After Medical Marijuana Legalized, Medicare Prescriptions Drop For Many Drugs

After Medical Marijuana Legalized, Medicare Prescriptions Drop For Many Drugs

http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2016/07/06/484977159/after-medical-marijuana-legalized-medicare-prescriptions-drop-for-many-drugs

Prescription drug prices continue to climb, putting the pinch on consumers. Some older Americans appear to be seeking an alternative to mainstream medicines that has become easier to get legally in many parts of the country.

Research published Wednesday found that states that legalized medical marijuana — which is sometimes recommended for symptoms like chronic pain, anxiety or depression — saw declines in the number of Medicare prescriptions for drugs used to treat those conditions and a dip in spending by Medicare Part D, which covers the cost on prescription medications.

Because the prescriptions for drugs like opioid painkillers and antidepressants — and associated Medicare spending on those drugs — fell in states where marijuana could feasibly be used as a replacement, the researchers said it appears likely legalization led to a drop in prescriptions. That point, they said, is strengthened because prescriptions didn’t drop for medicines such as blood-thinners, for which marijuana isn’t an alternative.

The study, which appears in Health Affairs, examined data from Medicare Part D from 2010 to 2013. It is the first study to examine whether legalization of marijuana changes doctors’ clinical practice and whether it could curb public health costs.

The findings add context to the debate as more lawmakers express interest in medical marijuana. This year, Ohio and Pennsylvania passed laws allowing the drug for therapeutic purposes, making it legal in 25 states, plus Washington, D.C. The approach could also come to a vote in Florida and Missouri this November. A federal agency is considering reclassifying medical marijuana under national drug policy to make it more readily available.

Medical marijuana saved Medicare about $165 million in 2013, the researchers concluded. They estimated that, if medical marijuana were available nationwide, Medicare Part D spending would have declined in the same year by about $470 million. That’s about half a percent of the program’s total expenditures.

That is an admittedly small proportion of the multibillion-dollar program. But the figure is nothing to sneeze at, said W. David Bradford, a professor of public policy at the University of Georgia and one of the study’s authors.

“We wouldn’t say that saving money is the reason to adopt this. But it should be part of the discussion,” he added. “We think it’s pretty good indirect evidence that people are using this as medication.”

The researchers found that in states with medical marijuana laws on the books, the number of prescriptions dropped for drugs to treat anxiety, depression, nausea, pain, psychosis, seizures, sleep disorders and spasticity. Those are all conditions for which marijuana is sometimes recommended.

The study’s authors are separately investigating the effect medical marijuana could have on prescriptions covered by Medicaid, the federal-state health insurance program for low-income people. Though this research is still being finalized, they found a greater drop in prescription drug payments there, Bradford said.

If the trend bears out, it could have other public health ramifications. In states that legalized medical uses of marijuana, painkiller prescriptions dropped — on average, the study found, by about 1,800 daily doses filled each year per doctor. That tracks with other research on the subject.

Marijuana is unlike other drugs, such as opioids, overdoses of which can be fatal, said Deepak D’Souza, a professor of psychiatry at Yale School of Medicine, who has researched marijuana. “That doesn’t happen with marijuana,” he added. “But there are whole other side effects and safety issues we need to be aware of.”

Study author Bradford agreed: “Just because it’s not as dangerous as some other dangerous things, it doesn’t mean you want to necessarily promote it. There’s a lot of unanswered questions.”

Because the federal government classifies marijuana as a Schedule I drug, doctors can’t technically prescribe it. In states that have legalized medical marijuana, they can only write patients a note sending them to a dispensary.

Insurance plans don’t cover it, so patients using marijuana pay out of pocket. Prices vary based on location, but a patient’s recommended regimen can cost as much as $400 per month. The Drug Enforcement Agency is considering changing that classification — a decision is expected sometime this summer. If the DEA made marijuana a Schedule II drug, the move would put it in the company of drugs such as morphine and oxycodone, making it easier for doctors to prescribe and more likely that insurance would cover it.

To some, the idea that medical marijuana triggers cost savings is hollow. Instead, they say it is cost shifting. “Even if Medicare may be saving money, medical marijuana doesn’t come for free,” D’Souza said. “I have some trouble with the idea that this is a source of savings.”

Still, Bradford maintains that if medical marijuana became a regular part of patient care nationally, the cost curve would bend because marijuana is cheaper than other drugs.

Lester Grinspoon, an associate professor emeritus of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, who has written two books on the subject, echoed that possibility. Unlike with many drugs, he argued, “There’s a limit to how high a price cannabis can be sold at as a medicine.” He isn’t associated with the study.

And, in the midst of the debate about its economics, medical marijuana still sometimes triggers questions within the practice of medicine.

“As physicians, we are used to prescribing a dose. We don’t have good information about what is a good dose for the treatment for, say, pain,” D’Souza said. “Do you say, ‘Take two hits and call me in the morning?’ I have no idea.”

Kaiser Health News is a national health policy news service that is part of the nonpartisan Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.

House members more interested in 2 million addicts than 106 million chronic painers ?

cryingeyevoteHouse passes opioid package, which now heads to Senate

http://www.kentucky.com/news/politics-government/article88535867.html

The House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a measure on Friday to help fight heroin and prescription opioid abuse after Democrats dropped a demand that the proposal include nearly $1 billion for drug treatment services.

The legislation, which was crafted by a joint House-Senate committee, now goes to the Senate next week, where Democrats must decide whether to approve it even though President Barack Obama might not sign it into law because of a lack of funding.

Currently, the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act authorizes nearly $200 million for a variety of programs aimed at curbing prescription opioid and heroin abuse. But Congress must appropriate the money at a later date.

Earlier this week, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said Obama might not sign the bill if no funding was attached.

The legislation passed 407-5 on Thursday with lawmakers from both parties supporting the bill in a rare show of election-year bipartisanship.

The bill would provide resources to expand opioid prevention and educational efforts and to increase the availability of the overdose-reversal drug naloxone for police and first responders. The measure strengthens programs to monitor and track opioid prescription trends and boosts efforts to identify and treat incarcerated addicts.

Earlier this week, Democrats tried to add $925 million to the bill to pay for drug treatment services. The Obama administration had asked for $1.1 billion.

Republicans have rejected both funding requests, saying the House Appropriations Committee would provide $581 million to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and $90 million to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to address opioid abuse in their 2017 fiscal year funding bill.

Congressman Fred Upton, a Michigan Republican who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee and led the committee that hammered together a compromise on the legislation, said the overwhelming support for the bill “underscores the urgency” of the prescription opioid and heroin crisis.

“I hope the Senate will swiftly follow suit. We must all come together, and get the job done. What we are doing will help save lives,” Upton said in a statement.

Public health officials dealing with a national increase in drug addiction were cautiously optimistic, despite Senate Democrats’ unease with the bill’s lack of funding.

Chrissie Juliano, director of the Big Cities Health Coalition, which represents 28 large public health departments, called the legislation a “first step” but said more money was needed.

“We look forward to working with congressional leaders in the coming days to find a way to ensure robust funding to accompany their response,” she said in a statement.

A popular class of painkillers, opioids include the illegal drug heroin as well as the prescription medications codeine, oxycodone, morphine and others. But they are highly addictive, and in 2014 they were involved in 6 out of 10 fatal drug overdoses in the nation, according to the CDC.

In Florida, heroin overdose deaths jumped 900 percent from 2010 to 2014, according to the Florida Medical Examiners Commission.

In Florida, heroin overdose deaths jumped 900 percent from 2010 to 2014, according to the Florida Medical Examiners Commission. The increase in heroin consumption has been linked to addiction that began with the overuse of prescription drugs.

Rep. Vern Buchanan, a Sarasota Republican who also represents Manatee County, called the House vote a “significant step toward breaking heroin’s deadly grip on America.”

Manatee County in 2014 had the highest rate of heroin overdose deaths per capita in the state.

“The Senate is all that stands between this bill and the president’s desk, and I urge our senators to take action as quickly as possible,” Buchanan said in a statement.

The Senate is expected to vote on the measure next week before its seven-week summer recess begins next Friday, and passage seems certain. When Democratic senators were unable to increase funding for the Senate opioid bill by $600 million, the legislation still passed 94-1.

More than 200 advocacy groups have expressed their support for the conference legislation, citing a need to address the problem sooner rather than later.

Countering the rise in opioid-related deaths has become a widely popular cause. Earlier this week, the Obama administration announced plans to allow doctors to nearly triple the number of patients to whom they can prescribe buprenorphine, a powerful medication to treat opioid addiction. The new rule, effective Aug. 5, raises that number from 100 to 275

EXTRA.. EXTRA… Cell phones cause 6000 preventable deaths

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Too Many Chefs Spoil The Broth?

FDA Chief Criticizes Industry for Inaction on Opioids

Califf: ‘We are all sinners,’ but drug firms bear special responsibility

http://www.medpagetoday.com/Psychiatry/Addictions/58950

How many more parts of the Federal alphabet soup of agencies is going to get involved with how our health system deal with treating chronic pain and the mental health disease of addictive personality disorder ?

WASHINGTON — The new head of the FDA accepted some blame for the agency’s role in the growing opioid epidemic, while also chiding drug manufacturers for failing to take action.

“[W]e are all sinners,” said FDA Commissioner Robert Califf, MD, recalling the words of his Baptist grandfather.

“I think in this case, there’s a lot of sin to go around.”

Califf spoke to provisional members of a newly formed committee charged with advising his agency on how best to balance the needs of legitimate pain patients with the societal issue of opioid addiction. At the meeting, held at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on Wednesday, Califf said he’s spoken with R&D directors at most of the big drug companies and none have shown interest in investing in research on new non-addictive painkillers.

He told the committee that when it comes time to make recommendations, “I don’t think corporate responsibility should be off your list of things to emphasize. There’s a lot of money being made on opioids, and my view is if you make a lot of money on something, you do have some social responsibility for casualties of your success when they occur.”

The guidance the committee develops is intended to update the 2011 Institute of Medicine report “Relieving Pain in America: A Blueprint for Transforming Prevention, Care, Education, and Research.”

One committee member, Traci Green, PhD, MSc, an epidemiologist at Boston University Medical Center, noted that the update is especially needed, since the words “addiction,” dependence,” and “overdose” are nowhere to be found in the 2011 report.

In 2014, the CDC estimated there were 28,647 opioid-related deaths that year and that opioid overdoses had quadrupled since 2000.

In explaining the committee’s charge, Califf and his colleagues homed in on the issue of how to incorporate public health into a benefit-risk evaluation that has traditionally focused on the individual. He asked the committee what it would tell an advisory group about how to weigh the societal effects against the patient-prescriber effect.

For comparison, he looked to the problem of antimicrobial resistance: “We’re telling physicians to change their habits, not necessarily because it would have a devastating impact on the patient in front of them, but [because of] the impact it would have on the ecosystem.”

The FDA is also changing labeling so that veterinarians can no longer prescribe antibiotics for animal feed without first examining the animals and giving a diagnosis.

But, in trying to find strong examples of balancing individual risk with societal risk in the area of antibiotic resistance, Douglas Throckmorton, MD, deputy center director for regulatory programs at the FDA, said he and others researching this internally have yet to find broad research that says, “here’s how you do this.” That’s what the FDA needs the committee’s help to do, he said.

 

He noted that studies of development have explored this balance, but “it’s not a place where a lot has been written.”

Committee members also asked Califf about the agency’s limitations around revising its benefit-risk assessment.

Califf encouraged the committee to push the limits.

“Do free-range thinking, but check-in mid-course … there’s nothing wrong with saying there’s a need for a new set of laws if that’s what you believe, but that would just take a much longer period of time,” he said.

Another wrinkle in Wednesday’s meeting was the composition of the committee itself: Four provisional members were dropped prior to the meeting, including two specifically singled out last week by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) for potential conflicts of interest — Mary Lynn McPherson, PharmD, and Gregory Terman, MD, PhD. A public relations representative for the National Academy of Sciences said she could not give the reason for their exclusion, citing NAS policy.

The spokesperson said that NAS is continuing the process of vetting committee members — current members are still provisional — and that a 20-day public comment period will be used for any members added in the future.

The committee will hold a public workshop on Sept. 22, 2016, and all members will be confirmed before that meeting, she said.

Imagine this: buying drugs “off the street” could be dangerous/lethal !

TBI warns of dangers of buying drugs on streets after 10 overdoses in Rutherford County

http://wkrn.com/2016/07/07/tbi-warns-of-dangers-of-buying-drugs-on-streets-after-10-overdoses-in-rutherford-county/

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. (WKRN) – If you get pain pills from anywhere other than your local pharmacy, you may want to think twice before taking them.

Authorities said the number of people found unconscious and then rushed to the emergency room, after taking fake Percocet, is increasing in Middle Tennessee.

Nearly a dozen overdoses have occurred in Rutherford County. Of those, one person died.

Photo: WKRN
Photo: WKRN

News 2 spoke with Tyler Bowman who said he knows what it’s like to hit rock bottom.

“I’ve been to the lowest places,” Bowman said. “I know what it’s like to struggle and to feel like you need something to cope with life.”

The former baseball player suffered an injury and was strung out on pain pills and heroin for years.

“I learned quick that the quick fix was to continue taking the pills, so I wouldn’t have to go through the symptom of withdrawal,” he said.

Bowman said he isn’t surprised to hear about the increasing number of drug overdoses in Middle Tennessee.

“These people are already miserable, they are empty, they are a hollow shell and they don’t know who they are anymore and they are overdosing because they are just trying to make it through,” Bowman said. “It really just breaks my heart.”

In Murfreesboro alone, there have been 10 patients rushed to Saint Thomas Rutherford Hospital for drug overdoses in recent days, and at least one death, according to police.

Photo: WKRN
Photo: WKRN

“The addict overdoses, their friends hear about it and they want the same drug because in their mind it’s supposed to be good stuff,” Bowman said. “That’s just the addict mentality. That’s how they think when they are in active addiction.”

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is now warning people about fake Percocet pills being sold on the streets.

“There’s a very serious, immediate danger to taking any kind of pills other than what you get from your pharmacy,” TBI spokesperson Susan Niland said.

The pills are being manufactured in clandestine labs and made to look like the real thing.

“Some of these elements contained within these drugs can be lethal and can be potentially deadly and these people that are taking them honestly don’t know what they are taking,” Niland said.

TBI drug agents are not sure what the Percocet pills are laced with, but back in May of last year, a law enforcement agency confiscated several oxycodone pills during a traffic stop.

Those pills turned out to be counterfeit and contained fentanyl, a pain killer 50 times more potent as heroin, according to the TBI.

Murfreesboro police said they are investigating each one of these overdose cases, first to see if they are connected, and then try to find the person who is selling the fake pills on the streets.

Bowman has been drug-free for two years and he hopes people will get the message.

“We have drug dealers that are on the streets killing people to make profit,” Bowman said.

Bowman now works for Waters Edge Recovery, and is planning to have a Drug Epidemic Town Hall Meeting at Lane Agri-Park in Murfreesboro on September 8 at 6:30 p.m.

The purpose for Town Hall is to give drug users options and help them find the resources they need to become drug free.

How long is it going to take to admit that we have a mental health epidemic in the USA ?

america-in-decline-under-reign-of-king-obama-e1392670303790Is our “gene pool” deteriorating or have we reached a “critical mass” of security cameras and/or smart phones that very little slips by without having a video of  citizens “acting badly”.

Those “citizens” can be both police and civilians. The last 12 months have been quite lethal between citizens and cops and cops and citizens.

We have a estimated 50,000 homicides in this country EVERY YEAR.. and just in the city of Chicago:

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/07/05/more-than-60-shot-chicago-over-july-4th-weekend/86707218/

CHICAGO — At least 64 people were shot in the nation’s third largest city over the Independence Day weekend, including four people who were fatally wounded.  The grim violence in Chicago, which has recorded 329 homicides already this year. Illinois/Chicago has some of the most strict gun ownership laws. So this would suggest that the call for reducing our 2nd Amendments every time that there is a mentally disturbed idiot goes on a shooting rampage would produce little/no change in these horror stories now and in the future.

America use to be referred to as a “melting pot” … one nation under God… now more and more groups tend to self segregate themselves both geographically, language and other means.

All too many in our society identify themselves as a hyphenated-American … not just an AMERICAN !

Maybe it is just me, but.. I find it hard to believe that those two police depts where an officer basically MURDERED two individuals in to different states over the last couple of days… that many in the force knew, should have known or highly suspected that those cops involved with those MURDERS were “bad eggs” already.

We all know that there are a lot of good cops… but.. isn’t it about time that those “good cops” help clean their own house of those “bad eggs”… to put a stop to these progressive hostilities.

Otherwise, we may end up just ramping up the military hardware on local police force and we end up with an escalated war … much like the last 46 yrs of the war on drugs. Good intentions that leads to bad outcomes.

More breaking news on preventable deaths

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20 veterans a day committed suicide in 2014, new data show

20 veterans a day committed suicide in 2014, new data show

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2016/07/07/veterans-suicides-young-men-women/86755132/

An average of 20 veterans a day committed suicide in 2014, a trend that reflects record high rates among young men fresh out of the military and growing numbers of women taking their lives, the first actual count of suicides among former service members shows.

The Department of Veterans Affairs previously had only estimated suicides, saying in 2010 there was an average of 22 a day. The 2

014 data released Thursday is based on a precise tabulation of the 7,403 deaths.

David Shulkin, VA undersecretary for health, noted the slight decline from the 2010 estimate, but added, “it’s still far too high.”

The 2014 count is the first slice of a massive examination of 55 million veteran death records dating back to 1979. Shulkin said that a final report due in several weeks will detail more suicide trends.

The VA found the worst suicide pattern among male veterans, ages 18-29. Their suicide rate was 86 per 100,000 people,  nearly four times the rate among active-duty service members last year.

By contrast, the overall U.S. suicide rate is 13 per 100,000 people, according to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.

The new figures show the suicide rate among young female veterans, ages 18-29, was 33 per 100,000 — more than double the overall U.S. rate.

Shu

lkin said the suicide rate among all female veterans was more than double that of women who didn’t serve in the military.

“It is difficult to understand why that is happening. It is one of the things that I think will become a central research question for us,” he said.

Shulkin said more research is needed to determine whether women who served closer to combat or experienced sexual trauma in the military put them at greater risk of taking their own lives.

He said the VA has taken several “aggressive” steps to deal with the high suicide rates. They include adding staff to the crisis hotline for veterans (800-273-8255), identifying veterans at high risk, increasing mental health counselors and expanding mental health

therapy via telephone.

In 2014, veterans accounted for 18% of all suicides in the United States, but made up only 8.5% of the population. In 2010, veterans accounted for 22% of U.S. suicides and 9.7% of the population.

HHS Eases Buprenorphine Prescribing

Here is the “official definition” of C-II & C-III drugs… HHS is encouraging the prescribing of Buprenorphine a C-III medication in place of a pt taking a C-II medication..  I wonder how the DEA determined what a medication’s “potential” for abuse is/was. Since measuring a person’s degree of an addictive personality disorder is very subjective… not like taking someone’s BLOOD PRESSURE, BLOOD SUGAR, CHOLESTEROL… I guess it is like trying to guess how many times you can split a hair ?

Schedule II substances are those that have the following findings:

The drug or other substances have a high potential for abuse
The drug or other substances have currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States, or currently accepted medical use with severe restrictions
Abuse of the drug or other substances may lead to severe psychological or physical dependence.


Schedule III substances are those that have the following findings:

  1. The drug or other substance has a potential for abuse less than the drugs or other substances in schedules I and II.
  2. The drug or other substance has a currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States.
  3. Abuse of the drug or other substance may lead to moderate or low physical dependence or high psychological dependence

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controlled_Substances_Act   

    HHS Eases Buprenorphine Prescribing

    New rule raises cap on number of patients physicians can treat

    http://www.medpagetoday.com/Psychiatry/Addictions/58923?xid=nl_mpt_DHE_2016-07-07&eun=g578717d0r

    WASHINGTON — The Obama administration announced a new rule that could lower the death toll from opioid overdoses, but the changes will be mostly meaningless without additional funding, officials said.

    The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) officially raised the limit on the number of individuals for whom prescribers can order medication assisted treatment (MAT), specifically buprenorphine, from 100 to 275.

    “In the absence of congressional action, we’re taking every step forward that we can,” said HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell, referring to the stalemate in Congress over appropriating adequate funding for opioids.

    Burwell announced the final rule alongside other key leaders in the administration during a press call Tuesday afternoon.

    She also announced a Request for Information soliciting public comments about current HHS prescriber education and training programs and seeking new proposals; and spoke of plans to launch a dozen studies aimed at understanding opioid abuse and pain management. Burwell will be speaking with governors about the epidemic late next week, she said.

    More than 28,000 Americans died from opioid overdoses in 2014.

    The White House announced plans in February to spend $1.1 billion to alleviate the opioid crisis, but Congress has yet to make the needed appropriations.

    “These funds would help make sure that everyone with an opioid disorder who wants treatment can get treatment,” Burwell said.

    HHS’s Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) anticipates that between 500 and 1,800 providers will request to increase the patient limit on buprenorphine in the rule’s first year. If each of these prescriber increases his or her load by about 20-50 patients, the overall increase in patients receiving buprenorphine could range from 10,000 to 90,000 in the first year, said Chris Jones, PhD, MPH, PharmD, ASPE’s science policy director.

    Jones estimates that the new rule could allow between 2,000 and 15,000 new patients access to buprenorphine in later years.

    In 2014, approximately 600-700, 000 of the roughly 1 million Americans who received some type of medication assisted treatment, were prescribed buprenorphine, he said.

    Botticelli noted that the increase in the patient cap is coupled with other changes included in the President’s budget request including increasing the number of providers who can prescribe buprenorphine and deploying them to areas where they’re needed most.

     

    Congress has busied itself writing more than a dozen new bills, including the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act (CARA). However, none of these bills comes close to providing the $1.1 billion investment promised by the White House.

    A House-Senate conference committee is to take up the CARA bill this week. The Republican draft conference report doesn’t include the President’s request, according to the administration. However, all of the Democratic conferees have signed a letter requesting $920 million in funding, to be offset with reductions in “overpayment for certain Part B infusion drugs” and durable medical equipment.

    The administration said many of the CARA provisions mirror its own priorities. But without substantial funding, “they are really insufficient to make a dent in providing treatment for people who desperately need it,” said Michael Botticelli, director of National Drug Control Policy, on Tuesday’s call.

    Botticelli also said that Congressional Democrats will not back a bill unless it has a “significant infusion of resources.” In response to questions about whether President Obama would veto such a bill, Botticelli called any speculations “premature.”

    Asked whether Congress could be expected to take action on opioids when it continues to delay funding the Zika virus, Botticelli said opioids is “top of the list” of urgent health priorities.

    “I think it’s very hard to walk away from the fact that there are 129 people dying every single day of an opioid overdose, many of those folks who could have been prevented [from dying] by receiving timely access to treatment.”

    In addition to raising the patient limit for qualified providers, the new HHS rule removes pain management questions from the scoring of the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey; and expands access to resources to help prescribers make safe decisions.

    Burwell said that while there is little data to support a connection between survey questions and prescriber behavior, the changes to the survey scoring were made due to “an abundance of caution.” The questions will remain so that pain management data can continue to be explored.

    The rule is slated to take effect on Aug. 5, 2016.

    The administration also announced a series of additional steps addressing opioids, such as requiring physicians in VA facilities and the Indian Health Services to check their Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs) before prescribing or dispensing the medication for more than 7 days.

Breaking news on preventable deaths

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