Shouldn’t lying to pts be consider UNPROFESSIONAL CONDUCT ?

pinochelloThe manager of walgreens has been out with medical issues for a few months. He is the biggest PITA..Today sunday I go to pick up my meds and he & I say hello and I say one to pick up and made small talk. I told him that I was going into the hospital tuesday for a TKR and I asked him if he would need paperwork from hospital tomorrow after I go to my pain doc. HE LOOKS at me and says I don’t think I have your meds and ISNT it too early. I asked him if he even remembers what meds I take and when I was in the last time.REMEMBER he’s been out for months. He didn’t even remember my name(grin)

Already before anything he’s trying not to sell pain meds.stevemailbox

I just looked at him and said I will see you in the AM..

He will either fill or not…Might have to do the CRAWL
What a JOKE

Maybe if you are going to tell LIES… you need to reference the time frame from which you are referencing ?

grant immunity to any pharmacist who denies a sale of Pseudoephedrine

congressstupidBill that gives pharmacists more control over cold-med sales heads to governor

http://www.indystar.com/story/news/2016/03/10/bill-gives-pharmacists-more-control-over-cold-med-sales-heads-governor/81607404/

Senate Bill 80 also would grant immunity to any pharmacist who denies a sale of Pseudoephedrine

Does this mean that Pharmacists can be SUED for failing to fill a LEGAL RX ???  I wonder what is going to be their next legal remedy is going to be in a couple of years when they discover that this is not going to do a DAMN THING ?

Pharmacists would have more control over who can buy cold medicine that is a key ingredient in methamphetamine under a bill passed Thursday by the Indiana General Assembly.

Under the bill, which is a combination of measures proposed in the House and Senate, a pharmacist would be able to refuse to sell products containing pseudoephedrine and ephedrine to a customer who the pharmacist does not recognize. Customers of record for the pharmacy would not be affected.

A pharmacist who does not recognize a customer could decide, after consulting with the customer about symptoms, to sell such products to the person. But if the pharmacist remained dubious as to whether the medicine was needed, the customer could then buy either products resistant to methamphetamine production or cold medicines in doses too small to make the illegal drug.

Senate Bill 80 also would grant immunity to any pharmacist who denies a sale. The measure now awaits Gov. Mike Pence’s signature to become law.

The Consumer Healthcare Products Association, which had fought earlier pseudoephedrine legislation including a proposal that a doctor’s prescription be required, had a lukewarm reaction to the bill’s passage.

“The version that passed today was certainly better than some previous iterations,” said Carlos Gutierrez, senior director and head of state government affairs of the trade association. “For us, it’s maintain consumer access to the medications of their choice. … From the start, our concern has continuously been the patient.”

If Pence signs the bill, Indiana would become the second state in the country after Arkansas to adopt such measures. Since Arkansas passed its law five years ago, the number of methamphetamine labs in that state has plummeted.

Indiana already had a law requiring that purchases of certain cold medicines be entered into a state database so pharmacists would not inadvertently sell to “smurfs,” people who buy the drugs on behalf of a methamphetamine maker.

Adding restrictions to cold medicine sales required lawmakers to strike a delicate balance.

Consumers do not necessarily want the inconvenience of having to see a doctor or submit to a pharmacist’s consultation to buy these products. At the same time, pharmacists want some discretionary ability to refuse sales to someone who is buying the drugs for meth making.

The Indiana Pharmacists Alliance applauded the legislature’s solution.

“The bill … leverages the pharmacist’s professional judgement to assure that pseudoephedrine is provided to patients with a clinical need,” said Randy Hitchens, executive vice president of the Indiana Pharmacists Alliance in a statement.

Fulton County pharmacist Harry Webb has championed the bill since the beginning. A task force already has put into place some of the provisions of the bill and seen a drastic reduction in pseudoephedrine and methamphetamine labs in that county.

Until now, however, some pharmacists have shied away from denying sales of cold medicine to a customer who they suspect has ulterior motives out of fear they would be held liable for the decision.

Pharmacists would now have the ability to just say no, without the requirement of a doctor’s prescription, said Webb, owner of Webb’s Family Pharmacy, with stores in Rochester and Akron, Ind.

“The beauty of this bill is that it allows us to treat our patients appropriately without having them go to the doctor,” he said. “If you come in sick and you’re asking for a recommendation, I can pretty much use whatever product I feel is appropriate, and you will be able to take care or your cold.”

Call IndyStar reporter Shari Rudavsky at (317) 444-6354. Follow her on Twitter: @srudavsky.

Human error plagues hospitals, speaker says

Human error plagues hospitals, speaker says

http://www.udreview.com/human-error-plagues-hospitals-speaker-says/

BY
Staff Reporter

In January 2001, 18-month-old Josie King was admitted to the Johns Hopkins Hospital as a result of suffering third degree burns from a hot bath.  Within weeks she healed and was scheduled to be released. Two days before Josie was scheduled to go home, the young toddler died as a result of careless human medical error.

On February 29, Josie’s mother, Sorrel King, spoke at the university about human medical error. Through the Josie King Foundation, King has been able to promote greater awareness of medical error in hospitals through the story of her daughter.

This case shows that healthcare in the United States is not as safe as it should be. According to two major studies, as many as 98,000 people die in hospitals every year as a result of human medical error. High error rates are found in stressful medical environments such as intensive care units, operating rooms and emergency rooms.

One of the main reasons for medical error is the lack of patient integrated care. Patients see multiple different doctors over the course of their stay in the hospital, none of which have access to a patient’s complete file. This in turn, makes it easier for doctors to make mistakes, causing the loss of thousands of lives every year.

In the case of Josie King, the hospital staff failed to recognize that Josie was severely dehydrated. Days before Josie’s death, her mother described her daughter as being extremely thirsty. When given a bath, Josie sucked frantically on the washcloth and cried at the sight of a cup of water.

As days passed, Josie’s eyes rolled back in her head and she developed a fever and diarrhea, both common causes of dehydration. Despite constant questioning by Josie’s mother, the toddler died of dehydration in one of the most renowned hospitals in the world.

Following Josie’s death, Sorrel King and her husband took steps in order to sue Johns Hopkins Hospital. Months later, the couple decided to settle, taking Hopkins money in order to start a foundation for their daughter. The foundation takes Sorrel King all over the United States to speak to health care professionals about Josie’s story and medical error.

“The way I see it is that I have an hour to reach an audience of 500 caregivers and I am going to use every second of that hour to inspire them to fix the culture and to really think about patient safety,” Sorrel said. “I tell myself how lucky I am that hundreds of caregivers want to hear Josie’s Story.”

Mary Kate Griffin, a graduate of the university nursing program, is currently employed by a hospital in New York. She states that she personally witnessed medical error within her first year of work.

Griffin said a resident on her unit made a careless error on one of her patients. The resident used a contaminated syringe and flushed fluid into the bladder of a patient.

While this specific incident didn’t kill the patient, this type of mistake can cause patients to develop urinary tract, bladder or kidney infections, which can lead to death.

“Now it’s something we put emphasis on in my unit,” she said. “We have new protocol for labeling which syringe is for each.”

Jess Madiraca is a nursing professor at the university. Madiraca recalls 10 to 12 different medical errors that she witnessed during her practice. Additionally, she describes one mistake she made herself.

“I administered the wrong dose of a medication to a patient through a careless error,” Madiraca said. “I thought the syringe someone handed me was the dose I requested but it was actual five times more than prescribed. Luckily the patient did not have any adverse reactions but I became more aware of my environment.”

Human error is something that will continue to be prevalent among hospitals, but King hopes for improvement.

“I hope for a future in the healthcare industry where patients and their families are really listened to,” King said. “Where there is openness and transparency, where teamwork and communication continues to improve, a culture where no one is afraid to speak up.”

In order to reduce error, medical staff needs to take appropriate measures to provide a safer hospital environment, Madiraca said.

“No matter how good of a hospital, while there is room for improvement, humans are not perfect and it will never be an error-free world,” Madiraca said.

Senate approves Medicare ‘lock-in’ amendment on opioid abuse

handicuffSenate approves Medicare ‘lock-in’ amendment on opioid abuse

http://www.drugstorenews.com/article/senate-approves-medicare-lock-amendment-opioid-abuse?utm_term=DSN204726&

Normally, a lock-in mechanism is used on people who have demonstrated to be doc/pharmacy shoppers. Apparently those in the Senate have decided to discriminate against all Medicare Part D beneficiaries who are prescribed certain frequently abused drugs. Not if the person has ever been a confirmed doc/pharmacy shopper. I can see how well this is going to work for Seniors who travel in a RV and/or Seniors that are snow birds. Once again those who are chronic painers are being discriminated against because of their medically necessary medications.  What is the definition of “at-risk” ?

WASHINGTON – The United States Senate approved an amendment Wednesday that gives Medicare Part D plans the authority to require at-risk beneficiaries to use a single prescriber and pharmacy for frequently abused drugs.
 
The Medicare “lock-in” provision, sponsored by Sens. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, Rob Portman, R-Ohio, and Tim Kaine, D-Va., is a part of a larger prescription drug abuse bill known as the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act. The bipartisan bill aims to curb the opioid abuse epidemic through enhanced grant programs, among other efforts.
 
“As the pharmacy community is well aware, prescription drug abuse and dependency have been on the rise in America for several years,” stated Thomas Menighan, American Pharmacist Association EVP and CEO. “This epidemic is a major issue for our nation due to the devastating impact it is has had on individuals, families and communities. We have made this a central theme for APhA2016. As we inform and educate pharmacy professionals, they will be able to help their communities.”
 
APhA supports the passing of the lock-in amendment and believes that solutions to curb opioid and prescription drug abuse “will take everyone working together, including health care professionals, patients, and federal, state and local governments,” according to Jenna Ventresca, APhA associate director, health policy.
 
Although the lock-in amendment represents one mechanism to respond to prescription drug abuse, APhA supports a multifaceted approach that balances legitimate patient access to prescription drugs with the need to protect individuals from misusing and abusing such medications. The Institute of Medicine estimates that there are 100 million Americans living with chronic pain – a number that does not include the additional 46 million individuals the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates suffer from acute pain due to surgery. 
 
Though the lock-in amendment has passed, the Senate still has to vote on the broader comprehensive bill before it moves to the U.S. House of Representatives for review.
 

Knowledge, experience, common sense = good pt care

SRAcrystalballThis below was posted on a pharmacy face book page.. I just submitted a article to DRUG TOPIC with the titled  “OTC Naloxone… patient care or cash cow for pharmacy ?”  but I can’t publish it until they do and then I can only publish it with a link to their publication. In that article, I discussed this very issue.  If this wasn’t so damn serious a issue.. I would find it hilarious. Here we have people BOASTING about the “Doctor of Pharmacy” (PharmD) degree/status and clamoring  to get granted provider status… so that they can move up to their true mid-level practitioner level.. that they are educated for, along side ARNP’s, NP’s, PA’s. In this example, you have a pt with a opiate overdose… pale… barely breathing… still has a pulse.. so you TAKE HIS BLOOD PRESSURE.. and worry about PAPERWORK which proceeds GETTING PAID…

This could end up being like the movie “GROUND HOG DAY”  and the “save the addict bandwagon” with a dose or two of Naloxone being in just about everyone’s pocket is just starting to unfold. But what do I know… with my OUTDATED BS Pharm degree and just 45 yrs of experience. I have never been confronted with a life/death over dose experience first hand, but I have been in life/death experiences with other pts and I didn’t CHOKE and pts lived to thank me for my acting on their behalf.  One of my favorite saying is “… knowledge is knowing the rules … and experience is knowing the exceptions to the rules …” Good pt care comes from the combination of knowledge, experience and common sense.. It is like a three legged stool… missing one or two legs and you will end up FALLING ON YOUR ASS 🙂

“Today was the scariest day I have had as a Pharmacist. A customer came to the counter looking for narcan for his friend who was overdosing on heroin in his car. I told him we could call 911 for him which my intern proceeded to do. I told him in order to sell it to him I needed paperwork filled out. He asked if I could administer it to his friend and I told him I could not. He told me he needed to go because he didn’t have a driver’s license and he didn’t want to get in trouble. He told me we was going to leave his friend on the side of the building. When I got to his friend he was pale and looked like he was dead. I found his pulse and took a blood pressure. I made sure he has a pulse until the ambulance and police arrived. Is this happening at your pharmacies?? Ohio just passed a law to allow narcan to be sold OTC. I’m assuming we will be seeing more of this now. What is your take on making narcan available without a prescription?”

I thought that #CVS was going to start selling Naloxone without a Rx ?

pharmaciststeve.com/?p=12176

 “The pharmacist said a male had come into the store and asked to buy Narcan because his friend was not breathing,” Foulds said Wednesday. “The pharmacist was alarmed and called 911.” 

But the phone call became disconnected, and Wilson traveled to the CVS to investigate, according to Foulds. Upon his arrival, Wilson located the male who entered the store and his friend, a 39-year-old male who was experiencing an overdose in the store parking lot. 

Dog and pony show coming to ABC 20/20 03/11/2016

Have You or Your Family Been Affected By Heroin Addiction?

PHOTO: Re-enactment of heroin user burning heroin on spoon in this file photo.

FRIDAY 03/11/2016 David Muir reports on the deadly heroin epidemic that crosses all boundaries and has few treatment options 

https://www.facebook.com/ABC2020/

ABC 20/20/ SHOW 03/11/2016 10:00 EST

 

 

ABC News is looking to speak with parents who have lost their children to heroin addiction, as well as spouses or siblings whose family members are currently battling the disease.

Specifically, they are hoping to speak with those whose loved one’s addiction began with a legal prescription to pain pills (post-accident or injury etc.) that then, led to heroin use.

If you are interested in sharing your story, please fill out the form below. An ABC News producer may be in touch with you.

Newton’s Third Law of Motion… states that for every action (force) in nature there is an equal and opposite reaction.

steamearsBelow is a www.change.org petition. I have seen some very dumb/stupid petitions out there… this one has got to be in the TOP TEN. IMO.. this young woman did something pretty stupid in putting this parody of Adele’s song “HELLO” out there on the web. Her 15 minutes of fame should have expired long ago… but.. some in the chronic pain community keeps “restarting the clock”. She has now lost/quit her job and now there are certain individuals in the chronic pain community wish to have the AL BOP to revoke her technician registration/licensure.

At a FL BOP special committee meeting last year a chronic pain doctor asked the BOP’s attorney if it was against the practice act for a pharmacist to LIE to a pt why they were refusing to fill their Rx.. the attorney’s reply — NO !!!

And you think that the AL BOP is going to take some action over a parody song in which was not directed at any single pt?  This is a textbook example of “killing the messenger”

IMO, her song is just things that have been stated to employees in the Rx dept that she works in and thousands of other Rx depts across the country. She is just regurgitating what has been said to her – and others – by pts.

What is next, a crowd goes to her house… drag her ass down to the town square and flog  or stone her to death ?

That portion of the chronic pain community that has participated in this “witch hunt” is an embarrassment to the chronic pain community and I am ashamed to be associated with them and/or any group that they belong to and encourage their actions.

My money is on the fact that those in the community pharmacies will “circle the wagons” and anyone putting their name on this petition… if they have not been discriminated against before… when trying to get their controlled Rxs filled… it might just start happening for no known reason. 

Newton’s Third Law of Motion… states that for every action (force) in nature there is an equal and opposite reaction.

How many times have you heard pts quoting a Pharmacist state that they “.. can refuse to fill a Rx for any reason…” Those signing this petition may be given them a reason to deny care… especially those who have signed the petition.

 

 

 

 

 

 

For those of you that suffer with chronic pain on a daily basis have at one time in your medical care, been discriminated against. More recently, the continuation and doubling down of federal agency onerous regulations of opioid pain medication has made our struggle den page news. We have united to fight back against stereotype that claim we are junkies, addicts and drug seekers. Apparently, this young, over zealous pharmacy technician from Alabama doesn’t feel our fight against stereotypes as opioid users and chronic pain patients is that serious. In a parade of Adele’s Hello, she writes new lyrics that discriminates against people with disabilities, chronic pain and those taking opioid medications for these ailments. Chronic pain patients are real people with real diseases, disorders and ailments that depend on pain medication to function on a daily basis. Legitimate chronic pain patients are very upset about this woman’s attitude both during the delivery of her adapted lyrics to Adele’s beautiful song. In this petition, I’m calling on the Alabama Board of Pharmacy and Walmart to both fire Ms. Sarah Brand and revoke her pharmacy tech license. Her YouTube video has been viewed over 200 million times. In a response to upset viewers, she says the following: “This is WHAT Sarah Brand posted on her wall about the NEGATIVE responses she is getting for her video/song!!! READ – Well, I’ve hit 2 million views and over 40’000 shares. I want to take a moment to correct some of the “hate” I’ve seen my video receive. But before I do I want to sincerely THANK every single person that has liked, shared and commented positive messages, realizing that this is REALITY and working in retail pharmacy is a wonderful job but at times extremely trying and exhausting. It’s so much more than counting pills. For the pharmacists it can be saving lives…. I was not, am not and WOULD NOT make fun of anyone. So those of you that have an “issue”, are generally the problem. Those of you that come to our counter demanding, and yelling and blaming us for your problems…. We still work everyday to try and handle your issues with a smile because it’s our JOB, and we care about each customer. I’ve been in pharmacy for 8 years now and I love to sing, so I put my experience together and wrote, what I and apparently about 2 million people think is a humorous little view of the life of a pharmacy associate. This video has reached SEVERAL states and I am amazed!. SO… if you don’t like it…. suck it up buttercup. I don’t like a lot of things. This is something we call LIFE and it’s very unfair. For those of you that understand or simply have a sense of humor… Much love!!” None of the patients, not addicts, that viewed and commented so angrily on this video we’re finding humor as we struggle daily for the human right of pain relief. Sign this petition asking for her pharmacy technician license and her job. She clearly doesn’t embody the qualities necessary to serve anyone, let alone someone in need of medication. Her video can be seen at the following link: http://chronicpainrights.com/pharmacy-tech-discriminates-against-people-with-disabilities/ I’m sure Adele would sign herself if she knew the stereotyping Ms. Sarah Brand is perpetuating with her adaptation of her beautiful song’s lyrics!!!

Ashley Kingsley started this petition with a single signature, and now has 27 supporters. Start a petition today to change something you care about.

Why do we have a FOURTH AMENDMENT ?

Willmar Lawmaker Using Son’s Overdose to Spur Change in Prescription Monitoring Laws
Joe Augustine
Wed, 2 Mar 2016 18:27:43 CST
A Minnesota lawmaker whose son became addicted to powerful pain medication before dying from a heroin overdose wants to strengthen the state’s oversight of opioid prescriptions.
Rep. Dave Baker (R-Willmar) will introduce legislation this month that would give state regulators more access to the state’s prescription monitoring program, which was implemented in 2010 to identify doctor shoppers and thieving doctors.
A 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS investigation found state privacy laws prevent the Minnesota Board of Pharmacy, which operates the monitoring program, from sharing crucial prescription evidence with law enforcement and other state regulators during investigations.
“It just has to be managed better than it ever has before because too many people are dying,” said Baker, whose oldest son, Daniel, became addicted to opioids in college and died of a heroin overdose in 2011.
The first-term lawmaker started drafting legislation to improve the monitoring program soon after taking office in 2014.
“It has to evolve with the needs and the actual crisis we’re in now,” Baker said. “It’s too late for our family.”
Baker’s law would allow regulatory boards, like the Board of Medical Practice, to access the monitoring program when investigating doctors or medical professionals suspected of stealing medication.
“We have no access at this point and time,” Board of Medical Practice Executive Director Dr. Ruth Martinez said.
5 EYEWITNESS NEWS found 268 medical professionals in Minnesota have been suspended for stealing medication since 2010.
An emergency room doctor from Princeton, Minnesota, stole pain pills for two years.
“I would write prescriptions to another party, they would fill the prescriptions and we would split them,” Dr. Luther Philaya said.
Philaya says state regulators never flagged his prescribing habits because nobody looked him up in the monitoring program.
Baker, who will also consider legislation that would give law enforcement more access to the monitoring program in the future, says patient privacy must be protected but that sitting on valuable information does not help address the public health crisis.
“There’s no reason why we can’t have this information at the fingertips,” Baker said.

Potential Dangers of NSAIDs, Acetaminophen Often Ignored, Unrecognized

Survey: Potential Dangers of NSAIDs, Acetaminophen Often Ignored, Unrecognized

A new survey conducted by the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) has revealed some concerning beliefs that patients have about acetaminophen and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). For example, over 40% of surveyed patients said they see over-the-counter (OTC) label use instructions as “just suggestions,” and some did not even consider OTC drugs to be medications.

“What we’re doing now—in terms of patient education both in the office and through drug labeling—it isn’t working,” said Charles Argoff, MD, professor of neurology at Albany Medical College and director of the Comprehensive Pain Center at Albany Medical Center, in New York.

Each year, of every 1 million Americans, 35 die from acetaminophen overdose, 64 succumb to ibuprofen overdose and 118 die from naproxen sodium overdose (Adv Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf 2013;2:1-5). Besides the risk for death, NSAIDs can cause gastrointestinal bleeding and damage to the esophagus and small intestine, while improper use of acetaminophen is associated with liver damage and liver failure, said Anne Larson, MD, clinical professor of medicine at Northwest Hospital/University of Washington Medicine Liver Clinic, in Seattle, during a recent webinar when she and others presented findings from the AGA’s survey.
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“The chronic pain community, in particular, is of the greatest concern because they reach for medications more often and use many types of prescription and OTC medications,” said Dr. Larson, noting that there are more than 900 NSAID-containing OTC and prescription medications and over 500 acetaminophen-containing OTC and prescription drugs.

Drug–drug interactions, older age, preexisting GI and hepatic illness, and consumption of more than three alcoholic beverages per day are risk factors for overdose and complications, according to Dr. Larson.

To gain a full picture of how patients use NSAIDs and acetaminophen and how gastroenterologists understand patient use of these agents, the AGA, with the support of McNeil Consumer Healthcare, surveyed 251 GIs and 1,015 consumers, including 479 individuals with chronic pain.

The findings indicated that GIs treat an average of 90 patients annually who overdose on acetaminophen- or NSAID-containing medications. Eighty-four percent of GIs said they had treated patients with abdominal pain as a presenting symptom related to improper use of NSAIDs or acetaminophen; 69% had patients present with NSAID- or acetaminophen-related nausea; and 66% said patients had presented with ulcers related to improper use of these agents.

“Ninety percent of the gastroenterologists included in the survey said patients do not often connect their overdose symptoms with the pain medications they take,” Dr. Larson pointed out.

“We’re seeing people both knowingly and unknowingly take too much medication,” Charles Melbern Wilcox, MD, professor of medicine, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, emphasized during the webinar.

Indeed, 43% of surveyed patients said they knowingly self-administered more than the recommended dose of acetaminophen or NSAIDs, and the same percentage of patients said labeled directions are “just guidelines.”

Dr. Argoff, who is not involved with the AGA’s campaign, noted that the FDA is trying to curb the incidence of adverse events related to use of these medications through stricter regulations on the prescribing of acetaminophen-containing combination medications. He is hopeful that additional FDA measures consistent with that step might further reduce complications and mortality.

“However, at the moment, the fact is that there are millions of people suffering from pain, and they are doing what they think they need to do to get through the pain,” said Dr. Argoff. “The job of the health care industry is to make safe options available, and right now we could certainly use safer, effective options to meet the needs of our patients.”

Visit GutCheckFacts.org for additional results from the AGA’s “Gut Check: Know Your Medicine” survey and patient education resources

Blenderized FACTS

lietotruth

This particular article – IMO – is well researched and written and provides a lot of  REAL FACTS… but if you think about it.. most of the articles we see/read is like this BASS-O-MATIC… the DEA and other anti-opiate groups … take FACTS and FACTOIDS and throw them into a  “bad boy blender” and push the FRAPPE button and outcomes a concoction that no one can recognize what was put into the FACT-O-MATIC  to begin with.  They then feed this concoction to various media outlets and they regurgitate it… like a “bad meal” that won’t stay down. They are using Hitler’s philosophy about lies getting the general public to believe what the bureaucracy keeps pushing out.

Five myths about heroin

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/five-myths-about-heroin/2016/03/04/c5609b0e-d500-11e5-b195-2e29a4e13425_story.html

March 4 at 9:21 AM 

Maia Szalavitz is a journalist and author, most recently of the forthcoming “Unbroken Brain: A Revolutionary New Way of Understanding Addictions.”
 
 America’s epidemic of heroin and prescription-pain-reliever addiction has become a major issue in the 2016 elections. It’s worse than ever: Deaths from overdoses of opioids — the drug category that includes heroin and prescription analgesics such as Vicodin — reached an all-time high in 2014, rising 14 percent in a single year. But because drug policy has long been a political and cultural football, myths about opioid addiction abound. Here are some of the most dangerous — and how they do harm.
Maia Szalavitz is a journalist and author, most recently of the forthcoming “Unbroken Brain: A Revolutionary New Way of Understanding Addictions.”

1. Most heroin addiction starts with a legitimate pain prescription, and most prescription opioid misuse leads to heroin addiction.

People who misuse prescription pain relievers are 40 times more likely to become addicted to heroin than those who don’t, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Recent research also shows that 75 percent of patients in heroin treatment started their opioid use with prescription medications, not heroin. That sounds like pain treatment is at the root of the problem, and the CDC is targeting doctors with new guidelines aimed at reining in prescriptions.

But overwhelmingly, prescription-drug misusers are not pain patients. According to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, more than 75 percent of recreational opioid users in 2013-14 got pills from sources other than doctors, mainly friends and relatives. And even among this group, moving on to heroin is quite rare: Only 4 percent do so within five years; just 0.2 percent of U.S. adults are current heroin users.

 The proportion of patients who become newly addicted to opioid medications during pain treatment is also low. A 2010 Cochrane review — considered the gold standard for basing medical practice on evidence — found an addiction rate of less than 1 percent. A study of more than 135,000 emergency-room visits for opioid overdose found that just 13 percent of patients had a chronic pain diagnosis.

Further, a 2015 study showed that only 6 percent of those who received an initial prescription for opioids took the drugs for more than four months; the authors didn’t determine how many of those ongoing prescriptions were medically appropriate and what proportion were linked to addiction.

The real risk factor for opioid addiction is youth, not pain care. Like 90 percent of all addictions, the vast majority of prescription-drug problems start with experimentation in adolescence or early adulthood, typically after or alongside binge drinking, marijuana smoking and often cocaine use. Having a prior or current addiction to another drug is the best predictor of developing problems with prescription drugs — not pain care.

2. The best treatment for heroin addiction is inpatient rehab.

When the media covers addiction in the rich and famous, an inpatient stay at a plush rehab center is almost always involved. Indeed, Dr. Drew Pinsky’s “Celebrity Rehab” is typical of such programs. Pinsky, like many who run inpatient programs, rejects the ongoing use of anti-addiction medication (though Hazelden, the original model for the 28-day rehab center, began offering it to some patients in 2012 after experiencing record high death rates). Similarly, most drug courts and many state Medicaid programs also deny continuing access to the two best-studied maintenance medications, methadone and buprenorphine (Suboxone).

The position that residential treatment centers and their abstinence-only philosophies are superior to medication ignores overwhelming data and keeps families from seeking the best care. Let’s start with Dr. Drew’s patients: Nearly 13 percent who appeared on “Celebrity Rehab” died not long afterward; most had been addicted to opioids. While that may be an especially poor showing, research on more than 150,000 patients receiving treatment for opioid addiction in Britain found that people in abstinence-only care had double the death rate of those who received ongoing maintenance treatment. And other studies find that maintenance medication cuts death rates by 70 percent or more. Since untreated heroin addiction carries a mortality rate of 2 to 3 percent per year, the benefit is substantial.

This is why the World Health Organization, the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the Institute of Medicine and even the White House drug czar’s office all agree that maintenance treatment — indefinite, possibly lifelong medication use — is superior to abstinence rehab for opioid addiction. While some argue that total abstinence is a moral imperative, dead people can’t recover. Sadly, only a small proportion of people with opioid addiction are currently in medication-assisted treatment — largely because of limits placed on it by misguided ideology, government policies and insurers.

 3. Recovery from heroin addiction is rare.

The prognosis for heroin addiction seems grim because of the high mortality rate and because rehabs typically report relapse rates of 60 percent or greater. However, the odds of recovery are better than they appear.

Early evidence for this idea came from studies of Vietnam veterans, who should have had particularly high addiction and relapse risk because young men are the group most at risk for addiction in general. Heroin and opium were cheap and easily available to American servicemen overseas; nearly half tried these drugs, and half of these soldiers became addicted. But upon returning home, just 12 percent of those who had been addicted relapsed within three years, and only 2 percent were still addicted at the end of the study — nowhere near 60 percent. Fewer than half got any treatment, and it didn’t make a difference in terms of who recovered.

This phenomenon, known as “natural recovery” or “maturing out” of addiction, is common with other drugs, too. Large population surveys show that most people who are addicted to alcohol or cocaine quit without treatment. The same type of study shows that around 60 percent of people who met the criteria for prescription opioid addiction at one time no longer do so — and one third of them never received any treatment. This research also finds that the average prescription opioid addiction lasts eight years; for heroin, the average is a decade. For alcohol, the average addiction lasts 15 years.

So why do heroin addicts appear so hopeless in the public imagination? Because people who quit on their own don’t show up for treatment — and so, while they are included in large epidemiological studies, they aren’t included in treatment research. This means that rehabs see only the worst cases, leading to an unduly pessimistic picture of recovery. Although opioid addiction certainly can be deadly, it doesn’t have to be — and those who struggle with it should absolutely seek help. Still, more research is needed to understand what people who recover without treatment can teach those who need it.

4. Tough love is the only thing that works. Programs that distribute clean needles and overdose-reversal drugs prolong addiction.

The idea that people with addiction must “hit bottom” — or experience the worst possible consequences — before they can get better is prevalent among parents and policymakers. One drug court official told a researcher that “force is the best medicine” for treating addiction, and the 12-step program Al-Anon warns against “enabling” addiction by doing things like helping people avoid jail.

But research shows that the opposite is true. Like any other human beings, people with addiction respond best to being treated with dignity, care and respect. Programs that nonjudgmentally distribute clean needles, provide overdose-reversal drugs or offer safe spaces for injection do not prolong addiction; in fact, a Canadian study found that 57 percent of people who came to a safe injection facility to shoot up ultimately entered treatment . An approach for helping addicted family members that uses kindness, rather than confrontation or detachment, was found in another study to be twice as effective as a traditional confrontational “intervention” — and no studies show that harsh treatment or incarceration is superior to empathetic care.

Similarly, there is no evidence that naloxone programs, which provide users and their families with the overdose-reversal drug, prolong addiction. But they do prolong life: The overdose death rate was cut by nearly 50 percent in communities that fully implemented these programs.

5. Whites have recently become the majority of people with heroin addiction.

In an article headlined “In Heroin Crisis, White Families Seek Gentler War on Drugs,” the New York Times recently claimed that “today’s heroin crisis is different,” because it is not “based in poor, predominantly black urban areas” and because use “has skyrocketed among whites.” NPR, the Atlantic and other major media outlets have run similar stories, often citing a study, published in JAMA Psychiatry, which found that 90 percent of new heroin users in the past decade were white.

What most of them omit, however, is that the same study showed that whites have made up more than half of all people with heroin addiction since the early 1970s and hit 80 percent before 2000. In 1981, Newsweek panicked about a new wave of “middle-class junkies,” and in 2003, a Times headline read “Heroin’s New Generation: Young, White and Middle Class.” White people using heroin is nothing new.

The reason for the misperception is political: Politicians from the first “drug czar,” Harry Anslinger, in the 1930s to Ronald Reagan in the 1980s have portrayed heroin and other illegal drugs as a black or “foreign” problem in order to justify tough policies. In the early 1900s, when heroin was sold over the counter without warning labels, the typical user was a white middle-class woman, and she was seen as a victim of unscrupulous manufacturers, not a criminal. After heroin became illegal and was framed as a problem of the poor and minorities, law enforcement began to predominate. Only now are policymakers beginning to recognize the failure of criminalization.

outlook@washpost.com