

(CALL TO ACTION ALERT) Hey folks, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review is accepting public comments in order to draft guidelines that will be used for formulating, pricing, and prescribing Opioid Analgesics with Abuse Deterrent Technology. They seem to be fair, and unbiased, and not anti opioid. Please consider commenting and addressing issues such as 1) what if they dont work? 2) what about the stigma around prescribing me an “abuse deterrent’ medicine when I DONT ABUSE? 3) what happens if it simply doesnt work for me, but I am cut off from my standard, common opioid analgesics? 4) what if Insurance companies wont cover it since they now believe Im an addict that needs “ABUSE DETERRENT” formulated medicines? 5) what if , since they are new medicines, are pushed into the higher Tier brackets and the co pays are unaffordable, and IM NOT ALLOWED TO GET ANOTHER CHOICE in opioid analgesics? and so on. Please consider a list of concerns you have with this push to start making ALL PRESCRIPTION ANALGESICS AVAILABLE ONLY WITH ABUSE DETERRENT TECHNOLOGY. We are not addicts. We cannot simply accept this belief that we are, and we ‘need’ these medicines because we ‘abuse so much medicine’. While there SHOULD be ADT medicines available for ADDICTS and those who are ‘at risk’, the average pain patient should not be forced to have to take these UNPROVEN, and EXPENSIVE medicines, which will ADD STIGMA and PERSECUTION to my health care needs. (PLEASE SHARE IN OTHER GROUPS AND PAGES).

www.icer-review.org/topic/abuse-deterrent-opioids/

LINK TO MAKE COMMENTS

https://www.regulations.gov/comment?D=FDA-2017-N-1094-0001

Preexisting conditions and insurance

There has been a lot of discussion recently about pre-existing conditions focusing on the perceived difference between the existing Obamacare and the perception of what the – yet to be passed by Congress – Trumpcare.

Here is a video of Jonathan Gruber – MIT Professor  that was involved in the development  of Obamacare stating that

Americans “Too Stupid to Understand” Obamacare

Keep in mind that before Obamacare started there was some 50 million Americans without health insurance and at Obamacare peak enrollment there was at least 30 million still without health insurance.  It would appear from the start that the timing of the implementation was pre-planned that any failing of the program would not be until after the 2017 election… but … the 2017 premiums and companies staying or pulling out was announced in Oct 2017… BEFORE THE ELECTION…  Some premiums over DOUBLED and many areas had only a SINGLE INSURANCE COMPANY willing to write policies and deductibles were INCREASED…  Those individuals/families that could afford the premiums, could not afford to get any healthcare.. because they couldn’t  afford to pay the deductibles.

Pre-existing conditions and insurance companies declining to provide coverage is common practice in many areas.

If you have numerous vehicle wrecks and tickets… Would you expect any/all insurance companies to write a policy and/or charge you rates that many can’t afford … with all those pre-existing conditions ?

You live along  the Gulf coast, eastern seaboard and you don’t have flood insurance or home owners insurance on your home… there is a hurricaine predicted to hit your area within a few days… you call an insurance agent to get home owners/flood insurance.. they will be happy to sell it to you BUT.. it will not be valid for 30 days.. because of the pre-existing condition of a eminent hurricane.

You are getting ready to apply for SS/Medicare disability and you call an insurance agent to buy DISABILITY INSURANCE…  the company insist on you having a medical exam before they will issue a policy and once you have the medical exam… they decline to issue the policy.. because of pre-existing conditions.

You are just diagnosed with terminal cancer .. and you decide to apply for a life insurance policy… if you are able to “hide” your terminal disease and you get a policy issued… if you die within the first couple of years after the policy was issues.. most likely there would be a search of your medical records and if they found out that you got the policy after being diagnosed with a terminal cancer… you will be lucky if they just give back the premiums that you paid in.

If a person goes on Medicare/Medicaid there is no preexisting exemptions.. because NO FOR PROFIT INSURANCE COMPANY is involved.  Healthcare is a FOR PROFIT BUSINESS… they are not going to write a policy if they believe that doing so will cost them more money than they will collect in premiums.

Until those that are trying to put together something to replace the failing Obamacare .. that if they want everyone to have health care insurance.. then EVERYONE is going to have to pay into the system… or the bureaucracy is going to have to supply supplemental financing …

 

Taking audio/video recordings to protect your rights

Over the last couple of weeks, we have seen several videos … concerning how the flying public is being mis-treated on various airlines…  American, United, Delta have made the news…

We have seen a person dragged off a plane… experiencing a concussion, broken nose and losing two teeth

A female with a baby in her arms was confronted by a flight attendant over a baby stroller

A male was tossed from a flight because after telling the flight attendant that he had to use the restroom and told him he would have to wait… after a 30+ minute wait .. he got up and quickly used the bathroom… 

The above video sort of reminds you of civil forfeitures… telling a father that he must relinquish a seat that he had PAID FOR.. and just one of the FOUR SEATS that he had paid for… one that a infant was sitting in – in a legal car seat..

He was lied to that it was a FAA rule that infants < 2 y/o could not fly in a car seat… Was threatened with him and his wife being thrown in jail and kids put in foster care unless he forfeited the four seats he had paid for.

When are we going to start see such audio/video of healthcare providers denying care, lying to pts, technically abusing pts ?

I have had pts tell me that they have been threatened by Pharmacists – normally chain store employees – have threatened to have pts ARRESTED because they asked for reason why their legal/on time/medically necessary prescriptions were being denied.

What are they wanting… pts getting down on their knees and BEGGING them to DO THEIR JOB ?

YouTube is a powerful platform for engagement, and uploading videos about protecting your rights can help to engage viewers and start a conversation about the topic. This can lead to increased awareness, advocacy, and action around protecting one’s rights. Visit this site to start your campaign from here and gain more youtube likes.

Corporations do not want BAD PRESS… and employees that cause them to get BAD PRESS .. may get suspended, fired or at least given a final warning…

Corporations typically don’t really care what their employees do.. as long as they don’t steal from the company, allow others to steal from the company and as long as HQ doesn’t get any complaints. The only time they will care and come looking for a problem is when revenues fall because pt/customers have taken their business elsewhere … where they are treated better.

IMO, many employees in healthcare neither respect nor fear pts nor care about their rights, and until they are taken to task to change how pts are treated… it will not improve and will probably get worse.

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Beware of worthless procedures and epidural steroids for your back pain

Beware of worthless procedures and epidural steroids for your back pain

www.kevinmd.com/blog/2017/04/beware-worthless-procedures-epidural-steroids-back-pain.html

CLICK ON GRAPHIC TO GO TO AMAZON TO PURCHASE

 

 

Is this document enough to start filing grievance with www.cms.gov if pt is on Medicare/Medicaid … or with your insurance company … or if your insurance is from an employer and self insured (ERISA) then file a grievance with the person/dept that is making decisions about what is to be paid for by the company.  The employer may go after the insurer for refunds of all the monies that was paid out for unnecessary and discouraged procedures.

If this was not so absurd … it would be funny… CDC and the like says that there is no proof (clinical studies) that opiates work long term.. because there has been no double blind studies on such, all there is … is anecdotal evidence from pts that it works… yet.. there is no clinical evidence that ESI using cortisone has been proven to be beneficial, and in fact more evidence that they have the potential to be harmful to the pt.  Technically, for a healthcare professional to provide a product/service that is not medically necessary… and insurance is billed for such… is considered INSURANCE FRAUD.

Many healthcare providers seem to have neither respect for nor fear of pts.  If you wish to file the claim anonymously, then hire an attorney to file the complaint and the pt can “hide” behind the attorney/client privilege.  This could also be a potential area of class action against a healthcare provider… Providing unnecessary/unapproved procedures to hundreds of pts.

Near my office, there’s a breakfast-and-lunch joint where strangers sit down at shared tables. When Joseph, an attorney in his early seventies, heard that I was writing a book about the back pain industry, he started asking questions.

That afternoon, he was scheduled to have the first of three epidural spinal injections meant to relieve the symptoms of spinal stenosis, a condition in which the spinal cord narrows to the point where it squeezes the nerves. The weakness and cramping in his legs were so bad that he couldn’t walk a long city block without stopping to recover.

The injections were his best hope, he said, making it even harder for me to break the news. A few months earlier, in a 2015 review of the medical literature, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality had found no evidence that epidural steroid injections were effective in treating symptoms of spinal stenosis or typical lower-back pain. Even in the presence of a recent disc herniation and ensuing sciatica, the benefits of injections were small and not sustained over time. That news followed on the heels of an FDA statement warning that injection of the active medication in these shots, glucocorticoids — a class of corticosteroids — into the epidural space of the spine could result in rare but serious neurological problems, including loss of vision, stroke, paralysis and death. Based on those and other findings, the Journal of the American Medical Association ( JAMA) advised physicians to refrain from recommending injection therapy to patients with any kind of chronic back pain.

That news did not go over well with the doctors known as “interventional pain physicians,” who make a living performing such procedures. In the United States, more than ten million epidural steroid injections are delivered each year, a number that makes them the bread and butter of interventional pain management practices.

I was not surprised that my lunch partner didn’t have the facts. Primary care physicians who ordered the shots were rarely informed about the lack of evidence and the risks of treatment. Even young, healthy people, explained anesthesiologist James Rathmell, the chair of the Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine at Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital, could go in with manageable low-back-pain symptoms and come out with catastrophic neurological injuries. “The bottom line,” said Rathmell, “is that if you come into my clinic with chronic axial back pain, you’re not going to get epidural steroid injections — because they don’t work.

“People should get the best evidence-based treatment they can,” he added. “As a rule of thumb, if you pay practitioners to do stuff, they will do more stuff. Frankly, what’s happened in interventional pain management is just a microcosm of what’s happened in all of medicine.”

As I explained these things to Joseph, he paled. Why would his doctor advise him to undergo a worthless and risky procedure?

Three decades ago, anesthesiologists had no trouble getting jobs in hospital ORs. On a busy morning, they could run five cases at once, and get paid for them all, while depending on registered nurses to keep an eye on individual patients. Starting in the early 1990s, cost-conscious health management organizations (HMOs) realized that the nurses could manage without supervision, and they stopped paying fees to doctors who at best were marginally present. Many anesthesiologists found themselves underemployed. They knew little about treating musculoskeletal disorders or how to address the feelings of depression, anger, and isolation that often afflict back pain patients, but when they retooled, they set up pain management practices.

Torpedoed into entrepreneurship, the most successful interventional pain physicians offered an ever-expanding menu of injections, including facet and sacroiliac joint blocks, selective nerve blocks, discography, needle electromyography, radio-frequency and thermal facet ablations, botulinum toxin, and trigger point injections. They implanted intrathecal drug delivery pumps and spinal cord stimulators and cemented together vertebral compression fractures. They used medical lasers to heat, shave and slice soft tissue. By the turn of the new millennium, interventional pain management, which a decade before had barely existed, had become one of the most profitable aspects of spine care.

There are, indeed, people who undergo one perfectly targeted epidural steroid injection and hit the golf course the next morning, completely cured. In the more typical scenario, however, the first injection — if in fact, it provides any relief at all — is only briefly effective. Then the numbing medicine and the anti-inflammatory effect of the glucocorticoid wear off, and the pain returns.

Generally, the shots are ordered in a series of three, although no expert I asked could say why, and the American Society of Anesthesiologists’ guidelines do not advise the administration of a specific number. “You always do three, even if the first two do no good at all,” wisecracked neurosurgeon Charles Burton, who publicly questioned the safety and effectiveness of the procedure, long before JAMA and the FDA got on board. Some doctors construed the “rule of three” to mean that, in a single visit, they could give three shots at each affected vertebral level, thereby exposing a patient to a colossal dose of glucocorticoid. In fact, when Colorado researchers mined an insurance company’s database, they found that one doctor had billed a single patient for fifty-one such injections in one year. The same database showed that a New Jersey patient had received thirteen shots in a five-month period and had subsequently developed kidney failure.

The FDA had been issuing cautionary statements about epidural steroid injections since 1981. But in 2014, the agency took a further step compelling pharmaceutical manufacturers that produced the injectable glucocorticoids to clearly state the risks on every vial’s label, advising that “serious neurologic events, some resulting in death, have been reported with epidural injection,” and that the “safety and effectiveness of epidural administration of corticosteroids have not been established.” The FDA stopped short of requiring manufacturers to notify physicians or their purchasing departments that things had changed, and most did not notice. One pain physician, Cleveland Clinic’s Richard Rosenquist, told Bloomberg reporter David Armstrong that because he’d used such drugs for his entire career, unless he was alerted to do so, he was “unlikely to go back and spend time reading the package insert.”

The implications were significant: Properly “consented,” a patient who was about to receive an epidural steroid injection would hear about specific risks, including damage to the dura mater (the sturdy sleeve surrounding the spinal cord), nerve root injury, elevated cholesterol levels, vertebral fractures, the death of muscle and bone tissue, staph infection, epidural abscess, immune system deficits, stroke and death. But in reality, if this information was conveyed at all, it was in boilerplate format, which the patient signed after only a cursory glance.

There are two dominant techniques for administering epidural steroid injections. In the first, known as “interlaminar,” the needle is directed into the epidural space, around the spinal nerves. In the second approach, referred to as “transforaminal,” the needle is inserted at an angle, which places it closer to the targeted nerve but also in the vicinity of vessels and arteries. Incorrectly placed, the needle can sever an artery or deliver medication into the blood vessels, clogging them and preventing adequate blood flow to the brain. The result, in either case, may be stroke or paralysis.

Whether the approach is transforaminal or interlaminar, research shows that a quarter of epidural steroid injections miss their targets. In “blind” injections, performed without fluoroscopic guidance, the needle is incorrectly placed in up to half of epidural steroid procedures.

In roughly six percent of epidural steroid injections (a number that sounds small but is not, because thousands of injections are delivered every day), the needle nicks the dura mater, the sturdy sleeve surrounding the spinal cord, allowing cerebrospinal fluid to leak out. Typically, this is not terribly serious. It results in a severe headache, which goes away after the patient lies flat for a couple of days. Sometimes, another procedure, known as a “blood patch,” is used to stop the leak of cerebrospinal fluid.

But when the needle actually punctures the dura mater, it’s a different story. Then the payload of glucocorticoid and anesthetic may be delivered into a region of fragile nerve tissue called the subarachnoid space. From there, the cerebrospinal fluid, bearing its toxic load, circulates to the brain, where the cortisone solution efficiently strips the insulating (and essential) myelin layer of neurons. One result is “adhesive arachnoiditis,” a condition so grossly debilitating that neurologist Dewey Nelson described it as akin to “having a blowtorch up your rectum. It binds the nerves, like gunky cooked spaghetti, and the result is unrelenting pain that may last for a lifetime.”

Cathryn Jakobson Ramin is an investigative journalist and author of Crooked: Outwitting the Back Pain Industry and Getting on the Road to Recovery.  Reprinted with permission of Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers

 

 

FL Implementation Bill Dies

    Implementation Bill Dies

The House and Senate have adjourned the 2017 session. The medical marijuana bills are among scores of bills that didn’t make it through both the House and Senate.

Lawmakers had created massive new regulation driven by special interests.

The House and Senate both gave lip service to working in the interests of the patients while taking tens of thousands of dollars from the “Have’s” (those who have a license) and the “Have Not’s” (those who want a license).

Drug-Free America was a leading voice in the drafting of House bill 1397. The bill was amended and re-written dozens of times. The final hours of the debate had nothing to do with patients and everything to do with the people who want to profit off the patients.

100 stores per license – was the final sticking point for the dart thrown between infinity and 3.

The Senate, in an earlier committee, attempted to block the seven license holders from growing so fast they would hold a market monopoly. They put a cap on the number of storefronts per license. The House rejected the cap on storefronts. (Could the thousands of dollars Leader Rodrigues got from the current license holders be part of the reason they held out?)

This session, those of us up here in Tallahassee working for you without compensation came to think of ourselves as the “Have Compassion” and “Have a Conscience”. Well, we lost this session. WE would like to thank our allies, Gary Stein, the team from the Minorities for Medical Marijuana, supporters of NORML and all those who came up to speak. We worked long and hard, but we couldn’t overcome the influence of money on the process.

Because the House and Senate failed to provide a framework for the implementation of Amendment 2 the Department of Health Office of Compassionate Use will finish the rule making process. You will remember they have already held public hearings.

Already attorneys are considering their options for lawsuits. This is an expensive and uncertain process.

For now, if you know someone who uses cannabis then be sure to encourage them to use caution.

Leading from the Front,
FLCAN Team
Florida Cannabis Action Network | Leading The Grassroots Since 1998
Anonymous Donations to P.O. Box 360653, Melbourne, FL 32936 | Tel: 321-253-3673

Lawsuit: State threatened to take children after false positive drug test

Lawsuit: State threatened to take children after false positive drug test

http://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2017/05/05/lawsuit-state-threatened-take-children-after-false-positive-drug-test/101328170/

according to : Research shows that morphine and codeine can sometimes be detected in the urine up to 48 hours after ingestion of poppy seeds from some pastries, such as bagels, muffins, and cakes (see reference one for a free article on this topic).  http://www.usada.org/can-poppyseeds-cause-a-positive-drug-test/  

So these “investigators” knew or should have know this fact… when Holly asked if eating poppy seeds on Bagel Chips could have caused the positive urine test…   Also this information states that the poppy seeds MAY CONTAIN Morphine and Codeine… and Heroin is metabolized in the body into Morphine so these “investigators” jumped to the conclusion that Holly was using Heroin… Just another illegal process by “people in authority” … to gain  “extra money” for their agency. Kind of reminds you of civil asset forfeitures ?

Holly Schulkers said they knew she wasn’t on heroin before she left the St. Elizabeth hospital in Edgewood, but that didn’t stop state social workers and hospital staff from threatening to take her children and putting her through a two-month “nightmare.”

Now, she’s suing the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services and St. Elizabeth Healthcare in federal court in Covington.

Schulkers walked into the hospital Feb. 8 to deliver her child through induced labor. She and her husband, David Schulkers, each have two children from previous marriages. This would be their first child together, and Schulkers said likely their last.

The labor went smoothly and she gave birth to a seven-pound baby girl on Feb. 9, a Thursday. She breastfed her new daughter within the first hour, and began discussing discharge with her doctors.

On Friday morning, according to the lawsuit, the Schulkers received an unexpected visit to their room from a hospital social worker who told her she had tested positive for opioids.

 The suit, filed Thursday in U.S. District Court, states Schulkers was told she couldn’t leave the hospital with her child, who would have to be monitored for 72 hours for withdrawal symptoms.

Schulkers agreed to a second urine test and was told her baby’s umbilical cord would also be tested. But, she said, before the results of those tests came back, the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services was contacted and social workers came to her room.

“They started asking me how the heroin, is what they said, got in my system,” Schulkers said. “I said, ‘There’s a mistake. Somebody mixed up the urine. I’m not a heroin addict.'”

She said she asked if the poppy seeds on the “Stacy’s Everything Bagel Chips” she had eaten before she gave birth could have thrown off the test, and was told the result could not be affected by that.

The state workers asked where she lived, how many children they had, where the kids were and where they went to school, according to the suit.

“She said she was going to run a background check on me, and asked what drug charges they would find,” Schulkers said. “I told them they weren’t going to find anything. I work with children. I volunteer at the kids’ school. They run background checks on me to make sure I’m not a criminal coming into the kids’ school.”

Schulkers said the cabinet even called her mother-in-law to ask if there was any history of drug abuse.

The suit states a supervisor with the cabinet told Schulkers, still in the hospital with her newborn, to “let me get the help you need so you can be a better mother to your children.”

When Schulkers insisted she did not do drugs, the suit states, she was told “until this gets figured out you are no longer allowed to be around any children without supervision of (an) approved individual.”

The suit states Schulkers’ second urine test and the umbilical cord test came back negative over the weekend, but that Schulkers and her husband weren’t off the hook.

According to the suit, they signed a prevention plan, which barred Holly Schulkers from being alone with any of her children. Stamped at the bottom of the plan, in capital letters: “Absent effective preventative services, placement in foster care is the planned arrangement for the child.”

The couple signed “under duress” and “coercive conditions,” the suit states, because they were worried that their children would be removed from their care.

Schulkers was allowed to take her daughter home Sunday. She said her the baby never showed any signs of withdrawal.

On Monday, Schulkers’ husband stayed home to “supervise” his wife and newborn. Their older children went to school where they were met by cabinet investigators, according to the suit. Schulkers said she was not told this was happening, and didn’t learn about it until afterward.

“They pulled my kids out [of class], my husband’s kids out and questioned them about if I took any prescription medicine, if they ever saw me smoking anything,” Schulkers said. “They asked if my husband and I fought, if we fought did we hit each other?

“My oldest daughter said she was really nervous and scared. My son thought they were getting information to kidnap him and break into our house. No child at that age should have their innocence taken away.”

She took yet another drug test, a hair test that would show any long term abuse. The suit states that test came back negative, too, and the results were sent to the cabinet.

It wasn’t until April 7 that the Schulkers received a letter stating the prevention plan was over and that “the claim of abuse was unsubstantiated.” Schulkers said it was a two-month “nightmare” in which she lived in fear of losing her children, sometimes worried to even answer the door to her Fort Thomas home.

“The birth of my last child has been ruined by these people,” Schulkers said. “I was basically guilty in their eyes. It wasn’t ‘innocent until proven guilty.’ It was, ‘This lady is on drugs and we’re going to do what we need to do to prove that.'”

Her legal team argues the cabinet may have had financial incentives for keeping the case open as long as it did. The suit claims  the prevention plan’s language matches the language required for the cabinet to receive federal funding for investigations.

“If the investigation is terminated, they quit receiving the funding. In our mind, that explains why the cabinet may have kept this open for two months,” said Schulkers’ attorney, Paul Hill. “If that was done to this family for money from the federal government, it’s pure evil.”

The Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services did not respond to requests for comment on the lawsuit.

“We cannot comment on any prospective or active litigation matters,” a spokesperson at St. Elizabeth said in a statement Friday. “St. Elizabeth follows all necessary protocols and procedures to ensure the safety and health of all patients.”

For Schulkers, the lawsuit extends beyond her family.

“I’m sure this has happened to other people,” she said. “I want to make sure it never happens to anyone else again.”