Maybe the chronic pain community needs to listen to the two Presidential candidates ?

Maybe the chronic pain community needs to listen to the two Presidential candidates ?

stronger-togetheramerican-great-again

 

 

 

 

There is an estimated 116 million chronic pain pts and in the last president election.. there was 5 million votes between the winner and loser and an estimate 106 million eligible voters – DIDN’T VOTE !

Our country cannot be GREAT.. if we keep denying millions of chronic pain pts their necessary medication and intentionally throwing them out of a productive life and their quality of live for them and their families – INTO THE CRAPPER !

People march for "yoga pants parade" in Barrington, R.I., Sunday, Oct. 23, 2016. Hundreds of women, girls and other supporters proudly donned their yoga pants Sunday afternoon as they peacefully paraded around the Rhode Island neighborhood of a man who derided the attire as tacky and ridiculous. (Kris Craig/Providence Journal via AP) Photo: Kris Craig, AP / Providence Journal

http://www.thehour.com/news/us/article/Yoga-pants-parade-a-protest-against-misogyny-10135273.php

More people showed for a protest in a small RI town (pop 16,000) over a man who wrote a letter to a editor about women wearing yoga pants in public… than showed up for a recent national rally supporting appropriate pain care for chronic pain pts.

Just in the last few days to Governors (Vermont & Arizona) have come out to set daily opiate limits that pts can have.  Another state governor assumes the authority to practice medicine without a license ?  The question has to be asked… do these Governors and other politicians/bureaucrats that are attempting to practice medicine without a license… have any LEGAL AUTHORITY to do what they are doing ?

Unless they are challenged in our courts… they are going to continue TO DO AS THEY PLEASE … There is more and more information being published that chronic pain pts are not abusing their medications and >90% of those ODing on opiates do not have a legal prescription for the opiate that shows up in toxicology.

STRONGER TOGETHER…. if someone puts together a organization to create a legal defense fund to challenge all these possible ILLEGAL ACTIONS… and if just TEN PERCENT of the chronic pain community contributed the cost of a fast food lunch $5- $7.50… ONE TIME … SEVENTY MILLION (70,000,000.00) could be raised…  for a “war chest”.

The BEST LAW FIRMS in the country would be beating a path to the chronic pain community’s door… wanting to defend your rights that have been taken away.

There is no WHITE KNIGHT or a person name “george” coming over the horizon to save your ass… the anti-opiate groups are being well funded by groups that have FOR PROFIT companies that attempt to treat people suffering from addictive substance disorder and the various State/Federal agencies and opiophobic bureaucrats.

You can’t sue the government… but… the legality of their actions can be challenged in a court of law.  A few of their edicts/mandates are declared illegal/unconstitutional… it will stop them in their tracks on implementing any more of these basic violations of human rights.

Another state governor assumes the authority to practice medicine without a license ?

Gov. Ducey order limits opioids for Arizona employees

http://www.12news.com/mb/news/local/arizona/governor-ducey-order-limits-opioids-for-arizona-employees/340796576

 

congressstupidVermont Governor Proposes Limits on Painkiller Prescriptions

I guess that the Gov of Arizona has never hear of The Americans with Disability Act that provides certain accommodations in the work place.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey on Monday issued an executive order limiting opioid prescriptions for employees insured through the State of Arizona and individuals insured through the state’s Medicaid program, Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS).

The order limits the first fill of prescription opioids to seven days and limits all fills for children, except those suffering from cancer, chronic disease or traumatic injury, according to a news release from the governor’s office.

“This action is essential to help prevent future drug addictions,” Ducey said in a prepared statement.

“The numbers are staggering. In 2015, 401 people in Arizona – more than 1 a day – died from prescription opioid overdoses. And in 2013 there were enough prescription pain medications dispensed to medicate every adult in Arizona around the clock for two weeks.”

 

Ducey signed the order Monday on the Capitol lawn. The signing is part of national Red Ribbon Week, focusing on drug prevention.

 

CDC “waiting till hell freezes over” to realize that legal opiates and OD’s: NO RELATIONSHIP

liarliarFewer Pain Meds but More Overdoses in Massachusetts

http://www.painnewsnetwork.org/stories/2016/10/20/fewer-pain-meds-but-more-overdoses-in-massachusetts

Apparently CDC is putting “common sense” ON HOLD.. when it comes to finally admitting that legal opiates and OD… have little in common..  Only 8.3 percent of those who died had a prescription for an opioid drug
Where is a recent article from the BOSTON GLOBE that stated that ONLY 8.3% of the people ODing on opiates … had a legal prescription for the opiate that toxicology showed in their system.

By Pat Anson, Editor

Opioid prescribing fell by 15 percent for members of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts after the insurer adopted policies that discourage the dispensing of opioid pain medication, according to a new analysis by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report found that 21 million fewer opioid doses were dispensed to Blue Cross Blue Shield members from 2012 to 2015. But the new policies failed to slow the growing number of opioid overdose deaths in Massachusetts, which more than doubled during the same period.

The CDC said it will “take time” before overdoses start to decline.

“Reducing the level of opioid prescribing is a long term strategy to limit exposure to these drugs. Mortality outcomes would not be expected to change for several years after implementation, and impact would be complicated by the increasing supply of illicit opioids,” Courtney Lenard, a CDC spokesperson, said in an email to Pain News Network.  

“Long-term strategies like the one outlined in the report take time to make an impact and therefore no immediate impact can be expected during the first several years of program implementation. Assessing what happened before and after the policy at the mortality level is inappropriate.”

Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS) of Massachusetts is the state’s largest insurer, with about 2.8 million members.

In 2012, the insurer adopted policies that discourage opioid prescribing by requiring doctors to develop treatment plans that consider non-opioid therapies; requiring pre-authorization for all opioid prescriptions after an initial 30 day supply; and limiting some pain patients to use of a single pharmacy.

The effect was immediate, with an average monthly decline of 14,000 prescriptions for both short and long-acting opioids.

Although cancer patients were exempt from the policies, there was a 9% decline in opioid prescriptions to BCBS members with a cancer diagnosis. The CDC attributed that to a “sentinel effect” in which doctors implement the same policies for all of their patients regardless of diagnosis.

“I think oncologists were becoming more thoughtful and maybe more vigilant about how much narcotics they were prescribing and I think that’s why we saw that decrease in cancer patients,” said Tony Dodek, MD, associate chief medical director for BCBS of Massachusetts. “We’ve only received one complaint about the program in terms of people having access to necessary pain medications.”

Like the CDC, Dodek said it may take years before the stricter prescribing policies start to have an impact on overdoses. So far the signs are not encouraging.

Opioid overdoses in Massachusetts rose from 698 deaths in 2012 to 1,659 deaths in 2015. The trend has continued in the first six months in 2016, with nearly a thousand opioid overdoses reported. Two-thirds of this year’s deaths were related to fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that is increasingly appearing on the black market. Illicit fentanyl is often combined with heroin and cocaine, or used in the manufacture of counterfeit pain medication.

MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

“It’s not surprising to me that overdoses have not gone down because there is still a lot of drugs in circulation,” said Dodek. “What we did was slow the supply of new medication that’s in circulation. The fact is there is already way too much medication sitting in people’s medicine cabinets at home and that is what was available to start this epidemic.”

The Drug Enforcement Administration has said the U.S. is being “inundated” with counterfeit painkillers and there are anecdotal reports of some patients turning to street drugs for pain relief as opioid medication has become harder to get. But Dodek says it is recreational users – not pain patients – who are resorting to the black market.

“Any pain patient isn’t having access problems to getting opioids,” he said. “Those who may be using it for recreational purposes or for diversion probably are having a more difficult time (getting prescriptions). We still need to figure out what to do about illicit drugs, but I think decreasing the amount of prescriptions drugs will only be a good thing in the end.”

And what about the effect on pain patients as these policies are adopted? The CDC report ends with this telling statement:

“Finally, it is not known from these data how patient pain and function were affected by limiting access to opioid prescriptions.”

Enough INCOMPETENCE and GUILT to go around ?.. and CPP end up suffering ?

How drugs intended for patients ended up in the hands of illegal users: ‘No one was doing their job’

https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/how-drugs-intended-for-patients-ended-up-in-the-hands-of-illegal-users-no-one-was-doing-their-job/2016/10/22/10e79396-30a7-11e6-8ff7-7b6c1998b7a0_story.html

As the worst of a nationwide opioid epidemic raged in Appalachia, DEA investigators went after companies distributing millions of highly addictive pills. Then, their cases ground to a halt. (Lee Powell/The Washington Post)

UNNATURAL CAUSES SICK AND DYING IN SMALL-TOWN AMERICA: Since the turn of this century, death rates have risen for whites in midlife, particularly women. In this series, The Washington Post is exploring this trend and the forces driving it. Related: The DEA slowed enforcement while the opioid epidemic grew out of control

For 10 years, the government waged a behind-the-scenes war against pharmaceutical companies that hardly anyone knows: wholesale distributors of prescription narcotics that ship drugs from manufacturers to consumers.

The Drug Enforcement Administration targeted these middlemen for a simple reason. If the agency could force the companies to police their own drug shipments, it could keep millions of pills out of the hands of abusers and dealers. That would be much more effective than fighting “diversion” of legal painkillers at each drugstore and pain clinic.

Many companies held back drugs and alerted the DEA to signs of illegal activity, as required by law. But others did not.

Collectively, 13 companies identified by The Washington Post knew or should have known that hundreds of millions of pills were ending up on the black market, according to court records, DEA documents and legal settlements in administrative ­cases, many of which are being reported here for the first time. Even when they were alerted to suspicious pain clinics or pharmacies by the DEA and their own employees, some distributors ignored the warnings and continued to send drugs.

“Through the whole supply chain, I would venture to say no one was doing their job,” said Joseph T. Rannazzisi, former head of the DEA’s Office of Diversion Control, who led the effort against distributors from 2005 until shortly before his retirement in 2015. “And because no one was doing their job, it just perpetuated the problem. Corporate America let their profits get in the way of public health.”

A review of the DEA’s campaign against distributors reveals the extent of the companies’ role in the diversion of opioids. It shows how drugs intended for millions of legitimate pain patients ended up feeding illegal users’ appetites for prescription narcotics. And it helps explain why there has been little progress in the U.S. opioid epidemic, despite the efforts of public-health and enforcement agencies to stop it.

At the peak of the crisis, the DEA retreated from the battle. A Post investigation published Saturday revealed that beginning in 2013, some officials at DEA headquarters began to block and delay enforcement actions against wholesale drug distributors and others, frustrating investigators in the field.

Several former DEA officials told The Post that the shift in approach undercut the cases­­­ against some of these distributors, who were ignoring signs that their customers were ordering suspicious quantities of narcotics.

“We could not get these cases­ through headquarters,” said Frank Younker, a DEA supervisor in the Cincinnati field office who retired in 2014 after a 30-year career. “We were trying to shut off the flow, and we just couldn’t do it.”

The 13 companies include Fortune 25 giants McKesson, Cardinal Health and Amerisource­Bergen, which together control about 85 percent of all pharmaceutical distribution in the United States. They also include regional wholesalers such as Miami-Luken and KeySource Medical, both based in Ohio, as well as Walgreens, the nation’s largest retail drugstore chain. Many of the distributors are tiny operations with just a few employees.

It is not clear how many other cases exist. Because the DEA handles its enforcement actions administratively, few details surface unless the agency or the company discloses them, or if one side appeals in civil court.

The DEA declined to disclose how many enforcement actions it has brought against distributors, requiring a Freedom of Information Act request that The Post filed in April. The request is pending. The DEA also would not make any officials available to discuss this article, but provided a statement from acting administrator Chuck Rosenberg defending the agency’s enforcement actions.

“We now have good folks in place and are moving in the right direction,” he said.

Some of the 13 companies have fought the DEA’s enforcement efforts in court and in hearings before the agency’s administrative law judges. All have lost or settled, except in two cases that are pending. Using its civil authority, the DEA stopped the flow of narcotics from some company warehouses, and U.S. attorneys levied fines totaling more than $286 million.

Most of the 13 wholesalers involved in these cases declined to be interviewed. In court filings and congressional testimony, they said they have developed large and sophisticated systems to help prevent drug diversion. They have complained that it is difficult to police the activities of far-flung drug dispensers and have noted that drugs could not be sold to illegal users without prescriptions written by corrupt doctors. They also criticized the DEA’s past approach to the problem as punitive and its rules as vague and confusing.

But the problem is clearly ongoing. Prescription narcotics cause more overdose deaths every year than any street drug, including heroin. The painkiller epidemic has taken 165,000 lives since the turn of the century, with the number of deaths soaring from 3,785 in 2000 to 14,838 in 2014.

Opioid overdoses, mainly from prescription drugs, are also the leading cause of the recent unexpected rise in the mortality rate of middle-aged white Americans, particularly women in rural areas, after decades of steady decline.

But it is impossible to estimate how much of the opioid supply is siphoned away to illicit use.

“No one knows, because it’s impossible to track what happens to an individual prescription once it leaves the pharmacist,” said Susan Awad, director of advocacy and government relations for the American Society of Addiction Medicine.

***

One of the first wholesalers targeted by the DEA under its “Distributor Initiative” was Southwood Pharmaceuticals, a small company based in Lake Forest, Calif., that sent controlled substances to Internet pharmacies. Because these online businesses typically allowed people to obtain drugs without being seen by a doctor, they were ripe for abuse.

In 2005, for example, Southwood supplied one Florida online drugstore, Medipharm-Rx, with 8.6 million doses of hydrocodone — the opioid found in Vicodin and Lortab, according to the DEA.

But Southwood failed to file a single suspicious order report, even after the DEA warned the company in July 2006 about the growth in the volume of its shipments. The DEA had seen the trend in its own monitoring of drug-sales data.

“Even after being advised by agency officials that its internet pharmacy customers were likely engaged in illegal activity, [Southwood] failed miserably to conduct adequate due diligence,” Michele Leonhart, then the DEA’s deputy administrator, wrote in a 2007 decision to revoke the company’s license to distribute narcotics.

“The direct and foreseeable consequence of the manner in which [Southwood] conducted its due diligence program was the likely diversion of millions of dosage units of hydrocodone,” Leonhart wrote, adding that the company had reason to know that the 44 million doses of hydrocodone it distributed were probably being diverted.

That amount would provide a 30-day supply of narcotics for everyone in the city of Dallas, according to Express Scripts, a pharmacy benefit management company.

Southwood got out of the business of selling controlled substances and six years later lost its pharmacy license in California.

The company’s president, John Sempre, recently told The Post that the company did not understand at first that it was supplying Internet pharmacies. He said it is very difficult for companies to monitor the sales of faraway retailers.

“If companies like McKesson can’t control it, what does that tell you?” Sempre asked.

In 2008, McKesson, the nation’s largest drug distributor, settled a case that accused three of its U.S. warehouses of failing to report hundreds of suspicious orders from Internet pharmacies. “As a result, millions of doses of controlled substances were diverted from legitimate channels of distribution,” the Justice Department said in a news release. The company paid a $13 million fine to U.S. attorney’s offices in Florida, Maryland, Colorado, Texas, Utah and California.

“By failing to report suspicious orders for controlled substances that it received from rogue Internet pharmacies, the McKesson Corporation fueled the explosive prescription drug abuse problem we have in this country,” Leonhart, then the acting DEA administrator, said in a statement at the time.

Seven years later, after being caught up in a second diversion case, McKesson agreed to pay a $150 million fine and accepted license suspensions at four warehouses, according to a company filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. No other details of that case have become public, and both the company and the DEA declined to discuss it.

A McKesson spokeswoman said in a statement to The Post, “We welcome the ongoing dialogue with the DEA aimed at developing effective controlled substances monitoring programs and successfully mitigating prescription drug abuse and diversion.”

AmerisourceBergen, another member of the so-called Big Three distributors, lost its license to send controlled substances from an Orlando warehouse on April 24, 2007, amid allegations that it was not controlling shipments of hydrocodone to Internet pharmacies. The facility was back in business by August of that year and did not pay a fine, according to a company spokeswoman.

Few details of the case have surfaced.

Cardinal, the third member of the Big Three, paid a $34 million fine in 2008 after seven of its warehouses across the country filled thousands of suspicious orders from Internet pharmacies without reporting them, despite an earlier warning from the DEA, according to a Justice Department news release.

On Oct. 5, 2010, when Cardinal investigator Vincent Moellering visited Gulf Coast Medical Pharmacy, a drugstore in Fort Myers, Fla., he found evidence of diversion everywhere, records show, including suspicious customers who came in groups to fill their prescriptions.

The pharmacy owner told Moellering that he could sell even more narcotics if Cardinal would supply them, according to Moellering’s report, which the DEA introduced in a court proceeding.

Moellering labeled the store “high risk” and wrote: “I am not convinced that the owner is being forthright pertaining to his customers’ origin or residence. I have requested permission to contact DEA to resolve this issue.”

But Cardinal didn’t notify the agency or cut off Gulf Coast’s drug supply, the DEA contends. Instead, the shipments kept going out. In 2011 alone, Cardinal sent more than 2 million doses of oxycodone to Gulf Coast. Cardinal typically shipped 65,000 doses of the opioid annually to comparable pharmacies, the DEA said.

Even as Cardinal was increasing its shipments to Gulf Coast, another wholesale drug distributor, H.D. Smith, was cutting off its supply of painkillers to the pharmacy. Smith took action after one of its compliance officers visited Gulf Coast and found “impaired and lethargic” customers “with glassy eyes” in November 2010, a few weeks after Moellering’s visit, court records show.

The Smith inspector learned that the pharmacy filled 300 prescriptions a day, nearly half for controlled substances. Smith considered anything over 20 percent to be a red flag.

Gulf Coast owner Jeffrey R. Green and manager Karen S. Hebble sometimes waited after hours to sell narcotics, even without a pharmacist present, court records show.

Drug dealers said they brought groups of fake patients — known in the trade as “spuds” or “skidoodies” — to Gulf Coast to fill bogus prescriptions obtained from cooperating prescribers, court records state. They always paid cash.

One drug dealer would call ahead to make sure Gulf Coast had enough pills for his fake customers; sales were so brisk that Gulf Coast sometimes ran out of painkillers. Cardinal only stopped shipments to Gulf Coast in October 2011, shortly before the DEA demanded information from the distributor. The next month, Gulf Coast surrendered its license.

Green and Hebble were ultimately convicted in federal court on conspiracy and money-laundering charges.

Cardinal contended that volume of drug sales alone is not an accurate measure of lack of compliance. The company noted that Gulf Coast served a hospital complex and hundreds of physicians.

In 2012, Cardinal settled the administrative case, but no fine has been levied. Negotiations are ongoing, according to a federal prosecutor and the company.

In a statement to The Post, Brett Ludwig, Cardinal’s vice president of public relations, said the company deploys “advanced analytics, technology, and teams of anti-diversion specialists and investigators who are embedded in our supply chain. This ensures that we are as effective and efficient as possible in constantly monitoring, identifying, and eliminating any outside criminal activity.”

At Walgreens, an employee at one of the 13 warehouses the drugstore chain operated in the United States, grew suspicious of the large orders being sent to some of its pharmacies, court records show.

Kristine Atwell, who managed distribution of controlled substances for the company’s warehouse in Jupiter, Fla., sent an email on Jan. 10, 2011, to corporate headquarters urging that some of the stores be required to justify their large quantity of orders.

“I ran a query to see how many bottles we have sent to store #3836 and we have shipped them 3271 bottles between 12/1/10 and 1/10/11,” Atwell wrote. [A bottle sent by a wholesaler generally contains 100 doses.] “I don’t know how they can even house this many bottle[s] to be honest. How do we go about checking the validity of these orders?”

Walgreens never checked, the DEA said. Between April 2010 and February 2012, the Jupiter distribution center sent 13.7 million oxycodone doses to six Florida stores, records show — many times the norm, according to the DEA.

In March 2011, the situation became so alarming at two Walgreens drugstores in the small town of Oviedo, Fla., that Police Chief Jeffrey Chudnow wrote to the company’s top executives: Alan G. McNally, who was chairman at the time; and Gregory D. Wasson, then its president and chief executive.

Chudnow asked that they prohibit Walgreens pharmacists from filling orders where the quantities of narcotics were split over two prescriptions.

“These types of prescriptions overtly denote misuse and possible street sales of these drugs,” Chudnow wrote. He said he never heard back from the executives.

In 2012, the DEA launched a six-month investigation of Walgreens’s Jupiter facility. The probe found that Walgreens failed to maintain an effective system for detecting suspicious orders or reporting them to the DEA.

Even when suspicious orders were identified, the warehouse often shipped the drugs anyway, without making inquiries, the DEA said in court papers. A company spokesman said Walgreens would have no comment on the case.

Walgreens settled with the DEA in 2013, agreeing to pay an $80 million fine — a record for a diversion case at the time. The company acknowledged that its “suspicious order reporting for distribution to certain pharmacies did not meet the standards identified by DEA.”

In 2013, DEA officials at the agency’s headquarters began requiring a higher burden of proof before investigators in the field could take enforcement action. One case that was underway became entangled in that shift, according to interviews and records.

Beginning in 2011, the DEA had repeatedly warned Miami-Luken, an Ohio-based distributor, about suspicious sales of opioids, according to Jim Geldhof, then the agency’s program manager in Detroit.

“We went to management of the company and told them they have to look at their sales. They are pretty extraordinary,” said Geldhof, who retired in January after more than four decades with the agency. “We spoke to them on multiple occasions, and we were pretty much ignored.”

Yet investigators couldn’t convince lawyers at DEA headquarters to allow them to take action.

Geldhof said that he requested orders to show cause in 2013 and that they were not issued until November 2015.

“It sat there for two years. I don’t know why there was a delay,” Geldhof said. “We went between back and forth. The ball was always moving. We had all of this going on, overdose deaths, what part of this are we not getting them to understand. We said, ‘You tell us what you want and we’ll give it to you.’ ”

Inside Miami-Luken headquarters, employees had also seen troubling signs. Two of them sent word up the chain. A pharmaceutical buyer and a customer-service representative were concerned about large oxycodone orders by a southern Ohio pain clinic.

The warnings reached senior company officials, including then-chief executive Anthony Rattini. But little changed.

Cindy Willet, the senior pharmaceutical buyer, told investigators in 2015 that she eventually “stopped talking to [Rattini] about her concerns because he wasn’t doing anything about it. It was as if it was falling on deaf ears. Tony never stopped an order.”

The pain clinic, Unique Pain Management, was based in Wheelersburg, Ohio, a town of 6,500 at the epicenter the opioid epidemic. The clinic was run by a father-daughter team of physicians, John and Margy Temponeras. Between December 2009 and June 2010, the clinic’s monthly orders of oxycodone rose from 67,800 doses to 104,400. Miami-Luken did not investigate the surge, according to the DEA.

Despite signs that something was amiss, “Miami-Luken not only continued to ship Dr. [Margy] Temponeras oxycodone, but also shipped increased amounts,” the DEA alleged.

But Margy Temponeras ordered so much OxyContin from Miami-Luken that in August 2010 she drew the attention of Purdue Pharma, the drug’s manufacturer. Purdue cut Miami-Luken’s OxyContin supply by 20 percent, prompting Miami-Luken to halt drug shipments to Temponeras, records show.

Last year, a federal grand jury indicted the Temponerases and a pharmacist on charges that they conspired to illegally sell medication, alleging that at least eight people had died of overdoses connected to the drugs.

Three of those people died while the clinic was receiving drugs from Miami-Luken between November 2008 and August 2010, according to the indictment and DEA records. It is unclear whether Margy Temponeras also purchased drugs from other distributors, or whether any of those who died consumed drugs distributed by Miami-Luken.

The Temponerases are scheduled to stand trial early next year. Their attorneys declined to comment. An attorney for the pharmacist, Raymond Fankell, who is also scheduled to stand trial next year, said Fankell’s involvement was limited to helping Margy Temponeras set up the dispensary in her office and to filling her prescriptions at his drugstore.

During one of their interviews with Rattini, DEA investigators asked how the company documented suspicious orders. Rattini pointed to his compliance officer, who put a finger to his head. “It’s all just up here,” he said.

The agency is now attempting to revoke Miami-Luken’s license. The company has asked for a hearing before a DEA administrative law judge and is battling the DEA in federal court over a subpoena for agency records.

Not All Drug Abuse Is From Health Providers and Oxycodone

Not All Drug Abuse Is From Health Providers and Oxycodone

http://www.anesthesiologynews.com/Commentary/Article/10-16/Not-All-Drug-Abuse-Is-From-Health-Providers-and-Oxycodone/38050/ses=ogst?

Over the last few months, there has been an explosion of interest in the legislature to rein in oxycodone and to limit its use for pain management. Health care providers are painted as the major culprits who are causing an explosion of drug abuse, as reported by the media. Many excellent physicians in the field of pain medicine have been put under the microscope regarding their management of narcotics prescribed for certain patients, including those with terminal disease pain. This is not to say that health care providers should not be policed with medically based data on how to balance pain management with narcotics and nonnarcotic modalities.

The media is also filled with reports of raids on methamphetamine laboratories in our communities. This ongoing battle with illicit drugs has become a major political issue at both the local and federal level. Political debate has focused on how oxycodone and fentanyl are overprescribed, diverted and at the heart of our drug problem.

Public health care providers and politicians may not be aware of a more overwhelming supply chain of illicit addictive drugs. These drugs that are flooding our streets are being manufactured not in a debilitated trailer in rural America, but in a factory at an industrial level. Want to get your hands on the latest designer street drug or slightly tweaked version of fentanyl? It’s as easy as typing “Research Chemicals” into Google. You can scroll through an endless list of websites such as Alibaba.com and Guidechem.com, to name a few. Some of these offer free samples, bargain prices and home delivery by Express Mail. All you have to do is wire a few thousand dollars or use your credit card with an English-speaking customer service representative, and you get drugs delivered to your door. No need to doctor-shop or use criminal drug dealers.

 

This globalized marketplace, in which Chinese chemical companies pump out large volumes of ever-changing isomers that are too new to be banned in the United States or internationally, leaves our local and federal law enforcement officials virtually powerless to slow the influx of synthetic drugs. Those companies also manufacture some of the precursors of illicit drugs, which are used by many of the major drug cartels. In a country that has perfected the art of internet censorship and electronic spying, the open online drug market is a blatant example of what law enforcement has said is China’s reluctance to take action, as it has today become the major supplier of deadly synthetic drugs.

Since 2008, the number of new psychoactive substances added to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime has soared more than eightfold to 541, far more than the 244 drugs listed as controlled substances that are sold on these websites as “legal highs,” “research chemicals,” “not for human use” and fertilizers.

Our local governments have to deal with these temporarily legal substances until legislation can be passed. A great example is “spice” or “synthetic marijuana,” which flooded smoke shops and gas stations and was sold alongside tobacco products. Some of the most popular names included K2, Yucatan Fire, Skunk and Moon Rocks. Spice was often promoted as being “natural,” but in reality it was plant material treated with manufactured psychoactive chemicals and synthetic cannabinoid compounds. Spice users and poison control centers across the country have reported rapid heart rates, agitation, confusion, hallucinations, self-destructive behavior and psychosis. These agents have triggered heart attacks, strokes and permanent neurologic damage.

Bath salts are another drug that has triggered a major drug problem and has filled our ERs and ICUs. Websites market these compounds as keyboard cleaners, plant food and jewelry cleaners. The main component of most bath salts is methylenedioxypyrovalerone or new derivatives to skirt the law. Popular types of bath salts include “Ivory Wave,” “Purple Wave,” “Vanilla Sky” and “Bliss.” These drugs trigger agitation, paranoia, hallucinations, hypertension, tachycardia and suicidal thinking. A major danger is depression or suicidal behavior that can last even after the stimulatory effects of the drugs have worn off. There have been cases of suicides reported a few days after use.

Flakka (or alpha-PVP), which is manufactured in China, is sold by over 150 companies. It is a highly addictive synthetic drug that has overwhelmed hospital systems, some of which report 20 Flakka-related emergencies a day. Many deaths also have been attributed to this cheaply priced drug. Some of the dealers even guarantee that if your shipment is seized, they will send you another package. To elude U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents, the shipment may be labeled as industrial solvent or cleaner. A kilogram can be purchased for $1,500 online and sold for many-fold more on our streets.

These chemical companies may be responsible for the explosion in narcotic overdose deaths that have affected all social classes across the country. The media is filled with reports of fentanyl deaths and ever-increasing drug-related deaths. This has triggered the wide availability of Narcan (naloxone, Adapt Pharma) to first responders and the public. However, much of the problem may be triggered by the widespread availability of industrially produced fentanyl analogs.

The Drug Enforcement Administration is working to classify these specific analogs. An example of the frustration that law enforcement must deal with is a compound called furanylfentanyl. Once it is listed as illegal, the laboratories in China will be automatically changing the formula to come up with the next analog acetyl fentanyl drug configuration.

What can we do as health care providers who must deal with these problems on a daily basis in our ERs, operating rooms and ICUs? I believe that education is a key factor. We need to educate our political leaders about any and all industrially produced, addictive drugs and their terrible effects on our society. Our national government should address this problem with authorities in China. At the grassroots level, health care providers must educate the public on these dangerous, synthetic drugs with widely varying potencies.

Seattle Pain Centers director denies state’s claims in patients’ deaths

Seattle Pain Centers director denies state’s claims in patients’ deaths

http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/health/former-seattle-pain-centers-director-denies-states-claims-in-opiate-deaths/

These clinics served some 8,000 opiate pts and over a 5-6 yr period… ” and 18 POSSIBLY DIED from their opiate use. Now there are some 25,000 pts – including 8,000 taking opiates – that are finding it impossible to get healthcare. Another WITCH HUNT ???

Dr. Frank Li, former medical director of a chain of eight Washington pain clinics, denies that he failed to properly oversee opiate use by Medicaid patients, possibly contributing to several deaths. State officials suspended his medical license in July.

The former medical director of a shuttered chain of Washington pain clinics is forcefully denying allegations he failed to properly monitor Medicaid patients’ opiate use, possibly contributing to 18 deaths since 2010.

In a 19-page response to charges by the state Medical Commission, Dr. Frank Li contends he never saw five of the patients himself, treated eight of the 18 only one or two times and shouldn’t be held liable for the acts of providers he supervised at Seattle Pain Centers.

 In addition, Li, 48, denied that his business model focused on hiring newly licensed practitioners with little pain-management experience or that he ordered excessive numbers of urine screenings and unnecessary medical equipment to boost fees.
 Thomas H. Fain, a Seattle lawyer representing Li, declined to discuss the case, but said in a statement that his client provided and supervised appropriate care for the difficult patients the clinics treated.

“(T)he providers at Seattle Pain Centers were willing to provide medical care to a very challenging and underserved patient population and we firmly believe the evidence will show that the medical providers complied with the evolving standards and guidelines regarding the management of chronic pain.”

Li has not been charged with a crime.

Li filed the response with the Medical Commission on Oct. 3, nearly three months after Washington regulators suspended his medical license July 14 and effectively shut down the chain of eight clinics with locations from Renton to Spokane. California medical officials also pulled Li’s license. Officials alleged that Li violated state regulations governing treatment of chronic, non-cancer pain.

The Seattle Times obtained a copy of Li’s responseThursday through a public records request.

Li’s response is the first word from the doctor who started with a pain clinic in Seattle and expanded rapidly, serving an estimated 25,000 patients, including about 8,000 prescribed opiate painkillers this year.

His response suggests that state officials deliberately misinterpreted records in an effort to target Li.

“In its zeal to prosecute the case, State exaggerates the clear language appearing on the death certificates provided by the state and ignores the clear language found in the medical records of the patients,” the response states.

Li contends he never treated several patients on which charges are based, including Becky Gene Rae Kruse, 58, of Everett, a grandmother who had fibromyalgia and struggled with chronic pain and addiction.

Kruse, who is listed as “Patient J” in the state’s statement of charges, died April 7, 2013, after an overdose of drugs, including hydromorphone. Six days before her death, Kruse had filled a prescription for 90 4-milligram hydromorphone pills, also known as Dilaudid. It was written by an advanced registered nurse practitioner (ARNP) at Seattle Pain Centers’ Everett site.

In his response, Li said he never treated Patient J, “and Washington law does not support vicarious liability for disciplinary action.”

Kruse’s sister, Nicole Ellis, 44, of Everett, said Li’s response suggests he’s trying to avoid responsibility for the care provided by his clinics.

“It does concern me because the more responsibility you have, the more accountability you have,” she said. “Especially in the medical community, that’s standard practice.”

The closure of Seattle Pain Centers left many former patients without care and the state’s health system struggling to absorb them.

A hearing on Li’s case has been set for April 17-22, officials with the state health department said. A Nov. 8 hearing is scheduled in Washington, D.C., to determine whether Li can keep his federal Drug Enforcement Administration registration, which allows him to prescribe controlled substances, including opiate painkillers.

we should never become so over-vigilant that we fail to treat a legitimate patient in real pain

An Obligation to Society

http://drugtopics.modernmedicine.com/drug-topics/news/obligation-society?

“A Pharmacist serves individual, community, and societal needs.”
– Pharmacists’ Code of Ethics

Joe had a full time job. He and his “team” had become quite proficient at their trade. Joe’s job had several parts and as the leader Joe had to be particularly good at each. Joe was a salesman and over the years he had developed a list of “loyal” customers – they were, however, only loyal as long as Joe and his team could supply “quality” products at a competitive price and have them available when they needed them. Joe sold drugs–actually pharmaceuticals–on the streets of Indianapolis.  Joe didn’t sell generics, only brand names – names his customers recognized.   

Joe’s second skill was as a con man. The con was to walk into a pharmacy – usually in the more affluent suburbs around Indianapolis – and pass the prescriptions Joe had spent a considerable amount of time forging. Another member of the team would go into physician offices and steal prescription pads – she was good at this but she couldn’t forge nearly as well as Joe could. This last skill is what lead to Joe’s arrest.2

One fall afternoon Joe walked into a pharmacy in one of the affluent suburbs the team frequented, and presented the pharmacist, Ed, with a prescription for controlled substance favored by Joe’s customers. Joe easily conversed with the technician and the pharmacist, explaining that the prescription was for his cousin, which is why the (fake) ID Joe presented did not match the last name of the patient. He went into detail about his cousin’s accident and her intense pain.2

Joe was proud of his handiwork on the prescription – it was beautifully forged. That was his downfall. Later, during Joe’s trial Ed, the pharmacist, explained to the jury that he became suspicious. He called the doctor and then the police because “the prescription just looked too good.”  

There are a lot of Joes walking into pharmacies today. Some, like Joe, steal and forge the prescriptions. Others, willing to spend more on overhead, visit “pill mill docs” who — for the right inducement — will write prescriptions for whatever the dealer asks. Pharmacists unwittingly become their suppliers.

In this country it is estimated we, as society, spend, an average of $484 billion each year on abuse and addition. In addition, drug addiction and abuse “can be linked to at least ½ of all major crimes committed.”3 It is also estimated that “half of those taken into custody for violent offenses, such as assault or homicide, were under the influence at the time of arrest.”3 It is said the most addictive drugs are medications obtained from a pharmacy.3

According to the CDC in 2014, ten% of all persons in the U.S. over age 12 were involved in illicit drug use.4 The CDC further noted that the number of “drug-poisoning deaths in 2013 was 43,982,” of which “deaths involving opioid analgesics was 16,235” — almost twice the number of deaths involving heroin.

Every pharmacist knows we have a problem in the prescription drug abuse in this country. While abuse may include medical and pharmacy problems of the overuse of these drugs by real patients who take more than prescribed, the larger problems are the non-medical, non-pharmacy problems. The more serious problem is the availability of pharmaceuticals not prescribed for a “legitimate medical purpose by a practitioner acting in the usual course of professional practice.”5

There are many sources where pharmacists can find red flags and signs of illegitimate prescriptions and what we can do when we see them. This article is only to remind us of our obligation to society as pharmacists. One further warning – we should never become so over-vigilant that we fail to treat a legitimate patient in real pain.  

 

why your prescription COSTS SO DAMN MUCH !

Here’s how a $50 drug ends up costing you $700 in America’s healthcare system

http://www.businessinsider.com/pharmacists-blame-pbms-for-high-cost-of-nexium-2016-10

Pharmacists around the country are agitated.

For years they’ve been watching their customers struggle to pay for prescription drugs, even when they have generic or over-the-counter alternatives. These drugs are supposed to treat simple, everyday ailments, like acid reflux and heartburn.

In the case of acid reflux, the drug in question is Nexium, and it serves as an illustration of the pharmacists’ chief complaint.

Nexium comes in many forms, including a less potent over-the-counter version. That costs between $25 and $50.

There’s also a prescription version with twice the strength. If you’re getting that one through Medicare Part D, the government’s program for prescription drugs, it could cost as much as $700.

To try to understand why, we talked to pharmacists, and they all pointed to the same thing: It’s the pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs.

PBMs are companies that manage insurance plans for the government, employers, and other payers. They’re middlemen. For the insurance companies and employers, they help manage prescription claims. They do this in part by creating lists of drugs that will or won’t be paid for and then use their scale to negotiate lower costs.

But they also get paid by the drugmakers, who want their product on the list of approved drugs. And, because some of their fees are pegged to the drug’s price, the PBMs can actually profit from higher prices too. To the pharmacists, these conflicts are made worse by the PBM’s secretive contracts.

“PBMs operate on the back side in secret deals with drug companies to keep their drugs being used and to keep market share,” said Tim Mitchell, a second-generation pharmacy owner who operates Mitchell’s Drug Stores in southwestern Missouri.

This, Mitchell alleges, is what is going on with Nexium, a drug that has been off-patent for almost two years.

“In our contracts they say you can’t talk to the press. You can’t talk to the patients. You can’t talk to the payers. You can’t talk to anyone. Well, I’ll tell you what, I don’t care. I’m tired of them scamming Americans,” Mitchell told Business Insider. “They’re not decreasing drug costs. They’re driving drug costs.”

To be clear: The reason pharmacists have an ax to grind with PBMs is that they feel the PBMs are squeezing profits out of every part of the industry — the insurers, the drugmakers, and the pharmacists — while providing little value.

They believe that the slices that the PBMs are taking only inflate the ultimate cost of prescriptions drugs. Sometimes the PBMs even claw back profits from pharmacies. Either way, the pharmacy owners can barely say a word about their relationships with PBMs because of restrictions in their pharmacy provider agreements.

They aren’t the only ones concerned about the growing power of PBMs either. PBMs are being sued by some customers for double dealing, and they’re now also starting to draw the attention of Congress. Perhaps the biggest threat of all: They’re facing a backlash from America’s largest employers, a group of which is working on a way to rewire the system.

What’s Nexium?

The reason I’m talking about Nexium is that I take the drug. In 2004, I had an invasive surgery to re-angle my stomach. I was born with it tilted the wrong way, so stomach acid was moving up through my esophagus and over time it wore away the lining to the point that my esophagus collapsed in three places.

For a while the surgery was enough to keep me comfortable, but as I’ve gotten older I’ve had to take Nexium every day. I take the over-the-counter Nexium 24HR, which is a 20 mg dose rather than the 40 mg prescription.

Nexium Nexium at Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart

I asked AstraZeneca, the maker of Nexium, to explain the differences between Nexium and generic Nexium, and they told me simply that, well, one is branded and one is a generic, according to the FDA.

From the company’s representative:

“With regards to your inquiry on the difference between branded and generic Nexium, in general there are differences pertaining to the requirements for FDA approval. To support the approval of branded medicines the FDA requires efficacy and safety data from in human, well-controlled clinical trials.

In contrast, according to the FDA, the generic drug manufacturer must prove their drug is the same as, or bio equivalent to the brand name drug by measuring the amount of drug in the bloodstream and comparing that to the brand.

It’s important to know that not all medications, brand name or generic, work the same for all patients, which is why it is important for healthcare providers and patients to determine the best treatment option on an individual basis.”

All righty then. If that’s it, then that’s it.

Nexium buyers, like pharmacies and wholesalers, have sued AstraZeneca, accusing the company of being involved in a “pay for delay” scheme. That means a drug company pays off a generic drugmaker — in this case a company called Ranbaxy — to get it to delay putting a generic version of their drug in the market. In 2014 the drug companies prevailed, but the plaintiffs are appealing that decision.

There’s more. In 2015, AstraZeneca had to pay a $7.9 million fine after allegedly paying kickbacks to PBM Medco Health. The government’s allegation was that AstraZeneca paid kickbacks to ensure that Medco kept Nexium on its formulary.

From Law360:

“According to the government, AstraZeneca agreed to give Medco about $40 million, largely in the form of discounts on other drugs, in exchange for Medco’s agreement to maintain Nexium’s ‘sole and exclusive’ status on its list of approved drugs, and the pharmaceutical company then submitted claims for reimbursement under the Retiree Drug Subsidy Program in violation of the False Claims Act.”

“No one knows with the PBMs what kind of discounts their getting from the manufacturers, and then what they turn around and tell the patient,” J. Randle House, a pharmacist at Metier Pharmacy in Arizona, told Business Insider. “It’s a highly corrupt industry if you really look at it from afar, and then when you really dive into it you’ll see that one and two doesn’t equal three.”

Another way

The three largest PBMs control about 80% of the market. Generally, they get paid per prescription. But some smaller PBMs manage far fewer formularies than the big three, which is to say they have fewer, and usually smaller, clients. These PBMs get paid a flat fee for managing programs, and also tend to be transparent about how much they make on drugs.

One of those PBMs is Detroit-based MeridianRx. When I asked its CEO, Andrew Miller, why formularies might include prescription Nexium, he sounded perplexed.

“Why don’t they just take omeprazole?” he asked me, referring to the generic name for other acid-reflux medications (you probably know it as Prilosec).

“We don’t have Nexium on our formulary because there’s no point,” he said. Other PBMs “have an incentive to keep it on there because the rebate is big,” he said.

Because of Meridian’s pricing model, Miller is willing to show his clients exactly how much he makes off of every drug. He also frowns on the vertical integration going on in the industry.

Big PBMs also sometimes own pharmacies. Miller does not, and he says Meridian avoids this practice because it gives PBMs “an incentive to fill inappropriately.”

So what would he do with the industry to fix this high-cost mess?

“You need true pricing transparency from everyone in the industry, including wholesalers, drug companies, pharmacies, and PBMs. Outlaw drug commercials, outlaw co-pay coupons,” said Miller.

Customers shop in the pharmacy department of a Target store in the Brooklyn June 15, 2015. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid Customers in the pharmacy department of a Target store in the Brooklyn, New York. Thomson Reuters

Doughnut holes

The real danger of taking Nexium, at least for millions of Medicare Part D patients, is that it can put them in something called a doughnut hole.

That’s when your out-of-pocket expenses start unexpectedly skyrocketing as a result of the structure of the Part D program. Unexpectedly, because most of the time patients don’t know how much drugs cost insurers, they just know what they have to pay as a co-pay.

Here’s how the doughnut hole happens: Most Medicare Part D patients have what’s called a coverage gap. That means after Medicare Part D pays a certain amount (say, $2,000) the patient’s co-pays go up from between $5 and $20 to half of what the drug costs.

“This means patients may find themselves in a situation where their initial co-pay of $10 for a 90-day supply of Nexium will exponentially increase to an out-of-pocket cost of $350 or more,” said Melissa Kiguwa, a spokeswoman for Pharmacists United for Truth and Transparency, or PUTT. For a lot of Americans, that $350 is a lot of money, especially if they don’t see it coming because they thought Medicare Part D was taking care of the full cost of Nexium.

PUTT sees no difference between Nexium and EpiPen, the life-saving antiallergy drug that has gone from costing $100 in 2007 to $608 in 2016. The drug’s cost has caused a nationwide uproar, and in an interview with CNBC, CEO Heather Bresch placed part of the blame on “middle men” — on PBMs.

More from PUTT:

“The EpiPen drug hike exposed part of the problem when Mylan Pharmaceuticals CEO attempted to expose how PBMs, brokers, and insurers pocketed more than $280 per prescription within the drug supply chain. The payer pays more in the end, the patient pays a higher copay or higher cost of the medication, and the rebates may or may not go back to the ultimate payer. Yet, in standard contracts with PBMs, providers are forbidden to discuss these tactics and pricing abuses with the ultimate payers or to any one else.

While the Nexium or EpiPen story is not unique in healthcare today, PBMs are quick to refute claims that they are adding to the overall prices of expensive brand drugs with Rx rebates. However, PUTT believes this is happening for most expensive brand drugs— including insulin, inhalers and even expensive specialty medications. Interestingly enough, these are also the fastest growing part of Rx drug plans.”

Just look at Nexium’s list price. While it has gone up year after year, it isn’t close to $700. In fact, the wholesale acquisition cost, or WAC, set by AstraZeneca has topped out at about $250. And the generic competition means the company’s revenue from Nexium is falling. Sales declined by 18% to $1 billion in the first half of the year.

This is possible because WAC isn’t even close to the whole story when it comes drug pricing. It’s just the price of the drug before manufacturers do their deals with insurers and PBMs.

Ask the PBM

That is why AstraZeneca’s representative suggested over email that we ask the many PBMs running Medicare Part D plans why the drug costs so much (emphasis added):

“AstraZeneca does not disclose specific details in regards to rebates for any of our products. The best determinant of a patient’s out of pocket cost is their individual insurance plan and the respective formulary placement for a medicine.

Nexium is currently covered for about 60% of Medicare Part D patients. Preferred drug lists are often made publicly available by PBMs, and it may be helpful to inquire with them as to the tier coverage of Nexium and/or generics, which will give you a better sense of the out of pocket cost for an individual patient on a plan managed by that PBM.”

For what it’s worth, we did ask the PBM lobby about Nexium, and they gave us the same response they always give: They encourage lower cost drugs, but clients ultimately pick what they want.

And with that we should add that PBM clients have been getting mad at them lately. Earlier this year, some of America’s biggest employers — including American Express, Macy’s, and Coca-Cola — created an organization called the Health Transformation Alliance with the aim of breaking with “existing marketplace practices that are costly, wasteful, and inefficient, all of which have resulted in employees paying higher premiums, copayments, and deductibles every year.”

Other clients are just flat out suing. Anthem Insurance, a client of the largest PBM in the country, Express Scripts, is suing the PBM for failing to negotiate its 10-year contract “in good faith” and is seeking $15 billion in damages.

congressman doug collins Congressman Doug Collins (R-GA). YouTube

Meanwhile, in Washington

Pharmacists aren’t the only ones concerned about the lack of transparency. A number of people in Congress have grown tired of the PBMs and are calling for more transparency in their dealings.

OmnicareRx, owned by UnitedHealth, is the largest PBM managing Medicare Part D formularies, and congressman Doug Collins (R-GA) called them out for anticompetitive actions in a congressional hearing last year.

“Tricare” — the Defense Department’s healthcare program — “did a study where it found that, if it eliminated PBMs from the Tricare program, it would save roughly $1.3 billion per year,” he said. “We are up here arguing about problems in our budget, and we could save this much money?”

He — along with Rep. Buddy Carter (R-GA), the lone pharmacist in Congress — believes the PBMs are especially targeting small pharmacies. They wrote a letter to the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) warning of predatory pricing driving small pharmacies out of business. They accused insurer Humana, which owns a PBM, of amending its pharmacy provider agreement to squeeze out little guys.

“Under this proposal, a pharmacy could meet most of the CMS benchmarks, provide quality customer care, and still not be reimbursed by Humana,” the letter read. “Humana’s criteria has little to do with patient care, and everything to do increasing their profit and driving community pharmacies out of the market. Some of these metrics, including ‘patient adherence’ are beyond the control of the pharmacists. Pharmacies already compete for customers and business, let’s not set a precedent to make them compete for reimbursement by insurance companies as well.”

But that’s exactly what they’re doing, and it’s driving some decades-old family businesses around the country to the brink.

“I love being a pharmacist, I love living in the community that that I grew up in, I love taking care of people that took care of me when I was a kid here,” Mitchell said by phone on his way to pick his kids up from football practice.

“But I may not be around forever. I may have to go work for a big chain … I love what I do, but the PBMs are taking that away from me. I think the time has come for small pharmacies and large pharmacies to stand up to big PBMs and make a difference for our profession and in our patients lives.”

Vermont Governor Proposes Limits on Painkiller Prescriptions

Vermont Governor Proposes Limits on Painkiller Prescriptions

www.nytimes.com/2016/10/20/us/vermont-governor-proposes-limits-on-painkiller-prescriptions.html?

I wonder how many of the 45 million “Nicotine addicts” and 35 million “Alcoholics” live in Vermont  and I wonder how many of the 540,000 people that die every year from the use/abuse of those two drugs live(d) in Vermont ? Didn’t read anything in this article about RATIONING either of these two drugs ?

They blame prescription opiates – particularly Oxycodone – on the opiate epidemic… No one seems to have a answer as to what is the “gateway drug” for Nicotine and Alcohol addiction ?  Maybe because of the 15%-20% of those addicts are ALSO POLITICIANS AND BUREAUCRATS… and they would not begin to pass laws that deal with the addiction of those two drugs…. because it would affect them directly/personally ?

Gov. Peter Shumlin of Vermont on Wednesday announced proposed limits on the number of painkillers that could be prescribed, the latest measure his administration has taken to combat the opioid crisis that has ravaged the state in the last five years.

At a news conference outside the Vermont Department of Health in Burlington, Mr. Shumlin and Dr. Harry Chen, the state’s health commissioner, spoke for about half an hour about proposed regulations, which they said represented a cutting-edge approach to combating the crisis.

Under the proposal, the severity and duration of pain would be used to determine the specific limit for a prescription of opioids. For example, for a minor procedure producing moderate pain, a provider would be limited to prescribing nine to 12 opioid painkiller pills, depending on the medication. The limits would be higher for more complicated procedures, and there would be exceptions for the treatment of severe pain.

The limits are proposed amendments to an existing rule and would be official in December if approved after a period of public comment and review by a state legislative committee, said Scott Coriell, a spokesman for the governor. Mr. Shumlin proposed the rule in his State of the State address in January, and he set its passage as one of the chief priorities in his final year in office.

The governor, who announced last year that he would not seek a fourth term, spoke in a phone interview about Wednesday’s announcement in the larger context of his battle against the flood of opioids. He said that when he took office in 2011, he very quickly realized that “we had a full-blown health crisis on our hands.” Three years later, in his State of the State address, he pledged to fight that crisis.

He said that limiting the number of opioid pills that could be prescribed would be an effective way to cut down on addiction.

Photo

 
The prescription drug hydrocodone, also known as Vicodin. The governor of Vermont has proposed limits on the number of painkillers that could be prescribed. Credit Toby Talbot/Associated Press

Asked whether he hoped his successor would continue the fight, Mr. Shumlin said, “This is not a hard problem to solve.”

“We didn’t have a heroin crisis in America before OxyContin was approved and started being handed out like candy,” he said. “If politicians would lead a more rational conversation about how we manage pain in America, we could fix the majority of this problem with a click of our fingers.”

Dr. Chen stressed that the rule announced Wednesday was designed to combat the prescription of opioids for cases of “acute pain.”

“These are people who don’t normally take opioids,” he said. “We want to reduce the variability in terms of what prescribers are prescribing.”

Some critics said Wednesday’s proposals might backfire. Liz Evans, the executive director of the New York Harm Reduction Educators, a group that works to promote access to safe equipment and health care for people who use drugs, said that although she was “sure that the governor is motivated by kindness,” she was worried that the proposed regulations might not have the intended effect.

“I think prohibiting access to pain medication can result in pushing people to using more illicit drugs in a more dangerous way without being paired with existing evidence-based public health strategies that are known to work,” she said.

Dr. Chen agreed that a public health approach was necessary and said it was something that Vermont aimed to employ.

“It’s a community problem,” he said. “It needs to be solved on a communitywide basis.”

 

After son’s heroin overdose and oxycodone prescription, parents search for answers

After son’s heroin overdose and oxycodone prescription, parents search for answers

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/local/article109589897.html

Someone who has been “fighting opiate addiction” for TWENTY YEARS… the most dangerous time for a recovering addict is after being in rehab… when their tolerance has been reduced.. and they are discharged… back into the environment from where they came from and where they were an opiate abuser… They fall off the wagon and go back to using the amount that they had used previously and typically OD.  This is an excellent place for the use of the 28 day Vivitrol therapy..  Which would limit or prohibit a person from getting high or ODing from reverting back to abusing…  Recidivism after going thru a rehab program is quite high.  Who believes that “Chip” would not have found something to abuse.. even if the prescriber had not written him some prescriptions ?

After Gray and Susan Kimel’s son, Douglas “Chip” Kimel III, died from an accidental heroin overdose, they went after answers. The Kimels went up against the state pharmacy and medical boards trying to learn why their son’s doctor had prescribed more than the recommended dosage of oxycodone and why Chip’s pharmacist continued filling the prescriptions.