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

 

Narcan won’t save you from this type of fentanyl

Narcan won’t save you from this type of fentanyl

http://www.valleynewslive.com/content/news/Narcan-wont-save-you-with-this-type-of-fentanyl-420944143.html

FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live): It’s a type of fentanyl that’s resistant to Narcan, and it’s popping up across the country. The DEA in Pennsylvania is warning people to be on the lookout as this drug continues devastating lives, unlike its medically based cousin. It’s called acryl fentanyl, another form of the drug that’s 100 times more powerful than morphine.

“Narcan is not the 100% fail safe that people may think it is, it does not always work,” explained West Fargo Police Interim Chief Jerry Boyer.

At a recent news conference, police and health officials warned about the deadly opioids like fentanyl. But unlike fentanyl which has a medical use, and carfentanil which is used by veterinarians, acryl fentanyl has no purpose.

“It’s a Schedule I drug, so this one has no medical use at all. At all. So it’s here illegally,” said DEA Special Agent David Battiste.

A DEA report shows the different types of fentanyl and derivatives recently seized and tested by their forensic lab in the first quarter of the year. Acryl fentanyl started appearing to the DEA last fall, and comes in a powder, looking similar to other forms. The DEA says that even narcotics experts couldn’t tell the difference without testing.

“These are dangerous drugs. They’re cut by these dealers who don’t care about anything other than making a profit. It can be cut with anything,” said DEA Special Agent Battiste.

The DEA says it is not clear how and why this acryl fentanyl is resistant to Narcan. The drug is being manufactured overseas, and smuggled into the U.S. The DEA says it mainly comes from China, but in March that country made it illegal to export four fentanyl classes including carfentanil and acryl fentanyl.

In 2016, there were about 30 opioid overdose deaths in Cass County alone according to Fargo Cass Public Health. They report seeing several deaths a month so far this year.

 

Recommended dose of IV acetaminophen may be insufficient for multiple-trauma patients

Recommended dose of IV acetaminophen may be insufficient for multiple-trauma patients

http://www.clinicaladvisor.com/pain-information-center/dose-of-1-g-iv-acetaminophen-may-be-insufficient-for-multiple-trauma-patients/article/652145/

(HealthDay News) — A dosage of 1 g intravenous acetaminophen every 6 hours yields serum concentrations below 10 µg/mL for critically ill multiple-trauma patients, according to a study published in the Journal of Clinical Pharmacology.

Oscar Fuster-Lluch, PhD, from the Hospital Universitari i Politècnic La Fe in Valencia, Spain, and colleagues examined the pharmacokinetic profile of intravenous acetaminophen administered to critically ill multiple-trauma patients after 4 doses of 1 g every 6 hours. Serum and urine acetaminophen concentrations were assessed and used to calculate pharmacokinetic parameters. Data were included for 22 patients (age, 44 years), mostly males (68%), who were not obese.

The researchers found that the maximum acetaminophen concentration was 33.6 µg/mL and the minimum concentration was 0.5 µg/mL. All values were below 10 µg/mL and 8 were below the limit of detection. Serum and renal clearance were 28.8 L/hour and 15 mL/min, respectively. For a steady-state minimum concentration of 10 µg/mL, the theoretical daily dose would be 12.2 g/day; the dose would be 6.9 g/day for an average steady-state concentration of 10 µg/mL.

“In conclusion, administration of acetaminophen at the recommended dosage of 1 g per 6 hours to critically ill multiple-trauma patients yields serum concentrations below 10 µg/mL due to increased elimination,” the authors write. “To reach the 10 µg/mL target, and from a strictly pharmacokinetic point of view, continuous infusion may be more feasible than bolus dosing.”

Maryland Medicaid Opioid Drug Utilization Review

Maryland Medicaid Opioid Drug Utilization Review

As part of Maryland’s effort to combat the national opioid epidemic, Maryland Medicaid is focused on improving the opioid prescribing process in the effort to reduce opioid misuse, dependence, overdose and death.

Here, you’ll find information about the opioid epidemic landscape in Maryland, the HealthChoice program’s response, and resources for providers and HealthChoice managed care organizations  made available through the Drug Utilization Review process.

This one AMAZING COMPANY…

This is one amazing company… we use to buy our 14.5 y/o.. Shih Tzu’s (Sammy) special diet food from our vet. We mis-estimated how much he was going to eat while we were in FL for the winter and Barb found this company stocked the specific special dog food and she ordered a case. Unfortunately, either her fault or theirs we were sent the right brand but the wrong version.  So Barb contacted them to order the correct food… They told us to donate the case to a local shelter and they sent us another case AT NO CHARGE…

We have since purchased all if Sammy’s food from them.. one order had a couple of slightly “bent cans” in the order and Barb made them aware of it..  Another order had a can so seriously bend that the seal was broken on the can and it was leaking…

The next day.. there is a new case of the dog food at our front door – AT NO CHARGE…

Barb has set up auto ship on his foods and other treats from them…

Last Thursday and Friday… Sammy is drinking water excessively and loading his “pads” equally with urine… we called the vet Friday afternoon and they are only opened Saturday 9 AM to noon and they were booked solid but if we brought him at opening they would look at him..  They ran labs and some of his liver values .. were off the scale.. and suggested that he be put on IV for the weekend… which we agreed to …

Barb sent a message to www.chew.com to suspend our automatic shipping orders…

Today the front door bell rang and there is a gentleman at the door with this:

 

 

 

 

 

 

with the attached note:

The two days of IV has lowered some of his liver values but no where near normal… We had a sonogram on Sammy as they recommended and the BAD NEWS is that it appears that Sammy has several small malignant masses in his liver. Because there are several masses and his age… surgery is not an option… and likewise because of his age neither is chemo. The vet did say that typically this type of cancer is SLOW GROWING…

He is back home and seems rather “normal” … how many more “normal days” that he has…

This breed has a life expectancy of 12-15 years and he turned 14 this past Dec… 

The reason for this post… if you have a pet … www.chewy.com… deserves your patronage … an IMPERSONAL INTERNET VENDOR THEY ARE NOT !!!

 

 

 

Ohio: Legal/prescribed use of MMJ could get you fired.. what medication is next ?

Medical marijuana: It’s here. It’s legal. What business leaders need to know.

http://www.sbnonline.com/article/medical-marijuana-legal-ohio-business-leaders-need-know/

A lot of confusion and misinformation still surrounds the Ohio Medical Marijuana Control Program, according to state and industry experts.

In March, the Columbus Chamber of Commerce hosted a panel discussion on the business benefits and challenges of Ohio’s medical marijuana law.

House Bill 523 authorized a basic framework — legalized medical marijuana for qualifying medical conditions, but prohibited its use by smoking or combustion — and made Ohio one of 28 states to establish a public medical marijuana program. But it left state agencies to establish specific rules and guidelines.

At this point, the Ohio Department of Commerce, State of Ohio Board of Pharmacy and State Medical Board of Ohio have written seven relevant rule sets. These rules —and all other pertinent information — can be found at medicalmarijuana.ohio.gov.

The rules will be finalized by Sept. 8. The state agencies have tried to be transparent and flexible with as much public input as possible, while keeping to strict deadlines, says Missy Craddock, policy staff member for the Office of Gov. John Kasich.

The MMCP likely won’t become operational until Sept. 8, 2018.

Employers

Ohio employers have some of the broadest protections in the country, says Michael Griffaton, of counsel at Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP, who played an integral role in drafting the medical marijuana legislation.

“House Bill 523 expressly states that employers do not have to accommodate medical marijuana use, even if the employees’ physician recommends that the employee use medical marijuana,” he says.

An employer can refuse to hire, discharge, discipline or take adverse employment action for a person’s use, possession or distribution of medical marijuana. In addition, that person may not sue the employer for doing so.

But that doesn’t mean hiring managers should ask about medical marijuana during a job interview, Griffaton says. Disability discrimination is still illegal. If someone is using medical marijuana for cancer, it raises questions.

“Did he not hire them because they used medical marijuana or because it’s a disabling protected condition under the American Disabilities Act? Employers are going to open themselves up to discrimination charges and lawsuits, because of that question, so be careful about asking,” he says.

Griffaton also has seen cases where employers terminated people that used medical marijuana — and that ended up being only minority members of the workforce.

“Carefully consider whether or not taking adverse action against someone who uses medical marijuana could lead to other claims,” he says.

Employers need to apply their workforce policies clearly and consistently, especially if they operate in multiple jurisdictions that have different state laws, Griffaton says.

In Ohio, if someone’s termination violates the employer’s expressed policy regarding medical marijuana, that person isn’t eligible for unemployment compensation. Also, employers don’t have to pay for medical marijuana under workers’ compensation.

Landlords

The state-issued licenses for cultivation, processing, laboratories and dispensaries will be tied to real estate.

Landlords need to consider things like cannabis-related termination provisions, how much cash can be kept onsite, security, indemnification, inspections, etc.

“From a landlord’s perspective, you don’t want to be in a position where you’re leasing to, let’s say, a dispensary and all of the sudden they lose their license,” says Bret Kravitz, an associate at Dickinson Wright PLLC, who works with the firm’s corporate practice group and leads the firm’s cannabis working group.

Not only are you in violation of federal laws, you’re also now running afoul of the state laws — it’s a position you don’t want to be in, he says.

Entrepreneurs and investors

Entrepreneurs, investors and companies of all sizes see opportunities, but there are risks, too. Kravitz’s firm has received calls from soil, chemical and lighting companies, to name a few, asking for more information.

One of the biggest issues is the inability to find banks, even though Ohio’s law excludes banks from state criminal statutes.

Marijuana is an illegal federal substance, so it falls under the Bank Secrecy Act, which essentially is a money-laundering statute, Kravitz says.

“So you have banks that would like to get involved, in light of the opportunities there, but they still risk losing their federal charters,” he says.

Some credit unions and state-charted banks have taken on people connected to the industry, but they charge larger fees because of the additional reporting requirements.

The state also has met with vendors and individuals about setting up a “closed-loop” cashless payment system. Justin Hunt, COO of the MMCP at the Ohio Department of Commerce, says his team has gotten many questions and is doing its due diligence, but it doesn’t have a proposed solution yet.

Entrepreneurs who are unsure of a municipality’s reaction need to take the temperature now, and set up meetings with political leaders, Kravitz says.

Cultivators, processors, dispensaries or laboratories must be at least 500 feet from a school, church or public library, playground or park, but cities, villages and townships may adopt additional restrictions or opt out completely.

“Most of the clients I’ve talked to, the No. 1 thing they recommend in terms of consulting with and going through this process is getting a land use and zoning attorney onboard, day one,” he says.

That helps entrepreneurs identify regulations and whether an application will be regarded favorably.

Investors also need to carefully weigh the risks of getting involved with an industry in its infancy, where their identity could become public.

“The first step is knowing you could lose everything you put in,” Kravitz says.

Entrepreneurs are raising private money at relatively high rates because they cannot get bank loans. They also are in violation of the Controlled Substances Act.

“There’s no protection. You’re investing in a federally illegal business and for that risk, you anticipate some higher returns in your investment. You’re not protected just because Ohio has legalized medical marijuana,” he says.

Image result for cartoon hot potato

 To me … this sounds like a very HOT POTATO .. for everyone

How long before we put a $$$ cost… if a life is worth saving ?

Ohio’s spending on opioid addiction treatment drugs Vivitrol and Suboxone spikes, spurs debate on what treatments work

http://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2017/04/ohios_spending_on_opioid_addiction_treatment_drugs_like_vivitrol_and_suboxone_spikes_spurs_debate_what_treatments_work.html

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Judges, doctors and lawmakers on the front lines of the opioid addiction crisis have a problem: Three types of medications are available to help the estimated 200,000 Ohioans struggling to recover from addiction and yet there are no clear answers as to which, if any, drug works best.

 The skyrocketing demand for treatment has spurred competition among drugmakers for a piece of the growing market, which in Ohio is worth well over $100 million a year in public money alone.

It has led to a vigorous, ongoing debate about how to spend limited tax money while also saving the most lives. 

  • What do you think? Join a live discussion noon Monday on Cleveland.com

The fastest-growing medication has the shortest track record and the highest price: Vivitrol, a monthly shot that blocks receptors in the brain so that a person can’t feel the euphoria or high from opioids. 

In 2012, Ohio Medicaid paid for 100 doses of the injectable medication. Last year, it paid for over 30,000 doses — at a cost of more than $38 million.

FOPIOID.jpg

Vivitrol is now a go-to option in many of Ohio’s 95 drug courts, which have become a de facto gateway to treatment for those arrested for possessing drugs or committing crimes to support an addiction. 

It also has strong backing among state lawmakers, who decide how to spend the state’s considerable resources to combat addiction. 

Research, however, is lacking on which medications are the most effective. But lawmakers say they can’t wait to act.

 “It’s not as if we are sitting here with lots of time on our hands,” Rep. Robert Sprague, of Findlay, said of the ballooning epidemic, which now includes abuse of not only heroin but more deadly combinations of fentanyl and carfentanil. 

“We’re going to fire all the bullets in the gun at the problem,” he said. “We don’t have time for a four-year double-blind study to see what works best.”

Opioid Addiction TreatmentA poster hangs on the wall in the hallway at the Hocking County Municipal Court, where Judge Fred Moses runs a Vivitrol drug court. 

The beginning of Medication Assisted Treatments

It wasn’t long ago that the idea of using medicine to help treat addiction was frowned upon, especially in Ohio, the birthplace of Alcoholics Anonymous, which for more than 80 years has endorsed abstinence as the route to sobriety.

That has changed. And swiftly.

In 2011, in response to the mounting toll of addiction and death, Gov. John Kasich signed an emergency executive order that opened the door for wider use of what are referred to as Medication Assisted Treatments (MATs).

Since then, state spending on three types of medication — buprenorphine, naltrexone and methadone — has jumped, particularly after Medicaid coverage expanded in 2014 to cover an additional 700,000 uninsured, low-income Ohioans. 

Since then, payments for MATs to treat opioid addiction have more than doubled, from $40 million to more than $110 million last year. Treatment and counseling services cost another $462 million in public money from 2014 to 2016. 

Courts, jails and prisons received at least $16 million more in state grants to cover the cost of MATs, treatment and case management for the uninsured. 

COPIOID.jpg 

Opportunity to profit

Amid all the public spending, Alkermes, the Ireland-based company that manufactures Vivitrol in Wilmington, markedly stepped up its campaign to make the drug available.  

“What is Vivitrol?” billboards dot the state, and since 2012 the company’s political action committee has donated more than $77,000 to nearly 40 candidates for state office, including $10,000 to a Kasich campaign fund. The company also hired a lobbying firm to push for provisions in roughly 30 proposed Ohio bills, including money in the state budget to pay for Vivitrol use in drug courts and to study its use. 

In his 2017 State of the State address, Kasich gave a shout-out to Alkermes, which has increased production of Vivitrol as demand has increased, and hired an additional 51 employees at its Wilmington plant after getting a seven-year, 50 percent tax credit worth about $284,000. 

The governor, however, has held firm to an “all strategies forward” approach that he cited in 2012 when vetoing a bill lawmakers passed that would have tested Vivitrol exclusively with inmates addicted to heroin or alcohol while they were incarcerated and after their release. 

Federally, Alkermes has spent even more to promote the use of Vivitrol: more than $11 million on lobbying since 2014, and more than $300,000 to members of Congress, including nearly $30,000 to U.S. Sen. Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio.

The makers of other brand-name medications have donated to lawmakers in the past, often closer to when the drugs were first FDA approved but in Ohio not during the most recent MAT push, according to state campaign finance records. (See federal lobbying of another MAT maker, Reckitt Benckiser, which makes Suboxone.)

Shortly after Vivitrol was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2010, Alkermes started to leverage access to court systems in Ohio, and across the nation. Last year, the company gave $50,000 to the National Association of Drug Court Professionals as a “champion” level corporate member. (Alkermes has donated to the group since 2007.)

For that, the company received valuable face time with judges, some of whom used free samples of Vivitrol in their courts before it became more widely available. The company held dinners for judges and drug court staffs and assigned drug “reps” to courts, similar to the kind who visit doctors’ offices.

However, Chris Deutsch, spokesman for the National Association of Drug Court Professionals, said corporate partners like Alkermes and other drug makers do not influence the nonprofit’s recommended guidelines for judges, which don’t endorse a particular medication to treat addiction. 

Vivitrol has become a “safety net,” now used in 400 drug court programs in 38 states, Alkermes spokesman Matthew Henson said. 

VivitrolA nurse holds up a Vivitrol injection, given monthly to help prevent relapse among those addicted to opioids.  

Alkermes, he said, has consistently advocated for making all FDA-approved medications to treat addiction available, and that Vivitrol be included as an option. 

 Word-of-mouth interest in the medication is high among judges dealing with a growing number of opioid-addicted defendants in their courts and detoxing in jails with few treatment options, he said.  “A lot of these judges have come to us,” he said.

Henson said the company decided it needed to do more to educate — not market to — judges, who were increasingly involved in decisions about what treatments would be offered.

A drug solution to a drug problem

The seeds of today’s opioid addiction and overdose epidemic in the United States were planted two decades ago, as pharmaceutical companies lobbied for fewer restrictions and wider use of pain medications.

Companies donated generously to political campaigns, telling lawmakers that pain was being massively undertreated, and that stronger medications, like OxyContin, posed no serious risk for addiction. 

Soon enough, America consumed 80 percent of the world’s pain pills.

In 1997, Ohio passed the Intractable Pain Act, allowing doctors wide latitude to dole out painkillers — a move that’s now being dialed back with new state limitations on prescribing.

So the idea that a new set of pharmaceutical companies might jockey to profit from the epidemic? Not shocking, said Hocking County Municipal Judge Fred Moses. 

“People made money getting [individuals] addicted to drugs and now people are making money getting them off,” said Moses, one of the first judges in the state to embrace medications for defendants with opioid dependence in his voluntary drug court. 

Despite the optics, Alkermes’ push has had minimal impact on what treatment options get paid for, said Rep. Ryan Smith, a Republican whose district includes parts of four southern Ohio counties that have seen significant opioid-related deaths.  When he first took office, there was a large push for the use of Suboxone or buprenorphine.

“I don’t want to minimize the lobbying aspect, but it is insignificant when compared to other things,” said Smith, whose campaign received $8,000 from Alkermes from 2013 to 2016. “They [Alkermes] have five lobbyists, and AT&T has like 40.”

He said he listens more to constituents who have recovered with the help of methadone, buprenorphine and Vivitrol over doctors.

ryansmith.jpgRyan Smith

“Doctors prescribed more than 800 million opioids on the front end of this problem,” he said. “That really aggravates me.” 

Doctors want data

Dr. Jason Jerry understands why Vivitrol is an easy sell, especially to courts, but it’s not for doctors who treat addiction. 

jerry.jpgDr. Jason Jerry 

He’s one of many doctors who remain skeptical of claims about the medication.

“There’s not a lot of scientific literature to support its use,” said Jerry, a nationally recognized addiction psychiatrist. Jerry treated patients at the Cleveland Clinic and was a member of the Northeast Ohio Heroin and Opioid Task Force, before recently taking a job at a hospital in North Carolina. 

Most studies supporting Vivitrol’s performance are paid for by the manufacturer and were done in Russia, where the alternative addiction medications available in America are illegal, he said. 

Which medication to use, if any, should be made between patient and doctor. That’s not always how it works.

 The Russian study Jerry referred to is the one the FDA cautiously used in approving Vivitrol in 2010 to treat opioid addiction.

It started with 250 patients, half of whom were to be given Vivitrol and the other half a placebo. Roughly 60 patients remained in the study and on Vivitrol for a full six months, and 36 stayed in treatment without a serious opioid relapse, compared to 23 percent in the placebo group.

Based on those small numbers, Jerry said, he can’t recommend the medication to most patients.

Jerry also worries there’s an increased risk of overdose when the shot is stopped and patients have a reduced tolerance for opioids. At least one Australian study showed a 40 percent increase after patients stopped using a naltrexone pill.

Dr. Ted ParranDr. Ted Parran, far right, talks to addiction medicine to fellows and Physician Assistant Michael Grodach at St. Vincent Charity Medical Center. Parran says all forms of Medication Assisted Treatment can help with recovery when paired with treatment.

In general, the relapse rates after about a year for each medication appear similar if a patient also completes treatment, said Ted Parran. He’s an addiction specialist who teaches at Case Western Reserve University and is on staff at St. Vincent Charity Medical Center.

Most studies of Vivitrol in the United States involve people charged with crimes, where there’s another important and hard to measure factor at play — the threat of a jail or prison sentence.

One such study published last year in the New England Journal of Medicine cited by Alkermes as proof the medication is helpful and by some doctors as proof it is not — found that Vivitrol, paired with treatment, doubled the time before opioid relapse from about five weeks to a little over 10 weeks. 

However, by about a year, the chance of relapse for those using Vivitrol and other methods, such as buprenorphine or only counseling, were virtually the same. Vivitrol also didn’t affect cocaine or alcohol use or how likely a person was to be re-incarcerated. Alkermes says smaller, drug court-based statistics, are starting to show lower recidivism rates for those taking Vivitrol.

The lack of clear research is one reason Ohio hasn’t officially singled out any medication for treating opioid addiction, said Dr. Mark Hurst, medical director of the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services. 

Instead, the state promotes the use of all available medications to help prevent relapse and treat addiction, along with psychosocial therapy, Hurst said. Each has proved to reduce the chance of relapse that — without medication and treatment — happens 80 percent to 95 percent of the time. 

The decision of which medication to use, if any, should be made between a patient and a doctor treating them, Hurst said.

Practically, that’s not always how it works. 

Judges’ preference

Moses, of Hocking County, has stumped for Vivitrol, inviting dozens of judges, lawmakers and reporters to visit cozy courtroom in Logan.

But it’s because he’s seen the medicine work, not because he’s been influenced by Vivitrol marketing.

“I’ve never taken anything from anybody,” he said, after learning a reporter had requested his public financial disclosure forms and questioned the Ohio Supreme Court about his and other branded “Vivitrol Drug Courts.”

Moses said he approached an Alkermes presenter at a drug court conference in 2012. “I walked up and asked them, ‘You’ll give it to a rich county, but will you give it to a poor county?’ “

Alkermes agreed to provide doses of Vivitrol for free, he said. Moses later testified for lawmakers in Columbus about the positive results he saw from those taking the medication.

Now, a state grant is paying for 49 treatment slots for his court to use at a cost about $98,000 in 2016. It covers the shots and for chemical-dependency counseling, case management and treatment services, which he says are key to success of defendants in his program.

In April, participants in the program included a former steel plant foreman who, before becoming addicted, made up to $98,000 a year, and several mothers hoping to stay sober and raise their children. Most said they’d first used opioids after being prescribed or using pain pills.

Weekly in the court the defendants discuss together how they are managing sobriety and doing things like getting driver’s licenses reinstated or searching for jobs.

The last four graduating groups had 100 percent employment and only three have committed additional crimes, Moses said.

“It’s not just about a shot,” he said. “It’s about treatment. That’s what really works.”

Suboxone still most used

Many judges like Moses soured on the use of the other medications used to treat opioid addiction, especially Suboxone, which is a semi-synthetic opioid. 

Suboxone, also sold generically as buprenorphine, partially activates the receptors in the brain that need opioids. Dosages are set to give an addicted person enough medication to not feel the symptoms of withdrawal but also not enough to feel a high. Methadone is used similarly, though it is more potent and tightly controlled. 

DOPIOID.jpg 

Buprenorphine-based medicines are still largely preferred by doctors trained to treat addiction, and Ohio Medicaid spent a combined $72 million for brand name and generic formulations of these medications in 2016.

From the start, though, judges didn’t like the idea of giving a form of opioid to an addict, especially after some defendants covertly used the medicine to game their drug tests for heroin. It was also often “diverted,” meaning it had a street value and was sold or smuggled into prisons.

Too few doctors in Ohio were initially trained to prescribe and monitor patients on Suboxone, which was approved to treat opioid addiction in 2002. Cumbersome insurance preauthorization requirements also led to the opening of clinics that charged cash for monthly visits. 

Heidi LaramieOhio Medicaid spent about $72 million last year on Suboxone and other buprenorphine-based medications to treat opioid addiction. 

Parran called those who are taking cash “ethically challenged.”

“It’s an embarrassment to my profession,” he said.

Moses believes that medications like Suboxone keep the brain addicted, and doesn’t allow it to heal. Defendants on Suboxone appear more sluggish and tend to use other unprescribed medications, such as Xanax or Valium to get stoned, he said.

“You wouldn’t tell someone one with high blood pressure to go out and eat salt, would you?” he asks.

Despite his misgivings, he  allows drug court defendants to use Suboxone but keeps that group separate from his Vivitrol court.

Jerry said complaints about buprenorphine sometimes reflect a misunderstanding of how the opioid-based medications work. It often was being sold, Jerry said, not for people to get high but to stave off withdrawal. “It means that a lot of people don’t have access to legitimate treatment. And so they are making halfhearted attempts on their own to stay away from the needle,” he said. Heroin is far cheaper on the streets if people wanted to score. “I’ve never had a patient that’s come in and said, ‘Doc, buprenorphine is my drug of choice.'”

Part of the problem, Jerry said, is that there’s a notion that people with addiction must be taken off medication to get “better.” That’s not the way we look at other diseases or conditions, such as diabetes or high blood pressure, where medicines are viewed as acceptable long-term treatment. “But here, with addiction, it’s looked at differently, and why?” he asked.

Common Pleas Judge David Matia, who started Cuyahoga County’s first drug court docket in 2008, said practical factors have “handcuffed” courts into using Vivitrol. 

David MatiaJudge David Matia says more needs to be done to make MATs available locally. 

Defendants in drug court are required to get treatment, often followed up by a stay in a sober-living facility, like a halfway house, which increases the chance they’ll do better in recovery. 

Few of those facilities allow the use of buprenorphine or methadone, Matia said. Some only recently allow Vivitrol use.

Matia admittedly also was skeptical at first about using any medication to prevent relapse.  “I thought it was being treated like some magic bullet,” he said. Plus, he cringed at the steep cost, anywhere between $1,000 and $1,400 each month.

The court now has a $470,000 state grant to pay for Vivitrol and treatment for defendants not covered by Medicaid or other insurance. The program doesn’t cover Suboxone or other medications, though defendants can use them.

Possible answers
on the horizon

Along with the state drug court grants, lawmakers in 2015 devoted nearly $1 million pay The Treatment Research Institute to study the effectiveness of the different medications being used, in hopes it might provide insight for the future. 

The study will look at results from more than 21 Ohio drug courts — including Cuyahoga and Hocking counties — and is due to be completed in June, although some have pointed out that at least one researcher associated with the study worked for Alkermes for nearly a decade, helping to develop and promote Vivitrol.

This past week, Republican lawmakers proposed pumping $170.6 million more into fighting the state’s opioid crisis over the next two years, including millions more for treatment and drug courts — and medications.

AOPIOID.jpg 

Smith, who heads the House Finance committee, said effectiveness ultimately will drive where the state spends its money. For now, lawmakers are still working to level the playing field. 

“At the end of the day, I don’t care who it is or what it is. All I care about it is the results,” he said.  

When Lawyers take on unconstitutional laws and recalcitrant prescribers.

Lawmakers May Make Changes to Tough Prescribing Law

AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — Lawmakers concerned about the plight of residents with chronic pain are considering softening a tough law that puts limits on how much opioid painkillers a doctor can prescribe.

Maine has the nation’s strictest limit for opioid prescriptions, part of a sweeping law that aims to stop doctors from over-prescribing the painkillers. The law passed last year with support from Republican Gov. Paul LePage and Democratic lawmakers.

By July, Maine doctors will not be allowed to prescribe more than 100 milligrams of opioid medication per day to most of their patients.

The law has a broad exception for “palliative care” that the state says protects patients with chronic or acute pain. But Rockland attorney Patrick Mellor says he’s heard from 100 people across Maine who say their doctors have told them they don’t qualify for the exceptions.

Mellor said he is representing two chronic pain patients who have formally notified the state they intend to sue over the opioid prescription law. He said he hopes a legislative committee will “at a minimum” extend the deadline to next year.

That change would let doctors and patients “taper,” or reduce, opioid dosages over a longer period of time than allowed under the current law. Federal guidelines say chronic pain patients who agree to lower doses should be tapered down slowly. Otherwise, experts say, they could experience depression or suicidal tendencies.

“It’s not exaggerating to say that people will die if the legislature doesn’t extend that tapering deadline,” Mellor said.

One of Mellor’s clients is Eric Wass, who owns a small roofing company in Rockland. He said he’s been on narcotics for 20 years for his spine, and said his doctors have long prescribed him enough painkillers to make sure he “can keep working and living his life.”

But now his medication has been cut back and he only has enough “to get me through a half day,” leading to afternoons spent on the couch to avoid pain, Mellor said.

“My ability to work is being taken away from me by you all or whoever else is responsible for this,” he recently told lawmakers.

Democratic Rep. Patricia Hymanson, the committee’s House chair, said she hopes the committee can agree on a solution and better educate the medical community.

“I think that just for humanity’s sake something needs to be done,” she said.

We have all seen advertisement from personal injury attorney wanting to sue someone and their insurance company when they caused a accident that caused harm to a “innocent person”  and/or caused that same person to not be able to work for a short or long period of time because of that “accidental harm”.

Now imagine a legislature that passes laws that could cause INTENTIONAL harm to a person and/or cause the person to become unemployed. The legislature put exceptions in the law that would allow prescribers to continue to treat pts to such a degree that there is no actual or theoretical harm…  but prescribers take a the position that chronic pain pts do not “qualify” to be diagnosed with the need of palliative care and thus there is INTENTIONAL harm done to a person or groups of people.  The particular law automatically becomes standard of care and best practices for the prescribers in the state, and for a prescriber to fail to adhere to those standards could be considered MALPRACTICE and intentional act that causes a person to become unemployed… the monies awarded to the plaintiff (harmed pt) could be very substantial.

Healthcare is just a FOR PROFIT BUSINESS… your personal health is not really a priority

http://www.keepmyrx.org/

Stop Calling Your Drug Addiction A Disease

Stop Calling Your Drug Addiction A Disease

Stop Calling Your Drug Addiction A Disease

Let me take you into a cancer ward, then try telling me you also have a disease.

https://www.theodysseyonline.com/stop-calling-drug-addiction-disease

Drug addiction has increasingly become more problematic over the last few years, with the opioid epidemic tearing apart families and leaving communities vulnerable to drug dealers and violence. Addiction recovery therapy has become more widely available, and the stereotypes surrounding addicts have definitely changed.

However, one thing remains constant, and that is addicts and enablers labeling drug addiction as a disease.

Addiction changes the brain in fundamental ways. It changes the normal hierarchy in a persons’ brain and then substitutes their needs and priorities for whatever said addictive is (in this case, we’re focusing on drugs). When a person does a drug, they release dopamine, which causes the body to crave the substance more, and eventually alters the way the brain reacts to these chemicals. The reason that drug addictions are called ‘diseases’ is because since the brain has become altered from drugs, the resulting compulsive behavior overrides the ability to control impulses, therefore making it a “relapsing disease.”

You chose this.

You chose to smoke the weed.

You chose to shoot up heroin.

You chose to snort cocaine.

You chose to buy prescription pills that you did not need.

You chose this.

I can’t express how much it infuriates me when drug addicts have the audacity to play the ‘oh poor me’ role, blaming their choices on a disease that they brought on themselves. That child in the cancer ward didn’t choose to do something that brought on their cancer, that woman with cystic fibrosis didn’t do something to bring it upon herself.

Every drug addict made a choice, so don’t tell me you have a disease all because you chose to do something you knew wasn’t right. Could you really look a child, stricken with cancer, in the eyes and tell them you also have a disease, that you’re also sick, but that unlike them, you made choices that led you to where you are, while they didn’t? Take some personal responsibility and own up to it, but don’t you dare go around telling people you have this so called disease that YOU created.

I’ve seen firsthand what addiction can do, who it hurts and how it destroys. I’ve watched enablers cosset the addict, consistently making up excuses as to why that person is an addict, why they can’t quit, and best of all; why they have a disease and should be treated as such. But enablers are not the problem, it’s the manipulator — who is the drug addict. They manipulate others to believe in their lies, to believe that they are indeed diseased and therefore can not quit because it’s a sickness. Have we, as a society, become so blatantly oblivious to basic manipulation tactics that we fail to see that drug addicts have made this ‘disease’ for themselves as a means to escape personal responsibility?

The reason this bothers me so much isn’t because I watch these addicts throw away their life, while someone is sitting in a hospital bed clinging onto their last breath, wishing that just for a moment they were healthy, that they didn’t have to face the chances that they would be dead within months. It bothers me because of the label we have given to addicts, making them believe they have an actual disease that they didn’t ask for, because let’s be real, what person asks for Cancer, Cystic Fibrosis, Ulcerative Colitis, or Multiple Sclerosis?

So please, stop playing the victim role thinking you have a disease that you brought on yourself because of your choices. Stop crying the blues because you screwed up and want the world to take pity. And for the love of God, STOP acting like you are as sick as a cancer patient!*

*I’ve seen plenty of people do this.

If you do some research on the author of this “piece” .. here is her FB page https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100011796819424 and she started at Fordham University in 2016..  so she is MAYBE 20 ? But why is she seemingly SO BITTER towards people who abuse some substance… apparently those who are addicted/abusing Alcohol and Tobacco/Nicotine does not register on her “addict radar”.

What to me is really disturbing is 324,000 SHARES of this extremely biased article… might even want to refer to it as a very bigoted diatribe.