‘Narcan parties,’ ‘narc-me parties,’ ‘Lazarus parties

http://www.ksl.com/?sid=44109931&nid=148

SALT LAKE CITY — There is new concern that naloxone, the drug that counteracts an opiate overdose, could be used in what Utah’s Drug Enforcement Administration is calling “Narcan parties.”

“Anytime you have something good, a criminal will capitalize on that and use it to their own advantage,” said DEA special agent Brian Besser.

Besser said the demand for prescription pills in our state is unprecedented and because of that, when users can no longer get their prescriptions filled, they turn to drugs like heroin. He said 80 percent of Utah’s heroin users started out with prescription drugs.

Naloxone, also known by its brand name Narcan, is a fast-acting drug that reverses the effects of heroin and prescription painkiller overdoses and restores breathing. As a result, naloxone has become prevalent, but lately not for the reasons intended.

“We are hearing them called ‘Narcan parties,’ ‘narc-me parties,’ ‘Lazarus parties.’ You know, like raising someone from the dead,” he said.

Dr. Jennifer Plumb with Naloxone Utah said pairing things like heroin and naloxone is not as good as it sounds.

“When you receive naloxone as an opioid-dependent person, it feels awful,” she said. “It sends you immediately into withdrawal.”

Plumb said in some cases, it takes more than one dose to counteract the overdose, which is why she finds it hard to believe someone would voluntarily participate in a “Narcan party.”

“One, you feel terrible, and two, to lose their last resources or potentially their last fix, it just defies all common sense to me,” she said.

DEA officials said although there is no evidence of it happening in Utah, they are doing everything they can to stay informed.

“Just because it appears to be below the radar here, I don’t want to be naïve and think that it does not exist,” Besser said.

What is more important medication PRICE or QUALITY ? FDA – ASLEEP AT THE SWITCH

FDAFDA slams Indian API firm for faking certificates of analysis

http://www.fiercepharma.com/manufacturing/fda-slams-indian-api-firm-for-faking-certificates-analysis

The FDA put India’s Sal Pharma on its import alert list and then issued it a warning letter for putting fake COAs on products that were manufactured by companies that are not approved by the agency and selling them in the U.S.

DEA effectively proposes a power grab and is trying to end-run the congressional appropriations process

DEA Seeks Prosecutors To Fight Opioid Crisis; Critics Fear Return To War On Drugs

http://www.npr.org/2017/05/04/526784152/dea-seeks-prosecutors-to-fight-opioid-crisis-critics-fear-return-to-war-on-drugs

The Drug Enforcement Administration has proposed hiring its own prosecutor corps to bring cases related to drug trafficking, money laundering and asset forfeiture — a move that advocacy groups warn could exceed the DEA’s legal authority and reinvigorate the 1980s-era war on drugs.

Citing the epidemic in opioid-related overdoses, the DEA said it wants to hire as many as 20 prosecutors to enhance its resources and target the biggest offenders. The DEA said the new force of lawyers “would be permitted to represent the United States in criminal and civil proceedings before the courts and apply for various legal orders.” The agency would use money it gets from companies that manufacture and dispense certain kinds of prescription drugs under the federal Controlled Substances Act.

The agency’s proposal, published in the federal register in March, received little if any public attention. But it would represent the first time the DEA had its own, dedicated prosecutors to go after drug-related offenses. Those lawyers would be shared or “detailed” to U.S. attorney’s offices and the main Justice Department, after an assessment of which regions needed the most help.

In an interview, DEA spokesman Rusty Payne described the plan as an outgrowth of the destruction that opioids have wreaked.

“We’re losing 90 people a day to opioids and about 140 a day to drugs altogether,” Payne said. “It’s pretty clear we’ve got to use the tools we have at our disposal to attack this. We’ve got to hold accountable the people who are facilitating addiction and heartache.”

“In this notice, the DEA effectively proposes a power grab and is trying to end-run the congressional appropriations process,” said Michael Collins, deputy director at the Drug Policy Alliance.

Collins said the special account at DEA is intended to keep prescription drugs safe and available to patients who need them, not to pay for prosecutors to target drug offenders. He said the rule is yet another warning signal that the Justice Department is shifting its approach to drug criminals under new Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Sessions, who was a U.S. attorney in Alabama in the 1980s, frequently decries the danger from drugs and gangs and uses rhetoric with echoes from the height of the cocaine epidemic.

“If the Sessions DOJ wants to abandon criminal justice reform, and escalate the war on drugs, that conversation should happen above board and in public; not in some arcane rule making document that very few people read or understand,” Collins added.

 

Kansas: Judicial/Legislative system… BRAINLESS , HEARTLESS or just PLAIN STUPID ?

Woman with terminal cancer jailed over medication in her system

WICHITA, Kan. (KAKE) –

A grandmother with terminal cancer is in the Sedgwick County Jail because of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, in her system while she was driving.

But the THC was in her system because it is in a medication her pharmacist says she needs in order to eat while on chemotherapy.

Angela Kastner has colorectal cancer. KAKE News spoke with her Tuesday night, right before she reported to jail for a 48-hour sentence. She’s in jail as a result of a DUI, although she had nothing to drink. 

“I had … Marinol in my system that the doctors in Oklahoma gave me to fight cancer. I’ve been fighting cancer 5 years,” Kastner said. 

Marinol is an FDA approved medication for cancer patients. It helps them keep down food. It’s a synthetic form of THC, but it’s legal.

According to her pharmacist, the amount of THC in her blood is not enough to make anyone high. The time Kastner will spend in jail will force her to miss a chemo session, which will force her to restart her whole regimen. Her doctor is not happy. 

“I miss my chemo tomorrow and I miss my doctors appointment tomorrow,” said Kastner.

Kastner’s niece, Crystal Fleming, is doing her best to help.

“She’s all I’ve got,” she said. “My dad passed away and she’s all I’ve got.”

Kastner is coming forward with her story so other cancer patients won’t have to experience the same legal treatment.  

“I feel sorry for the next cancer patient who has to go through anything I have had to go through. They shouldn’t have to do this at the end of their life.”

Fleming is just hoping her aunt won’t get any worse with her suppressed immune system. Kastner did plead no contest to the DUI charge. In a document obtained by KAKE News, her doctor says that if chemotherapy does not work then she will need hospice care. 

Opioid Induced Hyperalgesia—Exploring Myth and Reality

Published on Jan 18, 2017

Concern over opioid abuse is amplifying interest in opioid induced hyperalgesia among governing bodies and payor organizations. Dr. Harden discusses the current state of the science surrounding OIH, including terminology, technology/methodology, and existing evidence. Additionally, he offers some observations on the 2016 CDC prescribing guidelines for primary care practitioners.

Kratom Is the Cure for the Opioid Epidemic.’ Q&A With Filmmaker Chris Bell

Kratom Is the Cure for the Opioid Epidemic.’ Q&A With Filmmaker Chris Bell

CVS Health profit slides 17%

CVS Health profit slides 17%

http://www.sltrib.com/home/5243304-155/cvs-health-profit-slides-17-still

 

 

 

A quote by a Pharmacist on another Face Book page

OMG , so i guess there will not be more techs hours then , it will be just the pharmacist and his customers to compensate their loss, actually 17% is less than what i expected , with a company treats employess and patients like they are their own slaves , with no patients safety measurements under supervision of assholes midlevel managements , with the loss of tricare and ranked as one the worst corporate to work for , the profit should slide by 50% at least and you know it will happen and the day will come when this fake health care corporate collapse

Government Releases Massive Trove of Data on Doctors’ Prescribing Patterns

Government Releases Massive Trove of Data on Doctors’ Prescribing Patterns

https://www.propublica.org/article/government-releases-massive-trove-of-data-on-doctors-prescribing-patterns

The federal government released detailed data today on nearly 1.4 billion prescriptions dispensed to seniors and disabled people in the Medicare program in 2013, bringing more openness to the medication choices of doctors nationwide.

The data release comes two years after ProPublica reported that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services had done little to detect or deter hazardous prescribing in its drug program, known as Medicare Part D. ProPublica analyzed several years’ worth of prescription data, obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, and created a tool called Prescriber Checkup that lets users compare individual physicians to others in the same specialty and state.

But Medicare itself hadn’t made this information easily accessible—until now.

“This transparency will give patients, researchers, and providers access to information that will help shape the future of our nation’s health for the better,” said acting CMS Administrator Andy Slavitt in a statement accompanying the data’s release.

The information released by CMS is part of the agency’s data transparency initiative. In recent years, CMS has released data on hospital charges, geographic variations in the way health care is delivered, and Medicare’s payments to doctors. The payment data, first released last year, came after the Wall Street Journal and its parent company challenged a long-standing legal injunction that had kept the information private.

Medicare changed its approach to overseeing Part D after the ProPublica reports.

Before, agency officials insisted that monitoring problem prescription patterns fell to the private health plans that administer the program, not the government itself. Congress never intended for CMS to second-guess doctors – and didn’t give it that authority, officials said.

Doctors didn’t even have to be enrolled in Medicare to prescribe to patients in Part D, making it impossible for the program to know basic facts about whether the prescriptions these doctors wrote were appropriate.

Since our reports, CMS has moved to fix Part D’s excesses and blind spots. In May 2014, the agency gave itself the authority to expel physicians from Medicare if they are found to prescribe drugs in abusive ways. Beginning next month, the agency also will compel health providers to enroll in Medicare to order medications for patients in Part D, closing the loophole that has allowed some practitioners to operate with little or no oversight.

Medicare Part D is popular among seniors for helping to lower their drug costs. But experts have complained that since Part D began in 2006, Medicare has placed a higher priority on getting prescriptions into patients’ hands than on targeting problem prescribers. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ inspector general has repeatedly called for tighter controls.

Among ProPublica’s findings:

  • Medicare had failed to use its own records to flag doctors who prescribed thousands of dangerous, inappropriate or unnecessary medications.

    One Miami psychiatrist, for example, wrote 8,900 prescriptions in 2010 for powerful antipsychotics to patients older than 65, including many with dementia. A black-box warning on the drugs says they should not be used by such patients because it increases their risk of death. The doctor said he’d never been contacted by Medicare.

    ProPublica also found that many of the top prescribers of the most abused painkillers had been charged with crimes, convicted, disciplined by their state medical boards or terminated from Medicaid. Nearly all remained eligible to prescribe in Medicare.

  • Medicare wasted hundreds of millions of dollars a year by failing to rein in doctors who routinely give patients pricey name-brand drugs when cheaper generic alternatives are available.
  • The top prescribers of some drugs received speaking payments from the companies that made them.
  • Medicare’s process of flagging fraud was so convoluted and ineffective that the program was losing millions of dollars to schemes. Though the number of prescriptions attributed to Florida kidney specialist Carmen Ortiz-Butcher more than quadrupled in a year and the cost of her drugs to Medicare spiked from $282,000 to $4 million, Medicare didn’t ask any questions until Ortiz-Butcher realized that her prescription pads had been stolen and falsified.

The data released by Medicare today includes summary information, such as the total number of prescriptions written by each doctor in 2013, as well as more detailed information about each drug a doctor prescribed. It covers prescriptions worth more than $103 billion, not including rebates that lower the cost by an undisclosed amount.

The top prescribed drug in the program in 2013 was the blood pressure drug Lisinopril, prescribed 36.9 million times, including refills. Medicare spent the most on Nexium, $2.5 billion, not including rebates. The drug taken by the most Part D patients was the narcotic hydrocodone-acetaminophen. More than 8 million users filled at least one prescription for it.

Eric Hammelman, a vice president at the consulting firm Avalere Health, said the prescribing data could unlock clues about differences in how doctors practice medicine. Take, for instance, antibiotics, he said, which are often prescribed for inappropriate reasons. While the new data won’t show which prescriptions are inappropriate, it may flag providers who should be asked questions because they prescribe the drugs to a high proportion of their patients.

Beyond that, if consumers compare the prescribing data to data on the payments drug companies have made to doctors, they can see how often doctors prescribe products sold by companies with whom they have financial relationships.

“Knock on wood, these files are coming out on a regular basis. I think some of the doctors and manufacturers would prefer this goes away,” Hammelman said.

Robert M. Wah, president of the American Medical Association, said in a statement that the data “is much more complex than initially meets the eye. The limitations of it should be more comprehensively listed and highlighted more prominently so that patients can clearly understand them.”

ProPublica will be analyzing the information in coming weeks and incorporating the data into our Prescriber Checkup tool.

The PBM Story – why your prescriptions cost so damn much …

The Real Story of PBMs

Because who doesn’t like a story—especially when it’s true?

Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) say they reduce drug prices and increase patient access, but the facts just don’t bear that out. A new NCPA resource—The PBM Story: What They Say, What They Do, and What Can Be Done About It—tells the real story of how PBMs got their start as useful claims processors but then morphed into large corporations more interested in extracting profits from the prescription drug supply chain than in ensuring medication affordability and access. And that’s the real story: PBMs have done more to enrich themselves over the past 25 years than they have done to bring down drug costs.

Download The PBM Story (download the 6-page pdf or the 12-page pdf or the brief one-pager) and share it with your members of Congress, your state legislators, other policymakers, local employers, and anyone else who needs to understand the discrepancy between what PBMs say and the actual effect they have in driving up prescription drug prices and limiting patient access to medications. Watch our 3-minute video describing how PBMs raise prescription drug costs for patients below.

War declared on SICK & ELDERLY

No, the Republican healthcare bill does not protect preexisting conditions

G.O.P. Bill Would Make Medical Malpractice Suits Harder to Win

Many different entities (state legislatures, insurance companies, medical practices) are imposing days supply – up to 7 days – that opiates can be prescribed for acute pain.

Many insurance companies are requiring PRIOR AUTHORIZATION on all opiates and have REMOVED PRIOR AUTHORIZATIONS on Suboxone and other medications used to treat addiction.

Prescribers refusing to diagnose pts with the need of palliative care to be able to prescribe more than daily mgs limits

Just like school yard bullies that pick on the weak, meek and the easily intimidated…  the “medical school yard” seems to have amassed a “army of bullies”.

It has been reported in surveys that 90% of the families that have a chronic pain pt… are struggling financially because one spouse can’t work and/or the cost of therapy/treatment.

Generally, the chronic pain pts are physically, mentally, financially exhausted and if there is still a spouse around – a lot of divorces among chronic painers – that has to “pick up the slack – because of the physical limitations of the chronic painer…  Making them have less time to “put up a fight” against the discrimination that chronic painers are experiencing