The best therapy that the lowest priced medication can provide ?

UnitedHealth trims drug coverage, including Sanofi insulin

http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/unitedhealth-trims-drug-coverage-including-sanofi-insulin/ar-BBwssH0

UnitedHealth Group Inc, the largest U.S. health insurer, will stop covering several brand-name drugs as of next year, reinforcing a trend of payers steering prescriptions to lower-priced options.

 In a bulletin seeking client feedback by Sept. 28, UnitedHealth said it is changing reimbursement terms for long-acting insulins and will no longer cover Lantus, the main insulin drug sold by Sanofi SA.

The insurer said Basaglar, a cheaper biosimilar insulin sold by Eli Lilly & Co would be covered as “Tier 1,” meaning the lowest out-of-pocket costs for members. Levemir, produced by Novo Nordisk A/S, will move from Tier 1 to Tier 2.

Biosimilars are cheaper copies of protein-based biotech drugs such as Lantus, which are no longer protected by patents. They cannot be precisely replicated like conventional chemical drugs but have been shown to be equivalent in terms of efficacy and side effects.

The insurer also said it will exclude from coverage Amgen Inc’s white blood cell-boosting drug Neupogen, in favor of Zarxio, a biosimilar sold by Novartis AG.

UnitedHealth last year bought Catamaran Corp for $12.8 billion, making it the nation’s No. 3 pharmacy benefit manager after Express Scripts Holding Co and Caremark, which is owned by CVS Health Corp. 

Does this represents a conspiracy or collusion ?

stevemailboxThis is a email that I received today and it is similar to multiple emails that I get every week.

First of all there is no black/white definition of what “disabled” really is. If you can’t perform “normal” daily functions without your medications.. then, most likely, you are disabled… If you believe that you are disabled.. then let “the other side” prove that you are NOT DISABLED.

This particular email is from Florida and in 2015 there was a new pharmacy board regulation that was passed http://floridaspharmacy.gov/latest-news/validate-pain-medication-prescriptions/

that went into effect the last of December 2015.  How or if the FL Board of Pharmacy (BOP) is enforcing this new regulation… is still a question.

Personally, I have problems with mail order pharmacies, first of all all medications have a required temperature storage range .. normally 59F -86F and many times of the year and many sections of the country… medication is exposed to temperatures outside of these ranges.  Those requirements apply to the manufacturer, wholesaler and pharmacy ..HOWEVER… once the pharmacy turns the mail order package over to the carrier service… the storage requirement no longer applies.  Secondly, do you really know who you are talking to on the other end of the phone with a mail order service ?  If needed are you actually able to talk to someone in authority – a Pharmacist – or just someone who claims that they are a Pharmacist and whose job it is .. to just say “NO” and get the pt off the phone.  They mail order pharmacies are huge highly automated places.. filling more prescriptions EACH DAY that a community pharmacy will fill in a YEAR OR TWO…  If your paper prescription gets “lost” …  it is just one of hundreds of thousands that are stacked up in the que.  Most mail order pharmacies are “days behind” and if you get your necessary medication in a couple of days or a couple of weeks.. they are still several days behind … won’t change their day to day job… and if they lost your paper Rx… if they get it back to you in a few days or a few weeks… what are you going to do.. you are thousands of miles away.. 

You can complain to the corporate HQ, but typically they will tell you that they stand behind their Pharmacist’s decisions. They are correct they cannot force a Pharmacist to fill a prescription, the corporation only has a permit of operate a Rx dept.. if they have licensed Pharmacists operating it.  Of course, they don’t have to continue to employ Pharmacists that are refusing to fill legal prescriptions, but if they continue to employ Pharmacists that refuse to fill legit Rx…

You can complain to the Board of Pharmacy (BOP) , but the majority of BOP’s are stacked with non-practicing Pharmacists who draw their paycheck from the same chains that they are suppose to oversee.  Some of us believe that there is a lot of “conflicts of interest” among the BOP  members, but since generally the BOP members are appointed by the Governor… and we all know that contributions to political reelection campaigns often get repaid by political favors

I recommend that EVERYONE audio/video recording all their interactions with Rx dept staff.  If they will mis-represent (lie) about having your medication in stock, or that the insurance company refused the claim… who is to believe that they will tell the truth of what was said/not said… done or not done when push comes to shove.   Normally, the PIC (Pharmacist in charge) of any store can be found on the BOP’s website and/or there should be in “public view” within the store.. the pharmacy permit with the name of the PIC listed on it.

Independent pharmacies are typically ran by the Pharmacist/owner and unlike the chain Pharmacist does not get a paycheck every two weeks, regardless if he/she fills your prescriptions.  They depend on filling prescriptions to put bread/butter on their table.  Some Pharmacists when handed a prescription start looking for a reason NOT TO FILL IT… and if you start with that attitude… typically .. a reason can be found to not fill it… Generally, a independent Pharmacist will start by looking for reason to fill the Rx and/or be able to adjudicate anything that may appear to be a “red flag”.

With the existing systems and processes in place, it is normally easier for the pt to “switch than fight”.  Why would anyone patronize a store that wants you to BEG them to let them take your money, when there are 22,000 independent Pharmacists that would welcome your business ?  Here is a link to help pts find a local independent pharmacy http://www.ncpanet.org/home/find-your-local-pharmacy

I need your guidance/help with some information.

I am a chronic pain patient with valid scripts for controlled substances who lives in Florida. I am disabled however I have chosen not to go through disability and to continue working in the healthcare field for more than 10 years. I have been in 7 major car accidents over the course of 20 years. I have permanent damage to my neck, shoulder and back. I have all the appropriate documentation, have followed all the rules set forth by Florida and also by the mail-in pharmacy organization I use, CVS Caremark.

I have been having issues with CVS Caremark recently that I feel have bordered on illegal, unethical, and inappropriate in my opinion. I have a valid/on-time prescription written by a licensed medical professional with no sanctions in my state of Florida. The dosage and amount are at the recommended allowed dosages. I have been told by CVS Caremark on several occasions to “find another doctor”, “drive out of state to manually fill my prescriptions”, to fill out “this new form” or “that new form” stating that they are mandatory but not requiring them each and every time. I have had prescriptions withheld causing my body to detox unnecessarily for multiple reasons. The most recent was CVS stated my prescription in July had the wrong year on it (2001 was what they quoted) but when I reviewed copies of it from my doctor’s office, it had 2016. This month (September) it is because of a form that I have never had to fill out and they state has been required each time from the doctor’s office; yet when I call my doctor they state they have only had to fill out the form once when I first began using mail-in service. There local branches won’t fill them in my county because my doctor resides in another county. My doctor’s county won’t fill them because I live in another county. I have even been sitting with my doctor and had him call and speak with the pharmacy team in the controlled substances department and he was provided no concrete answers, and was given reasons like “I don’t know but we can’t fill it” or “I am not really sure about that, I will have to check with another pharmacist and get back to you” when he was speaking with a pharmacist. I am at my wits end.

 

  • I have been reading your article and not sure how to proceed against the mail in part of this big corporation. How would I find out the permit holder/store owner, the pharmacist in charge, the pharmacist who refuses to fill a prescription, and/or the wholesaler information when they keep that information “close to the vest” whenever I have called to complain before? If I am not on disability, would that negate my ability to file a complaint with the ADA? Should I hire an attorney for the undue hardship and medical complications this poses for my life and health? Which states do I file these complaints in since I use the mail-in pharmacy service while residing in another state?

 

If you can help me at all, I would appreciate all the information you can give me. I have hit a wall and don’t know where else to turn.

 

Bad science misled millions with chronic fatigue syndrome. Here’s how we fought back

Bad science misled millions with chronic fatigue syndrome. Here’s how we fought back

www.statnews.com/2016/09/21/chronic-fatigue-syndrome-pace-trial/

Problem is, the study was bad science.

And we’re now finding out exactly how bad.

Under court order, the study’s authors for the first time released their raw data earlier this month. Patients and independent scientists collaborated to analyze it and posted their findings Wednesday on Virology Blog, a site hosted by Columbia microbiology professor Vincent Racaniello.

The analysis shows that if you’re already getting standard medical care, your chances of being helped by the treatments are, at best, 10 percent. And your chances of recovery? Nearly nil.

The new findings are the result of a five-year battle that chronic fatigue syndrome patients — me among them — have waged to review the actual data underlying that $8 million study. It was a battle that, until a year ago, seemed nearly hopeless.

When the Lancet study, nicknamed the PACE trial, first came out, its inflated claims made headlines around the world. “Got ME? Just get out and exercise, say scientists,” wrote the Independent, using the acronym for the international name of the disease, myalgic encephalomyelitis. (Federal agencies now call it ME/CFS.) The findings went on to influence treatment recommendations from the CDC, the Mayo Clinic, Kaiser, the British National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, and more.

But patients like me were immediately skeptical, because the results contradicted the fundamental experience of our illness: The hallmark of ME/CFS is that even mild exertion can increase all the other symptoms of the disease, including not just profound fatigue but also cognitive deficits, difficulties with blood pressure regulation, unrestorative sleep, and neurological and immune dysfunction, among others.

Soon after I was diagnosed in 2006, I figured out that I had to rest the moment I thought, “I’m a little tired.” Otherwise, I would likely be semi-paralyzed and barely able to walk the next day.

The researchers argued that patients like me, who felt sicker after exercise, simply hadn’t built their activity up carefully enough. Start low, build slowly but steadily, and get professional guidance, they advised. But I’d seen how swimming for five minutes could sometimes leave me bedbound, even if I’d swum for 10 minutes without difficulty the day before. Instead of trying to continually increase my exercise, I’d learned to focus on staying within my ever-changing limits — an approach the researchers said was all wrong.

A disease ‘all in my head’?

The psychotherapy claim also made me skeptical. Talking with my therapist had helped keep me from losing my mind, but it hadn’t kept me from losing my health. Furthermore, the researchers weren’t recommending ordinary psychotherapy — they were recommending a form of cognitive behavior therapy that challenges patients’ beliefs that they have a physiological illness limiting their ability to exercise. Instead, the therapist advises, patients need only to become more active and ignore their symptoms to fully recover.

In other words, while the illness might have been triggered by a virus or other physiological stressor, the problem was pretty much all in our heads.

By contrast, in the American research community, no serious researchers were expressing doubts about the organic basis for the illness. Immunologists found clear patterns in the immune system, and exercise physiologists were seeing highly unusual physiological changes in ME/CFS patients after exercise.

I knew that the right forms of psychotherapy and careful exercise could help patients cope, and I would have been thrilled if they could have cured me. The problem was that, so far as I could tell, it just wasn’t true.

A deeply flawed study

Still, I’m a science writer. I respect and value science. So the PACE trial left me befuddled: It seemed like a great study — big, controlled, peer-reviewed — but I couldn’t reconcile the results with my own experience.

So I and many other patients dug into the science. And almost immediately we saw enormous problems.

Before the trial of 641 patients began, the researchers had announced their standards for success — that is, what “improvement” and “recovery” meant in statistically measurable terms. To be considered recovered, participants had to meet established thresholds on self-assessments of fatigue and physical function, and they had to say they felt much better overall.

But after the unblinded trial started, the researchers weakened all these standards, by a lot. Their revised definition of “recovery” was so loose that patients could get worse over the course of the trial on both fatigue and physical function and still be considered “recovered.” The threshold for physical function was so low that an average 80-year-old would exceed it.

In addition, the only evidence the researchers had that patients felt better was that patients said so. They found no significant improvement on any of their objective measures, such as how many patients got back to work, how many got off welfare, or their level of fitness.

But the subjective reports from patients seemed suspect to me. I imagined myself as a participant: I come in and I’m asked to rate my symptoms. Then, I’m repeatedly told over a year of treatment that I need to pay less attention to my symptoms. Then I’m asked to rate my symptoms again. Mightn’t I say they’re a bit better — even if I still feel terrible — in order to do what I’m told, please my therapist, and convince myself I haven’t wasted a year’s effort?

Many patients worked to bring these flaws to light: They wrote blogs; they contacted the press; they successfully submitted carefully argued letters and commentaries to leading medical journals. They even published papers in peer-reviewed scientific journals.

They also filed Freedom of Information Act requests to gain access to the trial data from Queen Mary University of London, the university where the lead researcher worked. The university denied most of these, some on the grounds that they were “vexatious.”

Critics painted as unhinged

The study’s defenders painted critics as unhinged crusaders who were impeding progress for the estimated 30 million ME/CFS patients around the world. For example, Richard Horton, the editor of the Lancet, described the trial’s critics as “a fairly small, but highly organised, very vocal and very damaging group of individuals who have, I would say, actually hijacked this agenda and distorted the debate so that it actually harms the overwhelming majority of patients.”

Press reports also alleged that ME/CFS researchers had received death threats, and they lumped the PACE critics in with the purported crazies.

While grieving for my fellow patients, I seethed at both the scientists and the journalists who refused to examine the trial closely. I could only hope that, eventually, PACE would drown under a slowly rising tide of good science, even if the scientific community never recognized its enormous problems.

But with the National Institutes of Health only funding $5 million a year of research into chronic fatigue syndrome, it seemed like that could take a very long time.

Then last October, David Tuller, a lecturer in public health and journalism at the University of California, Berkeley, wrote in Virology Blog a devastating expose of the scientific flaws of the trial. Tuller described all the problems I had seen, along with several more. The project was a remarkable act of public service: He isn’t a patient, yet he spent a year investigating the trial without institutional support, legal backing, or remuneration.

And, at last, the criticisms gained traction.

Racaniello and 41 other scientists and clinicians published an open letter to the Lancet calling for an independent investigation into the trial and saying “such flaws have no place in published research.” Rebecca Goldin, the director of Stats.org, an organization that works to improve the use of statistics in journalism, eviscerated the trial’s design in a 7,000-word critique.

In the meantime, a Freedom of Information Act request from Australian patient Alem Matthees was making its way through the legal system.

Matthees had asked for the anonymized data necessary to analyze the study using its original standards for success, but Queen Mary University of London had refused the request, arguing that malicious patients would break the anonymization and publish the participants’ names to discredit the trial. It again cited the death threats.

The court rejected these claims a month ago, calling them “wild speculations” and pointing out that the researchers themselves acknowledged in court that neither they nor PACE participants had received death threats.

Startling results from a re-analysis

Just before releasing the data,Queen Mary University of London did its own re-analysis on the question of how many patients got better, at least a little bit. Their data showed that using the study’s original standards, only 20 percent of patients improved with cognitive behavior therapy or exercise in addition to medical care, not 60 percent as claimed in the Lancet.

And even the 20 percent figure might be misleading, because the re-analysis also found that 10 percent of participants improved after receiving only standard medical care. That suggests that 10 percent in each of the treatment groups would likely have improved even without the exercise or therapy, leaving only 10 percent who were significantly helped by those interventions.

As for the claim that 22 percent of patients who received either treatment made an actual recovery? That went up in smoke when Matthees analyzed the raw data with the help of his colleagues and statisticians Philip Stark of the University of California, Berkeley, and Bruce Levin of Columbia University.

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Their analysis showed that had the researchers stuck to their original standards, only 4.4 percent of the exercise patients and 6.8 percent of the cognitive behavior therapy patients would have qualified as having recovered, along with 3.1 percent of patients in a trial arm that received neither therapy.

Importantly, there was no statistically significant difference between these recovery rates.

The PACE researchers, the editor of the Lancet, and the editors of Psychological Medicine (which published the follow-up study on recovery) all declined to comment for this article.

Simon Wessely, president of the UK Royal College of Psychiatrists, defended the trial in an email exchange with me. He argued that some patients did improve with the help of cognitive behavior therapy or exercise, and noted that the improvement data, unlike the recovery data, was statistically significant. “The message remains unchanged,” he wrote, calling both treatments “modestly effective.”

Wessely declined to comment on the lack of recovery. He summarized his overall reaction to the new analysis this way: “OK folks, nothing to see here, move along please.”

‘A classic bad study’

But it doesn’t appear that outside researchers are ready to “move along.”

After reviewing the new analysis, Jonathan Edwards, a professor emeritus of medicine at University College London said he was unconvinced that these small subjective improvements indicated the patients genuinely felt better. “They’ve set this trial up to give the strongest possible chance of there being a placebo effect that you can imagine,” he said.

“This is a classic bad study,” said Ron Davis, director of the Stanford Genome Technology Center and director of the Science Advisory Board of the End ME/CFS Project. He emphasized an additional problem: The study used such a broad definition of the disease that it likely included many patients who didn’t truly have ME/CFS at all.

“The study needs to be retracted,” Davis said. “I would like to use it as a teaching tool, to have medical students read it and ask them, ‘How many things can you find wrong with this study?’”

Retractions are rare, however, and erasing the impact of this flawed research will take much work for years to come.

After a sustained effort by ME/CFS advocates, the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, just changed its recommendation to read that there is insufficient evidence to justify cognitive behavior therapy or graded exercise. But many more public health agencies continue to point patients toward them.

And efforts to propagate this approach continue: A trial of graded exercise in children with ME/CFS has recently begun, and patients are protesting it.

Watching the PACE trial saga has left me both more wary of science and more in love with it. Its misuse has inflicted damage on millions of ME/CFS patients around the world, by promoting ineffectual and possibly harmful treatments and by feeding the idea that the illness is largely psychological. At the same time, science has been the essential tool to repair the problem.

But we shouldn’t take solace in the comforting notion that science is self-correcting. Many people, including many very sick people, had to invest immense effort and withstand vitriol to use science to correct these mistakes. And even that might not have been enough without Tuller’s rather heroic investigation. We do not currently have a sustainable, reliable method of overturning flawed research.

And rectifying PACE will take more than exposing its flaws. The lingering doubt it has cast on the illness will only be fully dispersed when we’ve finally figured out what’s really going on with the disease.

For that, we need to invest in some serious, good science. The kind I continue to love.

Julie Rehmeyer is a math and science writer. Her memoir “Through the Shadowlands,” describing the science and politics of chronic fatigue syndrome and other poorly understood illnesses, will be published by Rodale in May.

 

 

Death at the hands of the DEA ?

Woman Dies in FBI Drug Transaction Gone Bad

http://www.courthousenews.com/2016/09/21/woman-dies-in-fbi-drug-transaction-gone-bad.htm

SAN DIEGO (CN) — A San Diego woman’s family said the government used her as a plant in a deal with a Mexican drug cartel, which led to her being strangled to death when the deal went bad.
     According to the lawsuit her family filed in federal court, Andreina Tortolero worked with FBI and Drug Enforcement Administration agents in Jan. 2015 as a conduit for an undercover drug deal with a Mexican cartel, which included the son of infamous drug dealer “El Chapo.”
     Even though she was an inexperienced “layperson,” Tortolero worked with agents as part of a deal to get her husband, Eztor Placencia, released from jail, her family says.
     A former model from Venezuela, Tortolero had connections in Mexico and approached the government about striking a deal, her family’s attorney Elliot Kanter said in an interview.
     Agents led Tortolero to believe her husband would be incarcerated for up to four years for charges stemming from a parole violation, Kanter said. In reality, her husband would only spend a few months in jail and did not want Tortolero to go through with the transaction.
     The FBI and DEA made arrangements for Tortolero to deliver 10 kg of methamphetamine or cocaine to cartel members in Mexico, but the agents never delivered the drugs, the family says. Drug dealers strangled Tortolero to death for failing to come through.
     Tortolero’s body was found on the side of the road, and the government paid for her funeral, according to Kanter.
     The family says the federal agencies acted recklessly and “beyond the norm of behavior expected” by putting a “novice in a situation of grave danger.” By not providing a “reasonably safe environment for the negotiations and drug transaction to occur” and by not delivering the drugs as promised, the FBI and DEA knew drug dealers would harm or kill Tortolero, the lawsuit alleges.
     Tortolero’s husband, son and mother sued the FBI and DEA Sept. 16 for negligence, intentional infliction of emotional distress and reckless behavior. They are seeking to recover lost earnings and economical support, the cost of caring for her son, attorney’s fees and other damages.
     The FBI and DEA do not comment on pending litigation. 

The opioid lobby’s political spending adds up to more than eight times what the formidable gun lobby recorded for political activities during the same period.

Pharma lobbying held deep influence over opioid policies

https://www.publicintegrity.org/2016/09/18/20203/pharma-lobbying-held-deep-influence-over-opioid-policies

For more than a decade, members of a little-known group called the Pain Care Forum have blanketed the nation’s capital with messages touting prescription painkillers’ vital role in the lives of millions of Americans, creating an echo chamber that has quietly derailed efforts to curb U.S. consumption of the drugs, which accounts for two-thirds of the world’s usage.

The Associated Press and the Center for Public Integrity teamed up to investigate the influence of pharmaceutical companies on state and federal policies regarding opioids, the powerful painkillers that have claimed the lives of 165,000 people in the U.S. since 2000.

The news agencies tracked proposed laws on the subject and analyzed data on how the companies and their allies deployed lobbyists and contributed to political campaigns.

Key findings from the reporting:

  • Drug companies and allied advocates spent more than $880 million on lobbying and political contributions at the state and federal level over the past decade; by comparison, a handful of groups advocating for opioid limits spent $4 million. The money covered a range of political activities important to the drug industry, including legislation and regulations related to opioids.
     
  • The opioid industry and its allies contributed to roughly 7,100 candidates for state-level offices.
     
  • The drug companies and allied groups have an army of lobbyists averaging 1,350 per year, covering all 50 state capitals. 
     
  • The opioid lobby’s political spending adds up to more than eight times what the formidable gun lobby recorded for political activities during the same period.
     
  • For over a decade, a group called the Pain Care Forum has met with some of the highest-ranking health officials in the federal government, while quietly working to influence proposed regulations on opioids and promote legislation and reports on the problem of untreated pain. The group is coordinated by the chief lobbyist for Purdue Pharma, the maker of OxyContin. 
     
  • Two of the drug industry’s most active allies, the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network and the Academy of Integrative Pain Management, have contacted legislators and other officials about opioid measures in at least 18 states, even in some cases when cancer patients were specifically exempted from drug restrictions. State lawmakers often don’t know that these groups receive part of their funding from drugmakers.
     
  • Five states have passed laws related to abuse-deterrent opioids and scores of bills have been introduced, with at least 21 using nearly identical language that some legislators said was supplied by pharmaceutical lobbyists. Pharmaceutical companies lobby for such laws, which typically require insurers and pharmacists to give preferential treatment to the patent-protected drugs, even though some experts say the deterrents are easily circumvented.  

DEA: won’t let FACTS get in the way of their AGENDA.. just create FACTOIDS ?

Survey Of 6,000 Kratom Users Shows No Evidence Of Epidemic Or Abuse Justifying DEA Push To Ban Coffee-Like Herb

https://www.yahoo.com/news/survey-6-000-kratom-users-shows-no-evidence-173900596.html

WASHINGTON, Sept. 20, 2016 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Nine out of 10 respondents in the largest survey conducted to date of kratom users believe that the coffee-like herb is effective for dealing with joint and muscle comfort and related problems, according to the findings released today by the Pain News Network (PNN) at http://www.painnewsnetwork.org/kratom-survey/.

The survey of 6,150 kratom users was conducted between the August 30th announcement by the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) of a proposed ban on kratom and the end of last week.  With the support of the American Kratom Association (AKA), PNN promoted participation in the survey to its own readers and the broader public via social media channels.  The poll of kratom users involves a sample that is at least 10 times larger than any previous such survey. PNN maintained full editorial control of the survey questions and the presentation of the findings. 

Other key survey findings include the following:

  • The top three reasons kratom user said they use the herb are:  chronic or acute pain (51 percent); anxiety (14 percent); and treatment of opioid addiction or dependence (9 percent). Important note:  AKA and the Botanical Education Alliance (which joined PNN and AKA in releasing the findings) make no medical-related claims for kratom in connection with the survey published today by the Pain News Network.
  • For those using kratom to deal with pain, the five most common issues are:  spine or back (38 percent); other (15 percent); an injury (11 percent); fibromyalgia (9 percent); and osteoarthritis (3 percent).
  • 66 percent of kratom users said that a ban on kratom would result in them being “more likely to be addicted and overdose on other substances.”
  • More than one out of four kratom users (27 percent) said they would still use kratom even if it is banned by the DEA an 43 percent indicated they are unsure what they would do.
  • 98 percent of kratom users do not believe that it is a harmful or dangerous substance.
  • 75 percent said it is not possible to get “high” from kratom.
  • 95 percent said that making kratom illegal would be harmful or society.

Susan Ash, director, American Kratom Association, said: “In declaring war on kratom, the DEA never took the time to actually look at what is happening with this natural herb.  They never took the time to talk to or to survey kratom users.  If they had, they would have learned of the very positive picture that emerges from the Pain News Network survey.  There is no kratom epidemic or crisis. This is a natural herb in the coffee family that people are using in their lives in a variety of positive ways.  The DEA war on kratom is not justified by the facts, it is not based on scientific data, and it needs to stop now.”

Travis Lowin, executive director, Botanical Education Alliance, said: ” We must unite to bring the truth about Kratom to regulators and Congress. We cannot let the DEA get away with scheduling an herb that millions of Americans use safely to support their overall health and wellbeing. The DEA has failed Americans in its efforts to combat the opioid epidemic and targeting Kratom will make the situation worse. Our organization and Americans nationwide are only demanding that we receive due process and sensible regulation.  Veterans, seniors, and other kratom customers in the US should not have to pay the price for the DEA failing to play by the rules.”

Dr. Addie Davis, a resident physician in emergency medicine in California, said: “The CDC has actually recognized the use of prescription narcotics and particularly the number of deaths resulting from their use as a national epidemic causing thousands of deaths every year. In 2014 there were over 14,000 resulting from narcotic abuse. On the flip side, there is kratom. Kratom is an herb that is not very well known but I happen to know plenty of people who use it.  It is not new. It has many uses, some of which include managing fatigue, depression and anxiety. Most pertinent to my career, however, is kratom’s ability to help people manage chronic pain. I have seen many people wean themselves off of opiates successfully with the aid of kratom. In contrast to prescription narcotics, kratom is not dangerous and is non-habit forming. Kratom is not an opiate. Its active alkaloids work on mu-opioid, serotonin and dopaminergic receptors in the brain.  It cannot cause respiratory depression, unlike prescription narcotics.  Kratom has clear health benefits and it is used by thousands of people in this country every day.  If kratom is scheduled as a schedule I substance, many of the people who use it for pain control will likely return to using prescription narcotics. This will result in thousands of deaths annually.”

Pat Anson, founder and editor, Pain News Network, said: “Our survey provides the biggest and clearest overall picture to date of what is actually going on in the world of kratom use. What we see here are people with real issues and concerns who will be in a tough spot if the DEA bans kratom use. The survey findings dispel the myth that kratom is used recreationally like marijuana by people who only want to get high. The vast majority say they use kratom solely to treat and manage their medical conditions.”

The DEA is now seeking to ban kratom, or Mitragyna speciose, a tree in the coffee family native to Southeast Asia. Kratom leaves have been consumed in countries like Thailand and Malaysia for over 500 years. The herb is now available in the U.S. just like other herbal supplements.

 

Kratom is not an opiate. Many studies have shown kratom to have positive medicinal benefits. Kratom is legal in 44 states. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement released a December 2015 report that found: “Kratom does not currently constitute a significant risk to the safety and welfare of Florida residents.” Nonetheless, on August 31, 2016, the DEA announced its intention to place kratom into Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act in order to avoid a supposed “imminent hazard to public safety,” which, in reality, does not exist. In truth, kratom has never been present alone in a single documented death and is as about as habit-forming as the coffee to which it is related. By contrast, pharmaceutical drugs are one of the leading causes of death in this country, killing one American every 19 minutes. Prescription opiate pain killers account for more than 475,000 emergency room visits annually.

For more information about concerns raised about the DEA war on kratom, go to
http://www.painnewsnetwork.org/stories/2016/9/13/kratom-supporters-rally-at-white-house
and http://www.snopes.com/kratom-banned-by-the-dea/.

ABOUT THE GROUPS

Pain News Network is a 501(c)(3) non-profit, independent online news source for information and commentary about chronic pain and pain management.  The Network’s mission is to raise awareness about chronic pain, and to connect and educate pain sufferers, caregivers, healthcare providers and the public about the pain experience.  http://www.painnewsnetwork.org/overview/

The America Kratom Association (AKA), a consumer-based non-profit, is here to set the record straight, giving voice to the suffering and our rights to possess and consume kratom. AKA represents tens of thousands of Americans; each with a unique story to tell about the virtues of kratom and its positive effects on our lives. From Lyme Disease to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and even addiction, kratom can help offer relief.  www.americankratom.org

The Botanical Education Alliance (BEA) is an organization dedicated to educating consumers, lawmakers, law enforcement, and the media about safe and therapeutic natural supplements including Mitragyna speciosa, also known as Kratom. BEA’s mission is to increase understanding in order to influence public policy and protect natural supplements. The vision of the Alliance is to create a society where every adult has the right to access safe and effective natural supplements.  www.botanical-education.org/

CAN’T PARTICIPATE?:  A streaming audio replay of this news event and full survey results will be available as of 3 p.m. EDT/noon PDT on September 20, 2016 at http://www.painnewsnetwork.org/kratom-survey/

 

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/survey-of-6000-kratom-users-shows-no-evidence-of-epidemic-or-abuse-justifying-dea-push-to-ban-coffee-like-herb-300331148.html

Only 8.3 percent of those who died had a prescription for an opioid drug

Most overdose deaths in Mass. caused by illegal drugs

http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2016/09/15/most-overdose-deaths-massachusetts-caused-illegal-drugs/gPFUwRrRzSF3qGlXfP3VEK/story.html

Drugs obtained illegally were the main killers of the 2,212 people who died of overdoses in 2013 and 2014 in Massachusetts, according to a report from state health officials issued Thursday.

Only 8.3 percent of those who died had a prescription for an opioid drug, while 85 percent had taken heroin or fentanyl. This finding shows that the drugs that kill usually come from the street.

Fulfilling a legislative mandate, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health analyzed its data along with data from other government agencies to produce the report, available online at http://www.mass.gov/eohhs/gov/departments/dph/stop-addiction/chapter-55-overdose-assessment.html.

GOOD NEWS… prescription opiate OD deaths are DOWN…

Overdose Deaths Decline In Nearly Two-Thirds of New Mexico’s 33 Counties

http://krwg.org/post/overdose-deaths-decline-nearly-two-thirds-new-mexico-s-33-counties

BAD NEWS:  Heroin and Meth deaths are UP

Commentary: Today, the New Mexico Department of Health announced that nearly two-thirds of New Mexico counties saw a decline in overdose deaths last year. The department released county-by-county data, which shows overdose deaths decreased in 20 of 33 counties. Earlier this year, the Department of Health reported a 9 percent decrease in statewide overdose deaths.

 Credit New Mexico Department of Health

“We’re working hard with law enforcement, health care professionals, and community partners throughout the state to fight the devastating impact of drug abuse,” Governor Susana Martinez said. “While results like these show important progress, we need to continue fighting this issue with coordinated efforts of education, prevention, treatment, and enforcement to help more families protect themselves and their loved ones from the dangers of drug abuse.”

The number of overdose deaths declined by 10 or more deaths in Sandoval, Valencia and Rio Arriba counties in 2015 compared to 2014.

Overdose deaths in Rio Arriba County declined by 30 percent; from 40 deaths in 2015 to 28 deaths in 2015; however, Rio Arriba County has the highest drug overdose death rate in the state. Other counties with high overdose death rates included Quay at 63.1 deaths per 100,000, Grant at 46.1 per 100,000, and Taos at 43.6 per 100,000.

According to 2015 state mortality data previously released by NMDOH, New Mexico’s statewide drug overdose death rate decreased from 2014. The drug overdose death rate fell to 24.8 deaths per 100,000 in 2015, a 7.5 percent decrease from 26.8 in 2014. 

There were 493 total drug overdose deaths of New Mexico residents in 2015 compared to a record high of 540 in 2014. National data for 2015 is not yet available. However, New Mexico’s drug overdose death rate was the second highest in the nation in 2014.

Although the prescription opioid death rate declined in 2015 compared to 2014, the heroin overdose death rate increased over that period. Deaths involving methamphetamine remained at the high levels seen in 2014. While methamphetamine was involved in a smaller percent of deaths than heroin or prescription opioids, deaths involving methamphetamine have tripled since 2006.

“We are working hard to reduce overdose deaths in New Mexico. The recent decrease shows we’re making progress, but we still have a lot more work to do,” said Department of Health Secretary Designate Lynn Gallagher. “The fact is, our state continues to suffer from drug abuse. One overdose death is one too many. And until we have zero fatalities related to drugs, we’re going to continue to do all that we can to address the issue with our partners.”

New Mexico Governor Susana Martinez signed two pieces of legislation earlier this year, which take important steps to prevent drug misuse and combat overdose death:

·        SB 263 requires practitioners to check the Prescription Monitoring Program database when prescribing opioids. The database allows prescribers and pharmacists to check the prescription history of their patients.  

·        The Governor also signed legislation which increases the availability of naloxone, a medication that reverses opioid overdoses.  Medicaid claims for naloxone among outpatient pharmacies in New Mexico increased 83 percent between the first three months (January-March) and the second three months (April-June) of 2016.

Additionally, the Department of Health and the Human Services Department recently secured more than $11 million in various grants to reduce opioid-related deaths, strengthen prevention efforts, and improve opioid surveillance data. Following successful grant applications by the state, the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration awarded HSD’s Behavioral Health Services Division $6.8 million over five years in two separate grants to support training on prevention of opioid overdose-related deaths; aid in the purchase and distribution of naloxone to first responders; and bring prescription drug misuse prevention activities and education to schools, communities, parents, prescribers and their patients. DOH’s Epidemiology and Response Division just received two grants from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention totaling $3.7 million over three years to aid in preventing prescription drug overdoses and to enhance tracking and reporting of overdoses; this is in addition to $3.4 million received in September 2015 over 4 years for preventing prescription drug overdoses.

For information on prescription opioid safety visit:  http://nmhealth.org/about/erd/ibeb/pos/; for information on the DOH Harm Reduction Program visit: http://nmhealth.org/about/phd/idb/hrp/. You can also find New Mexico substance abuse data and statistics at: http://nmhealth.org/about/erd/ibeb/sap/.

Obama: I Will Consider It An Insult To My Legacy If You Do Not Vote


Obama: I Will Consider It An Insult To My Legacy If You Do Not Vote; Want to Give Me A Good Send Off? Go Vote

http://www.msnbc.com/hardball/watch/obama-urges-black-voters-to-vote-for-clinton-768958531893

Let’s take a look at Obama’s legacy… and its effect on the chronic pain community

The war on drugs took a turn toward a war on prescribers/pts

Hydrocodone products were rescheduled to C-II

Naloxone is now pretty much now a OTC drug and the “catch & release” prgm has been started.

Kratom products were rescheduled to C-I

The CDC published their opiate dosing guidelines

The Surgeon General sent a letter to every prescriber to lower opiate dosing to pts – first time a Surgeon General has done this.

Obama declared the week of Sept 18,2016 as Prescription Opioid and Heroin Epidemic Awareness Week

AG Loretta Lynch is sending a letter to EVERY GOVERNOR to “get on board” with fighting the opiate epidemic

So… if your pain management is as good or better than it was 8 yrs ago… voting for the person that Obama is endorsing… will probably work out for you…  otherwise… you may wish to vote for one of the three alternatives running for President…. or you can just stay home and NOT VOTE … and take your chances… it would appear obvious that the Obama administration does not feel/share your pain… and is probably just considering you another person suffering from a “opiate use disorder”…formerly known as a junkie/addict.

 

President Obama made a strong sell for a candidate to succeed his legacy at the Congressional Black Caucus dinner Saturday night. The president invoked slavery and the Jim Crow era and preached that if they wanted to give him a good send off then register people to vote because his legacy is at stake.

Although he did not name Hillary Clinton, the president said he would consider it a personal insult from the African-American community if they did not for her.

“My name may not be on the ballot, but our progress is on the ballot,” President Obama said Saturday night. “And there is one candidate who will advance those things. And there is another candidate who’s defining principal, the central theme of his candidacy is opposition to all that we have done.”

“There’s no such thing as a vote that doesn’t matter,” Obama said. “It all matters. And after we have achieved historic turnout in 2008 and 2012, especially in the African-American community, I will consider it a personal insult, an insult to my legacy, if this community lets down it’s guard and fails to activate itself in this election. You want to give me a good send off? Go vote!”

Remarks:

PRESIDENT OBAMA: Our work’s not done. But if we are going to advance the cause of justice, and equality, and prosperity, and freedom, then we also have to acknowledge that even if we eliminated every restriction on voters, we would still have one of the lowest voting rates among free peoples. That’s not good, that is on us.

And I am reminded of all those folks who had to count bubbles in a bar of soap, beaten trying to register voters in Mississippi. Risked everything so that they could pull that lever. So, if I hear anybody saying their vote does not matter, that it doesn’t matter who we elect, read up on your history. It matters. We’ve got to get people to vote.

In fact, if you want to give Michelle and me a good sendoff, and that was a beautiful video, but don’t just watch us walk off into the sunset now, get people registered to vote. If you care about our legacy, realize everything we stand for is at stake, on the progress we have made is at stake in this election.

My name may not be on the ballot, but our progress is on the ballot. Tolerance is on the ballot. Democracy is on the ballot. Justice is on the ballot. Good schools are on the ballot. Ending mass incarceration, that’s on the ballot right now.

And there is one candidate who will advance those things. And there is another candidate who’s defining principal, the central theme of his candidacy is opposition to all that we have done.

There’s no such thing as a vote that doesn’t matter. It all matters. And after we have achieved historic turnout in 2008 and 2012, especially in the African-American community, I will consider it a personal insult, an insult to my legacy, if this community lets down it’s guard and fails to activate itself in this election. You want to give me a good send off? Go vote! And iI’m going to be working as hard as I can these next seven weeks to make sure folks do.

Hope is on the ballot. And fear is on the ballot too. Hope is on the ballot and fear is on the ballot too.

Prescription painkillers are more widely used than tobacco – SO!!!!

Prescription painkillers are more widely used than tobacco, new federal study finds

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/09/20/prescription-painkillers-are-more-widely-used-than-tobacco-new-federal-study-finds/

Imagine this… 35 percent of the adults take a medically necessary medication and it is estimated that there are 116 million chronic pain pts and out current population is about 320 million… and that is compared to 31 percent of adults that are using/abusing a substance (Tobacco/Nicotine) that has no medicinal value and kills 450,000 people annually. Are some reporters getting really desperate to find a connection to the fabricated substance abuse epidemic.

More than 1 in 3 American adults — 35 percent — were given painkiller prescriptions by medical providers last year. The total rate of painkiller use is even higher — 38 percent — when you factor in the number of adults who obtained painkillers for misuse via other means, from friends or relatives, or via drug dealers.

These numbers come from a recent Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration report that highlights the stunning ubiquity of prescription painkillers in modern American life. The report indicates that in 2015, more American adults used prescription painkillers than used cigarettes, smokeless tobacco or cigars — combined.

Most painkiller use isn’t misuse, which SAMHSA defines as any use of painkillers in a manner not directed by a doctor. This can include taking painkillers without a prescription for the purpose of getting high, or taking the drugs for a longer period of time or at a higher quantity than recommended by a doctor.

Indeed, part of painkillers’ prevalence owes to how effective they are, and to the difference they can make in the lives of pain sufferers. It’s hard to imagine recovering from an invasive surgery without having something to treat the residual pain, for instance. And for many people afflicted with chronic pain, proper management with prescription painkillers can mean the difference between debilitating illness and daily functioning.

But many prescription painkillers are highly habit-forming, and they can be deadly if taken at high doses, or in conjunction with other drugs such as alcohol. In 2014, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, opioid painkillers killed nearly 19,000 Americans. That’s greater than the total number of Americans (15,809) who were murdered that year.

Those numbers are so high partly because Americans have developed a voracious appetite for painkillers in recent years. A 2008 study estimated that Americans consume about 80 percent of the global opioid supply and 99 percent of the supply of hydrocodone, one of the most popular prescription painkillers.

A recent investigation by the Center for Public Integrity and the Associated Press detailed the intense lobbying efforts pharmaceutical companies have made to keep these drugs lightly regulated and readily available. The investigation found that when it comes to lobbying, pro-painkiller groups outspend groups arguing for tighter restrictions by more than 200 to 1.

There are examples of pharmaceutical companies engaging in unscrupulous or illegal behavior to promote opioid drugs. In 2007 Purdue Pharma, maker of Oxycontin, pleaded guilty to charges that it misled regulators and doctors about the abuse potential of the drug.

More recently, employees at Insys Therapeutics, a manufacturer of the powerful painkiller fentanyl, plead guilty to charges involving kickback schemes for fentanyl sales. The company remains the target of numerous state and federal investigations.

Reducing the scope of the opioid epidemic has been a priority for President Obama. Earlier this year the White House requested $1.1 billion from Congress for fighting opioid addiction.

But critics have argued that Drug Enforcement Administration policies — some long-standing, some new — are undercutting federal efforts to curb opioid abuse.

For instance, earlier this year, the DEA refused to reduce restrictions on marijuana use, arguing that there was insufficient evidence of marijuana’s medical benefits. Multiple studies have found that access to medical marijuana is associated with reductions in prescription painkiller abuse and overdose rates.

More recently, the DEA announced a plan to ban the use of kratom, a Southeast Asian plant with opiate-like qualities. Many users of kratom report that the plant has helped them quit using more powerful prescription painkillers. Researchers are worried that without kratom available to them, these users will return to prescription painkillers or move on to heroin.