At least three spinal-surgery patients died after their doctor injected bone cement into their spine

Bone cement company accused of experimenting on humans

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/bone-cement-company-norian-accused-of-experimenting-on-humans/

SEATTLE – Reba Golden hurt her back after falling two floors while building an addition to her house in Honduras. But when she returned to Seattle for a routine spinal surgery, she suffered blood clots, severe bleeding and died in 2007 on the operating table.

Joan Bryant’s back had bothered her since a 1990 car accident, so in 2009 she sought help from a Seattle spinal surgeon, but she bled out on the operating table and could not be revived.

Like at least three spinal-surgery patients before them, Golden and Bryant died after their doctor injected bone cement into their spine and some of the material leaked into their blood stream, causing clotting.

The patients were never told Norian bone cement wasn’t approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Instead, Norian and parent company Synthes used surgeons in what one doctor called “human experimentation.” Federal prosecutors say the aim was to skirt a long, costly regulatory process.

The Golden and Bryant families have filed lawsuits against Dr. Jens Chapman, the companies, the University of Washington, Harborview Medical Center and Washington state. The lawsuits say Chapman knew the cement caused lethal clotting, and that the university and hospital knew or should have known the product had been prohibited for such use. The first trial is scheduled for June in Seattle.

The Golden lawsuit, filed by her daughter Cynthia Wilson, also accuses Chapman, Synthes President Hansjorg Wyss and the university of running a criminal enterprise under Washington’s Criminal Profiteering Act.

Synthes and Norian, along with four top executives, were indicted in 2009 on charges of conducting unauthorized clinical trials despite warnings that the bone cement caused deadly blood clots. Norian agreed to pay a $22.5 million penalty, Synthes paid a $669,800 fine, and the executives went to prison.

Tina Mankowski, a spokeswoman for Chapman, the university and the medical center, said they “vigorously deny any wrongdoing.” Jodie Wertheim, a spokeswoman for Synthes said the company can’t comment on pending litigation.

In 2000, spinal surgeons had few options if they wanted to use a cement-type product to treat vertebral-compression fractures to reduce pain.

Synthes bought the California-based Norian Corporation, which had developed bone cements used in skull and arm-bone surgeries. Synthes planned to alter Norian’s product so it could be used in spinal surgeries, but that meant a long FDA-approval process.

Synthes opted to take another route, according to court records.

Wyss directed a few sites to perform 60 to 80 procedures in spinal surgeries using the Norian bone cement and to publish clinical results. He recruited Chapman and other surgeons to test-market the product on patients, court records show.

Chapman and a colleague at UW conducted an experiment in 2002 using bone cement on pigs. The material caused clotting, killing the animals. The doctors also tested it on human blood in test tubes. Again, it caused clotting. Chapman reported his findings to Synthes.

A Synthes employee in its regulatory division warned company officials the FDA had said it couldn’t use Norian bone cement in spinal surgeries without approval. A Synthes medical consultant warned company officials in 2002 that unauthorized clinical trials amounted to “human experimentation.”

The company pushed forward with its plan to “test market” the product in spinal surgeries, court records show.

In 2003, a patient died on a Texas operating table after a spinal surgeon injected Synthes bone cement into her vertebrae. Another patient died seven months later in California, and another died four months after that.

By 2006, the FDA had cleared Synthes to market a bone cement called Norian CRS but said its label must state it’s not to be used on the spine. Synthes sent a 2007 letter to surgeons announcing that restriction.

Chapman performed more using Norian after the letter was sent, according to court records. He also held the Hansjorg Wyss endowed chair, which secured millions for the university.

When Golden fell at home in 2007, she suffered compression fractures in her spine. Months later, Wilson said her mother was feeling better, but she decided to go ahead with surgery.

Chapman scheduled the operation for August 2007. Records indicate he never told Golden that he planned to use bone cement or that the FDA specifically prohibited its use in spinal surgeries.

Chapman used the bone cement but had to stop the surgery when Golden’s blood pressure dropped and she began to bleed out. Attempts to revive her failed.

On June 16, 2009, Norian and Synthes, along with four company officials, were indicted on federal charges in Pennsylvania for conducting illegal clinical trials.

Thirteen days after the indictments, Chapman started Joan Bryant’s spine surgery using Norian cement.

Bryant suffered severe bleeding and almost died. Chapman stopped the surgery and tried again twice over the next few days using Norian cement, court records show. During the third operation, Bryant suffered bleeding and died.

In 2010, the companies pleaded guilty to conspiracy to impede the FDA and that they had shipped “adulterated and misbranded Norian XR.”

Suicide: does not discriminate… knows no age, gender, sex, race

ONE MILLION ATTEMPTS and 50,000 SUCCESSFUL SUICIDES every year.. including 8,000 veterans. Does this suggest that mental health issues are rampant within our society.. rather it is untreated mental health issues, bullying, desperation from untreated chronic pain.. no matter the motivation… who believes that 50,000 suicides is NOT A EPIDEMIC ?

This showed up on another FB page today:

Today we bury a Young Marine. She took her own life at the age of 12 years old for being bullied. Still a child, with the potential to do so much good for her future and ours. We HAVE to care. And it starts with you and me. What are we doing wrong as a country when a 12 year old decides to end their life when they should be worried about a what size bat to use for little league, or what time ballet practice is?
So suicide is the number one silent killer of good people! So if it’s a killer, it should be a big concern. But it’s not!!! That said, September is Suicide Prevention month . If I don’t see your name, I’ll understand. May I ask my family and friends wherever you might be, to kindly copy and paste this status for one hour to give a moment of support to all of those who have family problems, health struggles, job issues, worries of any kind and just needs to know that someone cares? Do it for all of us, for nobody is immune. I hope to see this on the walls of all my family and friends just for moral support. I did it for a friend and you can too. Please copy and paste this message.

PALLIATIVE CARE vs HOSPICE

palliativecarePALLIATIVE CARE vs HOSPICE

http://www.webmd.com/palliative-care/the-difference-between-hospice-and-palliative-care-topic-overview?page=1

It’s hard to have good days when being sick makes you feel sad, lonely, uncomfortable, or scared. Your quality of life can suffer, not just in your body, but also in your mind and spirit.

Palliative (say “PAL-lee-uh-tiv”) care is the field of medicine that helps give you more good days by providing care for those quality-of-life issues. It includes treating symptoms like pain, nausea, or sleep problems. But it can also include helping you and your loved ones to:

  • Understand your illness better.
  • Talk more openly about your feelings.
  • Decide what treatment you want or don’t want.
  • Communicate better with your doctors, nurses, and each other.

Hospice care is a type of palliative care. But it’s for people who are near the end of life. Here’s how the two kinds of care are different.

What kinds of care are involved?

Palliative care: This is treatment to help you feel better physically, emotionally, and spiritually while doctors also treat your illness. It can include care such as pain relief, counseling, or nutrition advice.

Hospice care: Again, the goal is to help you feel better and to get the most out of the time you have left. But you no longer get treatment to try to cure your illness.

When does the care happen?

Palliative care: This care can happen at any time during a serious illness. You don’t have to be near death to get this care.

Hospice care: In most cases, you can choose hospice care when your doctor believes that you have no more than about 6 months to live.

Where does the care happen?

Palliative care: This type of care can be provided wherever you’re being treated for your illness. You can get it in the hospital, at your doctor’s office, in a nursing home, and even in your home.

Hospice care: Most hospice care is done in the place the patient calls “home.” This is often the person’s home. But it could also be a place like a nursing home or retirement center. And hospice care may also be given in hospice centers, hospitals, or other facilities.

Who provides the care?

Palliative care: There are doctors and nurses who specialize in this field. But your own doctor may also provide some of this care. And there are many other types of experts who may help you, like social workers, counselors, therapists, and nutrition experts.

Hospice care: In hospitals, hospice centers, and other facilities, care is provided by doctors, nurses, and others who specialize in hospice care. In the home, a family member is usually the main caregiver. But the family member gets help from care experts who are on call 24 hours a day.

How is the care paid for?

Palliative care: Most health insurance covers palliative care. But the amount of coverage may vary.

Hospice care: Health insurance usually covers hospice care. It’s also covered by Medicare and Medicaid. You are eligible for hospice care regardless of your ability to pay.

A lot of government bureaucrat careers are at stake, and the DEA shields a lot of politicians

cryingeyevoteDRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATION INTRANSIGENCE

http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/article/NP/20160904/LOCAL1/160909966

The DEA announced that it will not reschedule marihuana from a Schedule 1 drug to Schedule 2, which would allow that cannabis has medicinal applications.

DEA chief Chuck Rosenberg defended the ruling, citing an FDA finding that marihuana has “no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States.”

Chuckie goes on, “This decision isn’t based on danger. This decision is based on whether marihuana, as determined by the FDA, is a safe and effective medicine, and it’s not.”

The DEA employed 11,055 people in 2014. Its budget is over $2 billion per year. For 40 years, the agency fought any change that would ease restrictions on marihuana, including research on potential medical benefits of the drug. A lot of government bureaucrat careers are at stake, and the DEA shields a lot of politicians (who budget agency money) from scrutiny on cannabis policy, hence the agency’s resistance to any threat to their status quo.

2,737 BCE marks the first recorded use of cannabis as medicine by Emperor Shen Neng of China.

As early as 2,000 BCE, Hindus used cannabis medicinally and ritually as an offering to Shiva.

700 BCE, Zorostrian Zendavesta religious texts refer to marihuana as the “good” narcotic.

23-79 AD, Pliny mentions cannabis’ analgesic effects.

70, Roman physician Dioscorides lists medical marihuana in his Pharmacopoeia.

1578, China’s Li Shih-Chen writes of the antibiotic and antiemetic effects of marihuana.

1794, medical marihuana appears in The Edinburgh New Dispensary.

1850, cannabis is added to The US Pharmacopoeia.

1850-1915, marihuana is widely sold and used medicinally in the US.

1910, Mexican immigrants displaced by the Mexican revolution introduce marihuana used as a recreational drug.

1914, the Harrison Act is the first federal law criminalizing non-medical drug use.

1960, Czech researchers confirm the antibiotic and analgesic effects of marihuana.

1971, first evidence that marihuana may help glaucoma patients.

1971, President Nixon declares the War On Drugs, which he intends to use as “cover” for government harassment of minorities and Viet Nam war critics. “We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marihuana and blacks with heroin. And then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities.” (Nixon aide, John Ehrlichman)

1988, a US DEA administrative law judge finds that marihuana has a clearly established medical use. His recommendation to reclassify it is ignored.

You know the rest.

Another reason our borders need to be secured : Carfentanil coming from China

Getting high on elephant tranquilizer: Carfentanil reaches the U.S.

www.pulseheadlines.com/high-elephant-tranquilizer-carfentanil-reaches/48466/

For those politicians and voters that are opposed to “closing our borders” … are they directly/indirectly supporting/encouraging/condoning the importing of Methamphetamine, Marijuana, Heroin coming from Mexico and Carfentanil and other synthetic drugs coming from China. The main reason for the increasing OD’s on our streets and DEA’s justification of increasing the funding of our war on drugs/pts.

If “more government” is the answer – by  many people/politicians –  to solve virtually any/all problems.. why has the DEA been fighting the war on drugs for some 46 yrs and things are seemingly getting worse ?

Carfentanil, a drug that’s 100 times stronger than fentanyl, the drug that killed Prince, is making its way to the streets of the Midwest, forcing a state of emergency upon the state of Ohio.

 

Opioid strength is usually measured against morphine. Fentanyl is 50 to 1,000 times stronger than morphine, which makes carfentanil optimistically 5,000 times stronger than morphine. Carfentanil is now being mixed with heroin, which has led to a spike in overdoses.

Carfentanil is now being mixed with heroin, which has led to a spike in overdoses. Photo credit: Palm Partners Recovery Center
Carfentanil is now being mixed with heroin, which has led to a spike in overdoses. Photo credit: Palm Partners Recovery Center

Authorities state that usually, 4 or 5 overdoses a day is what they would expect with only heroin and other common opioids hitting the streets. That amount has increased tenfold in Southwest Ohio.

Elephant tranquilizer is not for humans

Carfentanil is so potent that first responders and emergency personnel are advised to wear gloves and protective clothing, as inhaling or touching a minimal amount can cause an effect on the human body.

Because the body takes so much to process carfentanil and is so quickly exposed to its effects, the high obtained from carfentanil is much longer and intense and most of the time the body cannot contain it, leading to an overdose.

Usually, opioid overdoses are treated with naloxone, which is also often provided to opioid addicts trying to recover and to fend off withdrawal symptoms. But carfentanil overdoses are much more severe, which significantly reduces the chances of saving an overdosing patient’s life. It has been reported that emergency staff had to employ at least three times the regular dosage of naloxone to reverse carfentanil overdoses.

An elephant tranquilizer, carfentanil has a restricted distribution among veterinarians. It is a potent opioid used only for sedating large animals with resistant circulatory systems.

Ease of distribution is the main issue

According to the DEA, most carfentanil available on U.S. streets originates from China. People can create an anonymous account on the Internet and buy the drug with relative ease, stated DEA spokesman Russ Baer. He warns that people can quickly obtain synthetic opioids that are much stronger than opium derivates, which originate from poppy plants.

One of the main issues with opioid distribution is the lack of sizeable penalties. Because selling opioids on the street are considered a crime less punishable than murder or anything involving violence, the legal implications are much softer. But the circumstances should change if the trafficked drug is carfentanil, which has a very high mortality as it is not supposed to be consumed by humans in the first place.

The known uses of carfentanil

Carfentanil is sold under the name Wildnil. The DEA classifies it as analogous to fentanyl. It is often administered in 1ml or lesser doses, most of the times through intramuscular administration with a dart. As the animal is treated with carfentanil, it can be operated upon, although veterinarians recommend constant monitoring. In the U.S., carfentanil is mostly used to tranquilize moose and deer, applying a dose on their back, neck or shoulders. Carfentanil’s indications suggest that it should not be used in animals that have cardiovascular or respiratory diseases, which in humans, is often a contributing factor to death by carfentanil overdoses.

Veterinarian recommendations also point out that carfentanil should only be used with naloxone at hand, as it is the most widely-accepted reversal agent. 100Mg of naloxone have to be applied for each milligram of carfentanil. To legally obtain carfentanil, the purchaser must have the DEA’s approval.

In the U.S., carfentanil is mostly used to tranquilize moose and deer, applying a dose on their back, neck or shoulders. Photo credit: Alaska Dispatch News
In the U.S., carfentanil is mostly used to tranquilize moose and deer, applying a dose on their back, neck or shoulders. Photo credit: Alaska Dispatch News

One of the most widely-known uses of carfentanil was during a 2002 hostage crisis in Moscow. 50 armed terrorists attacked the Dubrovka Theater, taking 850 prisoners. The theater’s inner architecture was such that regular military actions could not provide an appropriate window for taking out the gunmen. Russian forces had to enter the ventilation system and deploy a chemical agent to neutralize the terrorists.

The Russian military used an aerosol containing carfentanil to knock out the Chechen terrorists. The aerosol’s contents were not disclosed until a 2012 research confirmed its composition thanks to the analysis of the urine of two of the operation’s survivors.

The effects of the aerosol appeared to be too severe, and when emergency personnel made it to the scene, they were not carrying the correct reversal agent, in this case, naloxone. The episode resulted in 165 deaths, including hostages and all the Chechen terrorists, mainly attributed to respiratory failure caused by carfentanil overdosing.

According to the DEA, at least 12 substances analogous to fentanyl are produced or distributed on the U.S.’s drug traffic. Most of these opioids can be smoked or snorted, but the primary method of consumption is intravenous administration.

Unlike other synthetic opioids which can be acquired through a doctor’s prescription, carfentanil displays an entirely different type of drug, as it is never administered to humans with a medical purpose. Even if the DEA regulates its distribution and consumption, it has not stopped U.S’s drug traffickers from mixing carfentanil and heroin to cut the product and offer a more powerful high. Unwarily, people buy the mix and overdose, which usually leads them to their death.

Even if prescription drugs are strictly regulated, addicts will always find a way to get their dosage until penalties become much higher and the availability of illicit opioids, at least those such as carfentanil that cannot be legally obtained, is reduced to zero.

Unlike most surveys

https://action.trump2016.com/stop-hillary-now-survey/?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=ELC_elections-2016_djt-stop-hillary-now-survey&utm_content=CC-JM-090416-djt-trump-stop-hillary-now-survey-inh-jfc-ps&utm_source=p_CC_JM

I normally don’t participate in surveys because they are generally limited to them asking only questions they want answers to and allow for no input to what concerns those taking the survey.  This survey includes to place where the survey taker can have input – free type space – to express in your own words what is important to you.

That does not promise that individual comments will be read, understood or acted upon,  but the failure to take the opportunity to make  your opinion heard… is a lost opportunity

 

Passive pts do not always get the appropriate care that they are entitled to

passiveactiveBelow is a paragraph from the CDC guidelines for opiate prescribing… that is specific about them not applying to those receiving palliative care

Below that is two ICD-10 billing codes for palliative care… specifically for pain..

Below that is the WHO (World Health Organization ) definition of what palliative care is

Palliative care is normally part of Hospice care…but… palliative care can be provided as a separate/distinctive modality  of  care.

In 2015 the Florida Board of Pharmacy has to pass a new regulation that requires Pharmacists NOT TO START LOOKING FOR A REASON NOT TO FILL A CONTROLLED PRESCRIPTION…but to first start looking for a reason to fill one… attempting to do their due diligence to perceived RED FLAGS.

With the publishing of the CDC guidelines has all too many prescribers… in fear/paranoia of the DEA coming around trying to apply the DEA “guidelines” as the law  chosen to use the most restrictive part of the dosing guidelines  (90 mg/day Morphine Equivalents) as a mandatory limits… regardless of what the rest of the guidelines state about those exempt from those limits.  Those chronic pain pts who chose to actively participate in their own care and attempt to educate their prescriber about the full intent of the CDC guidelines may not only get better care for themselves, but also for other pts using the same prescriber.


http://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/prescribing/patients.html

CDC developed the new Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain to help primary care providers make informed prescribing decisions and improve patient care for those who suffer from chronic pain (pain lasting more than 3 months) in outpatient settings. The guideline is not intended for patients who are in active cancer treatment, palliative care, or end-of-life care.


https://www.wellstar.org/about-us/icd-10/documents/top_diagnosis_codes_(crosswalks)/palliative%20top%20diagnosis%20codes%20(crosswalk).pdf

Chronic pain nec  G89.29 Other chronic pain

Generalized pain R52 Pain, unspecified


WHO Definition of Palliative Care

Palliative care is an approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the problem associated with life-threatening illness, through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual. Palliative care:

  • provides relief from pain and other distressing symptoms;
  • affirms life and regards dying as a normal process;
  • intends neither to hasten or postpone death;
  • integrates the psychological and spiritual aspects of patient care;
  • offers a support system to help patients live as actively as possible until death;
  • offers a support system to help the family cope during the patients illness and in their own bereavement;
  • uses a team approach to address the needs of patients and their families, including bereavement counselling, if indicated;
  • will enhance quality of life, and may also positively influence the course of illness;
  • is applicable early in the course of illness, in conjunction with other therapies that are intended to prolong life, such as chemotherapy or radiation therapy, and includes those investigations needed to better understand and manage distressing clinical complications.

What we need is more bureaucratic oversight to help us save money ?

Clinton plans to prevent drug price hikes with federal oversight group

Instead of suggesting that the FDA approve generic products that are being used in Europe that are trying to get FDA approval and let the “free market place” to do its work.. Clinton is suggesting more bureaucracy – and cost – to help save us money… that is the reason why 50 yrs ago … average Rx price was $4 and change and there was no generics… no Medicare.. No Medicaid… all insurance companies were not for profit … no PBM and other middlemen .. with their cost infrastructure and for profit motives… all the while they are promising to save the system money…  It’s doesn’t take a PhD in Economics to figure out that adding multiple levels of middlemen will not save a system money.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/sep/02/hillary-clinton-drug-price-hike-mylan-epipen

Amid public outcry over a sharp increase in the cost of the EpiPen, a life-saving drug to stop an anaphylactic allergy attack, Hillary Clinton has unveiled a plan to prevent “unjustified price hikes” for older prescription drugs.

Clinton’s proposal would create a team of representatives from federal agencies that would investigate and monitor the cost of long-available prescription drugs with little or no competition to protect consumers from so-called “price gouging”. The plan sets out criteria for determining “an excessive, outlier price increase” and a set of enforcement tools that include making alternative drugs available and imposing fines or penalties to help fund expanded access.

“Over the past year, we’ve seen far too many examples of drug companies raising prices excessively for longstanding, life-saving treatments with little or no new innovation or [research and development],” Clinton said in a statement. “It’s time to move beyond talking about these price hikes and start acting to address them.”

Last week, Clinton called on Mylan, the manufacturer of EpiPen, to reduce the cost of the medical device after reports highlighted that its price rose by 461%, from from $56.64 to $317.82, since 2007, when the company acquired the product.

In a statement, Clinton called the price hike “outrageous” a “troubling example” of pharmaceutical companies taking advantage of consumers. “Since there is no apparent justification in this case, I am calling on Mylan to immediately reduce the price of EpiPens,” Clinton said in a statement.

In response to the uproar, Mylan said it would launch a generic EpiPen version that is identical to the brand-name device but significantly less expensive, with a list price of $300 for a two-pack. The company also announced earlier that it would offer additional financial assistance, including co-payments worth $300, to patients who have to pay the full out-of-pocket price for the device.

Last year, Clinton outlined a plan to tackle the rising costs of prescription drugs amid outrage over the staggering price increase of Daraprim, a drug that treats life-threatening parasitic infection. The startup company responsible, Turing Pharmaceuticals, owned by controversial former hedge fund manager Martin Shkreli, acquired the decades-old drug and raised the cost from $13.50 to $750 per pill.

That plan would deny tax breaks for pharmaceutical companies that market medicines directly to consumers, a controversial and costly practice legal only in the US and New Zealand, according to the World Health Organization. Clinton also said she would push companies to invest in research and development in exchange for federal subsidies.

Bureaucratic SMOKE & MIRRORS ?

Legal medical marijuana date won’t help most patients

http://www.wkyc.com/news/health/legal-medical-marijuana-date-wont-help-most-patients/312899831

While many people are looking forward to this long Labor Day weekend, others have their sights set on Sept. 8, the day medical marijuana becomes legal in Ohio.

In June, Ohio was the 25th state to legalize a comprehensive medical marijuana program. 

There’s no licensed legal businesses to grow, process or sell marijuana or marijuana products in Ohio.

But patients with one of 19 medical conditions — including cancer, glaucoma, epilepsy and extreme pain — will be able to go to states where medical marijuana is legally sold, buy it and return to Ohio to use it. They would need a doctor’s note or authorization.

But not all states permit sales to non-residents.

And flying to other states to get it could pose problems. as marijuana is still illegal under federal law, so it could be a potential legal problem if a person with it is apprehended.

And right now there are no legal marijuana businesses in Ohio and there won’t be for some time.

So Sept. 8 is not a benchmark date for activity in Ohio.

Still to come? A 13-person advisory panel must still be picked by the governor and legislature to work with the State Commerce Department, Medical Board and Board of Pharmacy to to draw up regulations to grow, process and sell marijuana and its derivative products. The deadline for regulations is May 2017.

Some Ohio cities are concerned about possible enforcement issues and other problems if marijuana businesses come to town. The new law gives cities local control. Despite the fact that licensing of farms, processing facilities and retail dispensaries is still some time away, some cities are moving to ban or control marijuana businesses.

And state law forbids marijuana businesses from being within 500 feet of a school, library, church or playground, so that’s another consideration.

For example, Lakewood and Brooklyn have passed six month moratoriums on opening any marijuana businesses.  Lakewood is also halting changing zoning or building laws to permit them.

The state’s new legal marijuana industry is not expected to be completely up and running until September 2018.

According to the Associated Press, here is what is in the plan and what is not in the plan:

In The Plan:

•   Adults could buy and use oil, tinctures, plant material, edibles and patches with a doctor’s recommendation. Parents could purchase these products for their children younger than 18 with a doctor’s referral.

•   The Ohio Department of Commerce would oversee those who grow, process and test medical marijuana. The Ohio Board of Pharmacy would register patients and caregivers and license dispensaries. The Ohio State Medical Board would handle certificates for doctors who want to recommend marijuana.

•   A program to reduce the cost of medical marijuana for veterans and others too poor to pay.

•   The ability to purchase medical marijuana from other states while Ohio sets up its program. This would expire 60 days after the pharmacy board establishes its rules.

•   Legal medical marijuana for people with these conditions: AIDS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, cancer, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, Crohn’s disease, epilepsy or another seizure disorder, glaucoma, hepatitis C, inflammatory bowel disease, multiple sclerosis, pain that is chronic, severe, or intractable, Parkinson’s disease, positive status for HIV, posttraumatic stress disorder, sickle cell anemia, spinal cord disease or injury, Tourette’s syndrome, traumatic brain injury, and ulcerative colitis.

What’s Not In The Plan:

•   Smoking medical marijuana

•   Growing medical marijuana at home

•   Any details on who could grow marijuana commercially. That would be determined later by the Ohio Department of Commerce.

•   Any requirement that pharmacists oversee dispensaries.

•   Protections for employees fired from their jobs because they used medical marijuana.

Thinking AHEAD… helps with the planning for emergencies ?

onlyhadabrainKENTUCKY PUBLIC HEALTH ALERT

I received this email at 9:56 AM this morning (Friday)..  with a recommendation that community pharmacies and other healthcare professionals – STOCK UP – on Naloxone for the Labor Day weekend..  Most community pharmacies get wholesaler deliveries daily Mon – Fri and the cut off for Friday’s delivery is normally around 6 PM YESTERDAY ( Thursday) and the stores will not get another wholesaler delivery until TUESDAY…  Sure looks like Kentucky Emergency Management System is right on top of things…???

The Kentucky Department for Public Health (DPH) is hosting a special conference call today with medical personnel and emergency responders regarding the ongoing issue of heroin overdoses linked to fentanyl.  The call is scheduled for 11:00 a.m. EDT, Friday, September 2, for interested pharmacists and other health care professionals. The dial-in number is 866-570-4047.  The passcode is 75613975#.

Our region and our entire state are now threatened by a drug issue related to the appearance of contaminated heroin, typically mixed with fentanyl or other toxic substances. This is a very serious public health issue tied to a number of overdoses, hospitalizations and deaths across the country.

Over the upcoming days, DPH is asking our hospitals, pharmacies and EMS to help prepare for increases in drug overdoses so that individuals can be properly treated, deaths prevented and we all can be better informed about the prevalence and nature of these occurrences so they can be prevented.  We expect a possible increase in overdoses over this holiday weekend.  EMS, ER, and pharmacies must stock up on naloxone immediately.  KDPH is getting early reports that it now requires as much as three-fold the ordinary dose of naloxone to negate this newly compounded material.  These points will all be discussed in greater detail during today’s call.

If you need assistance, you can contact the Kentucky Emergency Management System at (502) 607-1638 Toll Free: (800) 255-2587, your local health department, or the Department for Public Health at 1-888-9REPORT (973-7678).

 

AGENDA

Public Health Alert Conference Call

Friday, September 2, 2016

11:00 A.M. – 12:00 P.M. EDT

Joining the Conference Call:

Prior to call start time, call the Dial-In Number: (866) 570-4047

Provide the Passcode: 75613975

TOPIC PRESENTER

Welcome and Overview Rick Johnson, BS (Facilitator)

Opening Remarks Hiram Polk, MD, Commissioner

Heroin/Fentanyl Current Situation Van Ingram, Office of Drug Control Policy

Medication Supply Plans, Training and Certification Programs Leah Tolliver, Pharm. D., Director of Pharmacy Emergency Preparedness, KPhA

Call to Action Hiram Polk, MD, Commissioner

Question and Answers – Next Steps All Participants

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