Attorneys telling clinicians how to practice medicine and treat pain ?

Opioid Prescribing: Navigating the Ethical Battlefield

http://www.painweek.org/story/opioid-prescribing-navigating-the-ethical-battlefield/

This is a very interesting article, the only people quoted are TWO ATTORNEYS.  They advise prescribers to do what is best for the pt and that they are not expected to be perfect, just reasonable. They also suggest that a prescriber who elects not to treat pts could be guilty of MALPRACTICE ! Also the prescriber is apparently suppose to be a “mind-reader” in determining if the pt is trying to mislead  (lying) to the prescriber to get opiates about a SUBJECTIVE DISEASE ISSUES.  Of course, if our judicial system shuts down a practice because a prescriber’s failure to miss some of these issues…and a pt or two over doses, commits suicide.. that the legit pts within the practice gets thrown to the street by the judicial system.. there is no responsibility of the judicial system for the resulting pts that can’t find new clinician that will treat their pain and/or commit suicide.  IMO.. it would seem that our judicial system has set up the system as heads they win and tails the clinician loses… or course.. the chronic pain pts tend to always end up on the losing end.

As concerns continue to mount regarding opioid overdose, misuse, and abuse,  https://801injured.com/car-accidents/ lawyers and guidelines regulating the prescribing of painkillers to patients have become stricter. Prescribers of narcotics are faced with more than just ethical dilemmas when making the decision to treat a patient with opiates; they are also being challenged on the legal front.

“Whether we are speaking in clinical, moral, ethical, or legal terms, the fundamental question remains: What is best for my patient?” said Stephen J. Ziegler, PhD, JD, associate professor in the Department of Public Policy at Indiana State University.

Kevin Barnard, a member of the National Association of Drug Diversion Investigators and formerly of the San Diego Police Department, and Jennifer Bolen, JD, a former US District Attorney and expert on medico-legal issues related to pain management, joined Ziegler in a panel discussion that centered around how physicians should handle situations in which they believe a patient is diverting or abusing pain medications, or both.With healthcare providers battling these issues on a daily basis, many in the medical community are wondering how decisions can be made effectively and efficiently. Recognizing when a patient is attempting to mislead a physician into providing painkillers is a responsibility of the prescriber. However, being able to make an educated decision to do what is best for the patient is not always easy.

“In many ways it comes down to how well equipped the physician is to perform patient assessment and screening for abuse; how well the physician understands and how easily the physician can access integrated care, including behavioral health support; and how much of the physician’s focus is money oriented vs patient centered,” Ms. Bolen said.

However, too much caution when considering medication for patients with pain can be harmful, as well.

“Clinicians who withhold the prescribing of opioids because they wrongly suspect that their patient is diverting have caused their patient to suffer, while clinicians who fail to take reasonable precautions to prevent abuse are fueling the abuse of opioids,” Dr. Ziegler warns.

Although it might save time, a strategy that avoids opioids entirely could essentially result in negative consequences for prescribers. Blatantly ignoring potential treatment options for a patient with pain could have both ethical and legal ramifications.

“For some clinicians, a blanket policy of withholding opioids may seem to be the safest route,” Dr. Ziegler explained. “Such an approach would reduce the amount of time they have to spend with a patient and it avoids any concern that their prescription will be diverted.”

“But such policies are not only unethical because they subordinate the patient’s needs, they can also expose the clinician to accusations of medical malpractice,” Dr. Ziegler cautioned.

The strategy behind prescribing opioids isn’t necessarily a clear one. There are numerous patient- and pharmacologic-related issues for a physician to consider before deciding whether or not to treat an individual with prescription painkillers.

“Ensuring access while preventing the abuse of opioids is not a zero-sum game and will remain an ongoing challenge for clinicians,” he said. “Patient assessment, screening for abuse, and integrated care all have a part in good patient care. Clinicians are not expected to be perfect, just reasonable.”

Can our Judicial system create LAWS ?

http://www.wesh.com/news/dea-addresses-prescription-access-issue/35273410  video

I posted this video about a week ago. This was a report by Matt Grant from WESH TV in Orlando from the Florida Pharmacists Association Meeting.  One has to listen to the words of Susan Langston with the DEA’s Miami field division..

“Not everybody’s going to fit into a checklist, but they still need their prescriptions filled,”…”As long as you’re doing your job, doing your best and doing what you can not to participate in drug abuse, addiction and diversion, then you’re not going to have any problem with the DEA,” Langston said.

Drug abuse is a Mental Health disease/issue

Addiction is a Mental Health disease/issue

We need to understand that Ms Langston and her colleagues at the DEA… are working under a court decision back in 1917 that determined that the mental health disease of addiction/drug abuse is a CRIME..

I may be wrong.. but.. isn’t it the job of the LEGISLATIVE BRANCH – like Congress – to write laws… and not the job of the JUDICIAL BRANCH to create LAWS..

Likewise, look how much has changed in our country since 1917..

1914ford

This was STATE OF THE ART personal transportation

 

 

 

 

1914airplane

This was STATE OF THE ART of the airplane industry

 

 

 

 

 

 

1914radioThis was STATE OF THE ART home entertainment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

olddocoffice

STATE OF ART Physician’s Office

 

 

 

 

 

Yet our judicial system/DEA is still relying on 100 year old laws to justify its existence and has this law’s constitutionality ever been challenged ?

Senator Schumer wants to expand the DEA’s 45 y/o successful war on drugs

Sen. Chuck Schumer holds up samples of synthetic marijuana as he talked about a strategy to ban dangerous synthetic marijuana from New York.moneypit

Chuck Schumer wants DEA to launch special unit to crack down on sale of synthetic drugs like K2, Scooby Snax

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/sen-schumer-dea-crackdown-sale-synthetic-drugs-article-1.2367327

The federal Drug Enforcement Agency needs to launch a special investigative unit to crack down on the sale of synthetic drugs following a major bust and a startling spike in emergency room visits, Sen. Chuck Schumer said Sunday.

The distinct division should focus on websites that peddle the powerful illegal drugs online and notify credit card companies and other payment processors like PayPal and Venmo of the high tech hawkers, Schumer told reporters.

“Unless we find a way to chock off their supply, synthetic drugs are going to keep delivering very real and very painful consequences,” Schumer said. “Toxic chemicals, cooked mainly in China, are available to dealers or bodegas at the drop of a hat.”

The sale of potent drugs like “K2” and “Scooby Snax” appears to be increasing.

The use of synthetic marijuana has resulted in 2,300 emergency room visits in New York State over a recent two-month period, according to the Manhattan federal prosecutor’s office.

Authorities have struggled to keep pace.

A 10-man drug ring that allegedly distributed over a ton of synthetic marijuana to city bodegas was busted last Wednesday. The drug crew used chemicals shipped from China to at least one processing facility in the Bronx where they would be mixed and sprayed onto leafy materials like tea leaves, according to an indictment.

Officers seized $30 million worth of drugs, including 275,000 flashy packets distributed in bodegas for around $5 each, authorities said.

“The chemicals were likely purchased via the Internet and likely with a credit card,” Schumer said. “The high is cheap, the cost is low, and the consequences are deadly.”

Synthetic drugs are frequently a dangerous combination of chemicals made to copy 9-tetrahydrocannabinol, the primary psychoactive ingredient in marijuana.

Many of the websites selling the drugs are operated in China, Schumer said.

“It’s hard to shut them down because the Chinese government doesn’t cooperate,” he said. “But if we eliminate the ability to process credit cards we can strangle their operation, we can choke off their oxygen.”

Could some corporate healthcare executives being moving from the E-suites ?

jailbird

Justice Department seeks individual liability in healthcare fraud

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/justice-department-seeks-individual-liability-in-healthcare-fraud/405838/

  • The U.S. Department of Justice announced in a memo last week it aims to combat corporate misconduct by seeking accountability from the individuals who perpetrated it.
  • Companies will now have to disclose further information in order to meet the requirements for cooperation credit, which trades cooperation for more lenient penalties.
  • Experts tell Modern Healthcare the change could assist the government in ongoing battle against healthcare fraud.

Dive Insight:

Individual liability has been the missing piece in combating healthcare fraud, according to former government prosecutor Marc Raspanti, a partner at Pietragallo, Gordon, Alfano, Bosick & Raspanti.

“If they do follow the new guidelines, it could very well be a sea change in certainly the way healthcare companies conduct their business and how healthcare companies ramp up their internal compliance,” he told Modern Healthcare.  

According to Roy Snell, CEO of the Health Care Compliance Association, healthcare companies are already working to improve compliance.“When the enforcement community comes into healthcare, they’re going to see a more robust effort,” he said.

The DOJ memo details six steps it intends to follow in pursuit of individual corporate wrongdoing:

  1. For cooperation credit, corporations must provide all relevant facts relating to the individuals involved;
  2. Both criminal and civil corporate investigations should focus on individuals from the beginning;
  3. Attorneys handling corporate investigations should be in regular communication;
  4. The DOJ will generally not release individuals from liability when resolving a matter with a corporation;
  5. DOJ attorneys should not resolve matters with a corporation without a plan for handling the related individual cases; and
  6. Civil attorneys should typically focus on individuals as well as the company, and look beyond the individual’s ability to pay. 

Recommended Reading

Modern Healthcare: Justice Department takes aim at individuals for corporate misconduct
US Department of Justice: DOJ memo: Individual accountability for corporate wrongdoing

Julie… the #Walgreen’s Pharmacist… another healthcare DENIER ?

happyhealthy

This was posted on another facebook page today 09/20/2015…  According to this particular WAG’S pt… Pharmacist Julie could care less if they are health or happy.. and her mind is appears to be like a “mouse trap” .. once it snaps shut with a conclusion… you can’t open it…

Just left Walgreens on us.41 in Cochran plaza. (Port Charlotte, FL ) Julie, the pharmacist, decided not to fill my prescription for my pain medicine. I asked her if something was wrong with the prescription and she told me it was her discretion to fill it or not. I asked her what her criteria was and was this Walgreen’s corporate policy not to serve some customer’s and serve others? She said it was not company policy but her decision and it was at her discretion since she was the pharmacist. She also said she did not know me. I told her that I was not denied last time and that she could look it up but she said some other pharmacist filled it last time.

I tried to reason with her, that I had gone to the doctor’ office and paid for an office visit in order to get the special and secured paper that the prescription was written on. I asked her if something was wrong with the paper, was is illegitimate or was it was the color of my skin or my age? She refused and was getting real rude by this time so I thought she might call the police since I was made to feel like some drug addict.

I am 63 years old, an employer in the community and serve my community and many charitable organizations. I am so frustrated that those of us that need pain medication to get through the day are being denied service, forced to pay for visits to the doctor’s office just to get the prescriptions and then have to run all over town to try and get the medication filled. I have bone cancer and I have tumors in my arm, two in my spine and one in my left cavity where my kidney used to be. I have had to spend well into hundreds of thousands of dollars for surgery, chemo therapy and radiation treatments. I have all kinds of side affects from the chemo drugs, yet I continue to work, provide jobs, volunteer in my community and make a difference in the lives of hard working people. I am joining other folks like myself that we ask the Florida legislature to come up something better than the discriminatory practices that are now on the books. I wrote my state senator but have heard nothing.

I am now reading where this law will only drive up health care costs (it has for me) and fuel black market sales of drugs as well as cause more suicides. Yes, suicides. I know because the pain associated with some of these cancers are unbearable and death would only bring relief. Too bad the DEA and Florida legislature could not see this coming. Thanks for nothing.

Ibsen re-opens clinic despite fears of potential criminal charges for treating pain patients

Source: Ibsen re-opens clinic despite fears of potential criminal charges for treating pain patients

The BULLIES WITH BADGES – who have no medical training – are winning… prescribers suffers, pts suffer…

and the BULLIES ???

victorydance

Where the numbers come from

SlideShow2 SlideShow3

 

 

 

 

 

 

For the last two days, I attended  number of presentation at the Indiana Pharmacists Alliance’s annual convention..  This particular presentation, like many others were presented by PharmD’s who are in or completed 1-2 (yrs)  different residences. So these are the academically the brightest of the brightest.

This particular presentation was on the new auto injector EVZIO (Naloxone)… this little single use (2 separate injection) has a audio function to walk anyone thru its proper use… This little jewel only cost abt $600.00

Of course, the presentation started out with 44,000 people dying of drug overdoses in this country..  never mind that nearly 50% are by non-prescription drugs… which EVZIO probably has no use to reverse the overdose.

In Indiana, there was 999 drug deaths… with about 20% being from legal opiates… doesn’t mean that the person dying from the opiate had been legally prescribed to them.

In Indiana, the medical examiner and/or toxicology report abt  70% were either not identified or not tracked..

I asked the presenter of the 16 K opiate deaths.. how many were accidental or suicides… ANSWER   – DON’T KNOW

I asked the presenter of the 16 k opiate deaths .. how many involved a single drug or involved a multiple drug cocktail .. ANSWER –  DON’T KNOW

A couple of the older Pharmacists, officers of the Association made commented that the “profession was in good hands” if these young PharmD presenter were representative of the future of pharmacy…

I’m sorry.. but if the brightest of the brightest only believe and regurgitate stats by entities that may have other agenda(s) when presenting data results without questioning the breakdown – or lack of break down of the results

I have seen the 44 K number of drug overdose deaths… but.. this is the first time that I have seen the fact that nearly 50% are from OTC MEDS..

Is Indiana trying to “warp” the number? how come nearly 50% nationally are OTC meds and in Indiana abt 70% are not identified ?

How many pts died of a overdose that was actually prescribed to them ?  How many are suicides ?  How many died from a drug “cocktail ” ?

Could those pts that had opiates prescribed to themselves died from a accidental overdose or actually committed suicide. Could that number be in the low single digits ? Of those that are suicides, was that because they were not getting adequate pain management ?

So many numbers… and so little detail… why does no one questions these ?

Top 10 Most Dangerous U.S. Government Agencies

Top 10 Most Dangerous U.S. Government Agencies

http://www.activistpost.com/2013/01/top-10-most-dangerous-us-government.html

Activist Post

We have chosen to highlight United States agencies; however, this top 10 list has global impact, as the U.S. has now proven to be the enforcement division of the overarching globalist agenda of centralized control.

One could argue that every government agency serves the purpose of stifling freedom and wasting taxpayer money. Yet, the 10 listed below go the extra mile for their sheer corruption, draconian regulations, and ultimate impact upon the largest number of citizens.

The main criteria for inclusion in the top 10 is the amount of money spent by the taxpayer according to official budget declarations, and then attaining the highest level of doing exactly the opposite of their stated intentions.

Here is the countdown to the top 10 most dangerous U.S. government agencies to the freedom, prosperity and health of its citizens . . . .

#10 – Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) – annual budget $8.5 billion

Their record of ignoring environmental damage and the health effects on humans from major events such as 9/11, the Exxon and Gulf oil spills to the worst case, Fukushima, is unparalleled. Rather than investigate and warn of real dangers, they have gone after farmers for dubious claims of water contamination, while treating milk spills as they should have treated oil spills.  Even worse, the EPA has concluded that there is no law preventing it from doing “research” on Americans. A recent lawsuit over the EPA’s work with airborne pollutants will put this claim to the test in Federal court. Their illegal human experiments could break the Nuremberg Code (source: The Washington Times).

#9 – Internal Revenue Service (IRS) – annual budget $13.3 billion:

Cries of “End the Fed!” continue to get louder, while more people are beginning to wake up completely and couple this with “End the IRS!” In fact, the two were developed together 100 years ago making the private Fed and the government IRS fraternal twins in creating a system of indentured servitude through dollar devaluation and arbitrary tax collection, respectively. The Fed enslaves through stealth, while the IRS uses force to impose itself through ever-expanding regulations and the threat of fines and imprisonment. As the collection division, the IRS rakes in a staggering $2.3 trillion annually. Despite that massive amount, the IRS has a distinguished record of ignoring the shenanigans of major corporations and federal employees, while focusing harshly on the average private citizen and small businesses in particular. Thankfully, there is some momentum toward abolishing the IRS through FairTax legislation. Now would be a good time, as the IRS will be empowered even further when the healthcare overhaul takes effect.

#8 – Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) – annual budget $13.5 billion

Despite massive funding to help people in dire need of assistance, FEMA has failed spectacularly in the cases of Katrina and Sandy, even hindering the ability of people to make it on their own, as gun confiscation was ordered against the population affected by Katrina. The mechanics of offering aid to legitimate victims of Sandy are still being debated by the U.S. government.  Additionally, there is a disturbing amount of evidence that suggests FEMA would be instrumental in enslaving large populations following an economic collapse or civil unrest. FEMA centers are now open knowledge and if implemented will likely resemble the squalor and horror that refugees encountered when jammed into the New Orleans Superdome following Katrina.

#7 – Department of Justice (DoJ) – annual budget $28 billion

This includes the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) which has its own annual budget of $8 billion. The “Department of Justice” is perhaps the most Orwellian oxymoron of all government agencies.  For decades they have pursued a failed War on Drugs that targets small-time users while ignoring the true drug criminals. In fact, they’ve even armed the drug gangs as revealed in the Fast and Furious scandal. We have a Justice Department more concerned with going after whistleblowers of crimes than the criminals themselves. The FBI deserves a whole section unto itself given their recent behavior. The only “terrorists” they’ve caught since 9-11 are the ones they have created with their own material support. Further, the FBI is increasingly using illegal surveillance tactics for peaceful activists like Occupy demonstrators and others. It has recently been revealed that the FBI was actually spying on Occupy protesters at the behest of banks, not the government, even refusing to tell Occupy leaders that there were assassination plots against them. Finally, it must be noted that no bankers have gone to jail from the immense fraud that led to the financial collapse of 2008 and beyond; no one significant has gone to jail for torture and other war crimes; and government corruption has been all but legalized.

#6 – Spy Agencies: The nation’s 17 spy agencies, including the CIA and the National Security Agency (NSA) – annual budget $55 billion?

Many of the intelligence accounts are classified, so we can’t really know the true total, but we do know that the budget for spy agencies has doubled since 9/11. The NSA has grabbed the most attention as of late with plans to expand into their new $2 billion data mining center in Bluffdale, Utah set to launch in September of this year. Whistleblowers like William Binney have stated that the agency is already spying on its own citizens domestically. As the war on terror increases its scope through drone surveillance on American soil, the NSA’s budget will only increase, while increasing the danger posed to large sections of the U.S. Constitution. The CIA of course has long been implicated in using assassination rings to topple foreign governments and political opponents, while being at the center of the Guantanamo Bay and rendition torture apparatus. With the arrival of no-holds-barred legislation like NDAA 2013, the intelligence regime becomes more dangerous than ever.

#5 – Department of Education (ED) – annual budget $70 billion

The way that America has chosen to educate its youth is the beginning of the justifications for the abuses of every other federal agency. The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America, as Charlotte Iserbyt has called it, has resulted in a once independent, entrepreneurial nation becoming a collectivized horde of selfish, but not individualistic, youth. There is much less attention paid to vocational skills, and much more attention paid to training the next bunch of public officials or bureaucracy enforcers. Furthermore, the public school system is clearly engaging in prisoner training with the actions of children becoming criminalized at an ever-greater pace. With the recent CT school shooting, we can expect that this will now become part of the curriculum as justification for the surrounding police state will be taught as a logical consequence in the face of such random threats of terror.

#4 – Department of Homeland Security (DHS) annual budget $100 billion (3,000 page PDF)

Much like the Department of Defense, the activities of DHS are all-encompassing including the goon squad of the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which has employed untrained, low IQ, and criminal elements including pedophiles to reach into the pants of men, women and children. The TSA is also responsible for introducing cancer to its employees and the public through its backscatter radiation naked imaging machines. And now they are set to hit the streets across America with their spin-off VIPR teams. DHS has set up the ultimate framework for tyranny, including secret lists, secret arrests, activist surveillance, biometric immigration measures, control of cyberspace, Orwellian telescreens and PSA’s that increasingly portray average citizens who are engaged in normal activities as worthy of suspicion and interrogation. They are sure to be on the front lines of any gun control and confiscation initiatives, as they clearly have been stockpiling their own ammunition in ever greater numbers.

#3 – U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) – annual budget $155 billion

If there is one agency that is administering the globalist directives of Agenda 21, it is the USDA. They have recently begun putting dubious embargoes on small farms, which is leading to economic and literal starvation of people and animals alike. Through their trickle down directives, farmers can even be charged in a different county after being cleared of wrongdoing in a previous case. This is the hallmark of bureaucratic tyranny. The USDA has been instrumental in clearing Dow Chemical’s GM soy, giving Monsanto’s GMO crops special ‘speed approval,’ and covering up pesticide damage to humans and bee populations. But in true absurdist bureaucratic style, the same organization that has consistently overlooked the health and economic threats to countless millions of people decided to fine a family $4 million dollars for selling bunny rabbits.

#2 – Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) – annual budget $892 billion

This gargantuan structure includes the FDA, CDC and the National Institutes of Health among others. The FDA has its own annual budget of $4.5 billion. This agency has approved prescription and over-the-counter drugs that knowingly have killed hundreds of thousands of people annually, has increased irradiation of the food supply, and has covered up vaccine injuries, But if you want Big Pharma, you can get it from a vending machine, thanks to the FDA. No surprise, the FDA has ties to Monsanto and ties to Bayer.  Now our food is being made and modified by the largest pesticide manufacturer, while any move to label GMO is shut down by the agency. The FDA has additionally approved AquaBounty’s GE Salmon despite a statement by The Center for Food Safety, that its “bad for the consumer, bad for the salmon industry, and bad for the environment.” Among other gems are dangerous animal feed additives, approving dangerous anti-viral drugs for infants, and policing food safety in foreign nations.

As for the CDC, or Centers for Disease Creation and Proliferation as some natural medicine practitioners have coined the agency (budget $11 billion), they have encouraged vaccination to such an extent that some have questioned whether their mandated vaccine schedule is part of a compulsory sterilization program.

#1 – Department of Defense (DoD) – annual budget ??? – Officially $613 billion

This agency is in desperate need of returning to its more honest original name: The War Department. In addition to being the recipient of the highest percentage of the federal budget, the DoD’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) division almost deserves a category of its own. Many of DARPA’s projects fall into the money pit of “black budget” secret projects not even subjected to presidential and congressional oversight. With DARPA’s “mad science” reputation, it is no doubt one of the top recipients of the $50 billion annual black budget, making this one of the most dangerous federal agencies to both the economy of the U.S. and to world peace. Overall, the Department of Defense as the coordinator for anything that falls under “national security” is responsible for openly killing millions and eviscerating the Constitution … and there is no sign that they are letting up any time soon.

Honorable Mention

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) – annual budget $3 billion

This agency falls under HHS, but the video below demonstrates a special level of corruption and worthlessness that is humorous, except for the fact that it represents a staggering level of taxpayer looting, despite the small size of the agency (537 people). It is a microcosm of what we only can imagine going on within the larger agencies, especially those with less oversight.

 

The government’s track record for permitting massive looting of the economy in collusion with the private banking sector; the upcoming collusion with the insurance industry and Big Pharma to change the landscape of healthcare; their collusion with private contractors to implement a prison-industrial complex; their unconstitutional war machine, and their history of secret human experiments makes government the single greatest terrestrial danger we face. In the 20th century alone, governments across the world outright murdered 290 million people, known as democide. How many more must have fallen to covert means and bureaucratic ineptitude? How many more will follow?

There is so much more that could have been mentioned about the dangers of the agencies listed above. Do you have other facts to document? How would you rank these agencies? Would you like to add an agency to the above list? Please do so in the comment section.

 

On going DENIAL OF CARE .. going on in FLORIDA ?

(Credit: Thinkstock)

State Looks At Pill Mill Regs Causing “Pharmacy Crawl”

http://miami.cbslocal.com/2015/09/16/state-looks-at-pill-mill-regs-causing-pharmacy-crawl/

TALLAHASSEE (CBSMiami) – Chris Young is a lifelong gun enthusiast, but his wife Lesley got rid of his rifles not long after the couple moved back to Florida nearly two years ago.

She was afraid of what her wheelchair-bound husband might do to himself once the Youngs found themselves among the throng of other patients forced to do the “pharmacy crawl” to get pain medications ordered by doctors.

Chris Young, a former mechanic, was crushed “like an accordion” a decade ago when a car he was standing beneath fell off its lift. Almost completely paralyzed, Young still experiences tremendous pain in his legs, for which his doctors have prescribed a number of narcotic drugs.

Young’s struggle to get prescriptions filled, however, is nearly identical to the plight of patients across Florida who need medication to cope with severe pain. The dilemma has reached such proportions that the Florida Board of Pharmacy’s Controlled Substances Standards Committee is holding a series of meetings in an attempt to figure out what can be done. The panel will meet Monday in Tallahassee.

With Florida having the dubious distinction of being branded the “pill mill capital” of the country, Florida lawmakers in 2011 — at the urging of Attorney General Pam Bondi — imposed strict regulations on doctors and pharmacies about dispensing highly addictive pain medications. The effort was aimed at shutting down rogue clinics that had popped up in areas like South Florida and had drawn addicts and traffickers from states hundreds of miles away.

Around the same time, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration targeted pharmacies and distributors that contributed to the problem by allowing powerful narcotics to get into the hands of unscrupulous doctors and dealers.

But now, many doctors, patients and even pharmacists wonder if the pendulum has swung too far in the other direction.

Last year, Lesley Young traveled to more than a dozen Jacksonville-area pharmacies before finding one that would fill her husband’s prescriptions.

Suzy Carpenter, diagnosed with Stage IV breast cancer, spent three days pleading with pharmacists at 13 drug stores before she received her pain medication.

And three pharmacies rejected 4-year-old Aiden Lopez’s prescriptions for narcotics after the tot underwent surgery for kidney cancer.

A handful of patients have committed suicide because no one would fill their prescriptions, according to doctors who testified at the Board of Pharmacy committee’s last meeting.

Other patients have turned to social media to spread the word. Some, like Lesley Young, are showing up at the meetings in tears, begging for help.

They’re tired of being treated like drug addicts.

“You try and dress nice. You go into the drug store and speak well, and they look at you and say what do you need all this medication for and fling (the prescription) back at you,” Young said. “It’s humiliating.”

Who’s responsible for the problem, and how to fix it, is complicated.

Pharmacists offer a litany of reasons for refusing to fill prescriptions.

They don’t have the medicines in stock. They’re worried about running out of the medications and leaving their longtime patients empty-handed. They’re obeying mandates handed down by corporations like Walgreens and CVS. Or they’re afraid of being caught in a net cast by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency that has shuttered 13 Florida pharmacies since 2011.

Physicians complain that pharmacists are second-guessing their decisions, demanding that health care professionals provide the results of MRIs or other tests while questioning drug orders.

“You have some pharmacists that are just out of control with their assessment,” said Charles Friedman, a Pinellas County physician who is certified with the American Board of Anesthesiology and the American Board of Addiction Medicine.

Friedman said he frequently is grilled by pharmacists, who are required by law to call prescribers if they believe that a prescription may be fraudulent.

“Can you give me his diagnosis? Do you have MRI scans? When was their physical examination? Have you tried other modalities of care?” Friedman said. “It’s like a whole laundry list of questions they ask you. They’re a pharmacist. They’re not really trained in making a clinical assessment. … I think they’re really walking outside of the box and stretching out beyond their expertise.”

Florida Medical Association General Counsel Jeff Scott, who did the “pharmacy crawl” in Tallahassee in an attempt to locate pain medication for his elderly father, is even more direct.

“(Pharmacists) need to fill the damn prescription,” Scott, whose father was diagnosed with cancer, said. “If a doctor orders it, they need to fill it. Period. Unless they have reason to believe it’s fraudulent.”

At a meeting of the pharmacy board committee last month, Susan Langston, the Drug Enforcement Administration’s divergent program manager for the Miami Field Division, called 4-year-old Aiden Lopez’s story “deeply troubling.”

The DEA’s Miami staff “is horrified to hear the heartbreaking stories of cancer patients, hospice patients, surgery patients and legitimate pain patients being forced to endure needless suffering,” Langston said. “This has to stop, and it has to stop now.”

Langston, who delivered lengthy prepared remarks, insisted that her agency isn’t trying to keep pharmacists from doling out medicines to legitimate patients.

“In watching for suspicious activities we are not asking pharmacists to be medical doctors. We are not asking them to review medical records, MRI reports or to diagnose a patient. We simply want pharmacists to be aware that there is an epidemic of pharmaceutical drug abuse in this country and to use their education, experience, professional judgment, ethics and common sense to not knowingly participate in this national health crisis,” she said.

But, three years after Walgreens agreed to pay an $80 million fine for violations regarding distribution and dispensing of highly addictive narcotics, Florida Pharmacy Association Executive Director Michael Jackson acknowledged that pharmacists are scared.

Pharmacists are experiencing “some real, real fear,” Jackson, a member of the controlled substances committee, said at a meeting in June. “We need to find ways of overcoming that fear and fixing that anxiety.”

Two months later, the DEA’s Langston tried to quell those concerns.

“I want to make myself perfectly clear. Pharmacists do not need to fear the DEA when they use their professional judgment, experience, education, training and common sense to fill legitimate prescriptions,” she said at the August meeting.

Part of the problem may rest in Florida’s history as the country’s “pill mill capital.”

“Addicts have brought us to this point,” Melissa Ramba, a lobbyist for the Florida Retail Federation, which represents pharmacy chains like Walgreens, told the panel in June.

Doctors aren’t required to consult the state’s prescription-drug monitoring program, the database that contains all of the prescriptions for controlled substances. About 10 percent of physicians use the program, according to the latest data provided by the Department of Health. Nearly half of the state’s pharmacists have consulted the database, the records show.

Florida’s law should require doctors to check the database prior to writing prescriptions, Ramba said. That would give pharmacists “some comfort” in filling the orders and “help move the needle on this issue,” she said.

But the Florida Medical Association vehemently opposed forcing doctors to use the database, and it is unlikely that lawmakers will approve such a requirement without the support of the powerful lobbying group.

In the meantime, Jackson’s association, which represents independent pharmacies, held a summit last weekend to educate about 150 pharmacists and pharmacy technicians about state laws and rules regarding controlled substances.

The Board of Pharmacy’s committee agreed last month to open up the 2002 “Standards of Practice for Dispensing of Controlled Substances for the Treatment of Pain” for possible revision.

That’s the first step in addressing the problem, according to Jackson.

The rule contains “red flags” for pharmacists, including whether a patient frequently “loses” drugs; only has prescriptions for controlled substances; has more than one name; has the same drug prescribed by two or more doctors at the same time; and pays only in cash.

Also of concern is a state law that includes a trigger for distributors to examine retailers who order more than 5,000 dosage units per month of controlled substances. While the 5,000 dosage units are only a trigger, some pharmacies may be treating it as a cap, according to testimony from the committee’s previous two meetings.

Bondi, who has made prescription drug abuse a signature issue since taking office in 2011, called the plight of legitimate patients heartbreaking. But she balked at the idea of eliminating the 5,000 dosage unit trigger.

“If they’re not doing anything wrong, they shouldn’t have a concern about it,” she said. “What I know is that we cannot return to the days when seven Floridians were dying each day due to prescription drug overdoses. I also know there are credible reports of people with legitimate pain who aren’t able to get their prescriptions filled. My heart goes out to them.”

The News Service of Florida’s Dara Kam contributed to this report.

epidural corticosteroid injections…some early improvements in patient outcomes, but the effects were small and not sustained

Steroid Injections for Low Back Pain Looking Worse

http://www.rheumatologynetwork.com/arthritis/steroid-injections-low-back-pain-looking-worse#sthash.1D2XCgLM.dpuf

The use of steroid injections for low back pain is increasing, even though the evidence supporting it is declining.

A newly published review and meta-analysis of the evidence for epidural corticosteroid injections for radiculopathy has found some early improvements in patient outcomes, but the effects were small and not sustained. The epidural corticosteroid injections had no clear effects in patients with spinal stenosis, wrote the authors of the review which appears in the Aug. 24 issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine.

“Limited evidence suggests that epidural corticosteroid injections are not effective for spinal stenosis,” wrote the authors who were led by Roger Chou, MD, of Health and Science University in Portland, Ore.

Chou and colleagues conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of data from Ovid MEDLINE (through May 2015), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, prior systematic reviews and reference lists.

Their review is based on 30 placebo-controlled trials that were evaluated for epidural corticosteroid injections for radiculopathy and eight trials for spinal stenosis. For radiculopathy, epidural corticosteroids were associated with greater immediate-term improvement in pain (weighted mean difference on a scale of 0 to 100, -7.55 [95% CI, -11.4 to -3.74]; SOE, moderate) and function (standardized mean difference after exclusion of an outlier trial, -0.33 [CI, -0.56 to -0.09]; SOE, low), and short-term surgery risk (relative risk, 0.62 [CI, 0.41 to 0.92]; SOE, low).

The effects were below predefined minimum clinically important difference thresholds, and there were no longer-term benefits. Limited evidence showed no clear effects of technical factors, patient characteristics, or comparator interventions on estimates. There were no clear effects of epidural corticosteroid injections for spinal stenosis (SOE, low to moderate). Serious harms were rare, but harms reporting was suboptimal (SOE, low).

“Our findings are consistent with those of several recent systematic reviews, despite variability in the studies included and methods used for data synthesis and meta-analysis,” the authors wrote. “In conclusion, epidural corticosteroid injections for radiculopathy are associated with immediate improvements in pain and might be associated with immediate improvements in function, but benefits are small and are not sustained, and there is no effect on long-term
surgery risk. Evidence did not suggest that effectiveness varies on the basis of the approach used, corticosteroid, dose, or comparator. Limited evidence suggested that epidural orticosteroid injections are not effective for spinal stenosis.”