We care… just not all that much?

Patients Impacted by Dispensing Errors: Callous Response From Pharmacists

When patients report dispensing errors to ISMP, they are usually
more upset about the response they received when contacting the
pharmacist or pharmacy manager than the actual error itself. All too
often, consumers tell ISMP that pharmacy staff have responded in a
callous manner when confronted with the possibility of a dispensing
error, demonstrating a lack of empathy and concern for the adverse
effects the patient might have experienced. While pharmacy staff may
want to be more responsive to patients who report errors, they are
often following corporate policies that are focused on legal concerns.
As patients are continually encouraged to be active participants in
their health care, they want and deserve honest disclosure of errors,
and knowledge that there is an action plan to reduce the risk of it
happening again.

“Terrified’ Helena physician closes clinic temporarily

“Terrified’ Helena physician closes clinic temporarily

http://www.kxlh.com/story/29963964/terrified-helena-physician-closes-clinic-temporarily?config=H264

HELENA – Helena doctor Mark Ibsen, battling a state investigation of his prescribing practices for more than two years, is closing his Helena clinic, Urgent Care Plus, for at least a week because of what he calls a witch hunt against doctors who treat pain with narcotics. 

A note on the door of the clinic says it will reopen September 12. 

But Ibsen says he will not prescribe pain medications — and would feel ethically obligated to treat the pain if he met with the patients. 

“I’ve got to make myself totally unavailable,” he said. “I can’t see pain patients unless I’m safe.” 

In June, a state hearing examiner rejected charges from the Montana Board of Medical Examiners alleging over-prescribing by Ibsen for nine patients; but the matter still awaits final adjudication from the board. 

The examiner said Ibsen’s only violations involved record-keeping, and recommended six months of probation for Ibsen’s license, plus corrective action. 

But despite what appears to be vindication of the drug charges, Ibsen said Friday he’s “terrified” by the current “regulatory hostility” in the state and by the arrest of Dr. Chris Christensen, a Florence doctor charged last week with 400 felonies

Christensen’s office was raided by U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents in 2014, and his license was suspended thereafter, before being recently restored in a probationary status. 

“They reinstated Dr. Christensen’s license, and 10 days later the authorities came to arrest him,” he said. 

Ibsen sees that as a trap and suggested he’s afraid he might be next. 

He said that two years ago, agents with the DEA told him he risked not only his license but also his freedom for prescribing “to patients like these.” 

Ibsen, formerly an emergency physician at St. Peter’s Hospital in Helena, has become an advocate for people with chronic pain, and a critic of the medical establishment’s treatment of those with pain. 

He has recorded testimony of numerous patients who say they’ve been given a runaround from physicians, were treated like criminals, and came to him in desperation. 

He says he’s helped more than 1,000 patients — many of them “pain refugees” from other doctors, including Christensen — wean themselves from opiates (many by using medical marijuana); others, he says, remain on medications so they are able to lead functional lives. 

He said prosecutors in Florida are seeking the death penalty for a doctor facing charges similar to that of Christensen, and he finds the turn of events terrifying and exhausting. 

“In Montana it’s just not safe to prescribe any pain pills to anybody,” he said. “I think the stakes have become higher, and my well-being is at stake.” 

Ibsen said he too thought Christensen was a criminal when he first heard of the raid of his office by the DEA and suspension of his license in 2014. 

But he changed that view as many of Christensen’s patients came to him. 

“When I started following his patients, I saw that he was doing the right thing,” he said. “And I’m probably the only one who would know that.” 

He said that genetically, some patients metabolize the drugs much more quickly, and may need as much as 10 times the normal dosage for pain medication to be effective. 

That explains some of the reports of Christensen prescribing seemingly large amounts of pills, he said. 

Ibsen said the stress of the clinic hours, the complexity of the pain patients, the financial hardship, and the fear for his freedom has led him to this point. 

“I’m fried, he said. “I ‘m just basically melting after seeing 50 pain patients. It’s exhausting and I don’t know that I’m doing anybody any good by continuing the process. I might just be enabling a sick system to continue itself.” 

Ibsen has long maintained — and several patients have agreed — that for many he is the only doctor left in the community willing to prescribe opioids. He said many of them will be in crisis, and possibly seek medications illegally. 

“Pain patients are going to be in misery,” he said. “They were in misery when they came to me.” 

He says he’s told them for some time he cannot maintain the pace of seeing pain patients while losing money. 

“The more I work, the more broke I get,” he said. 

He said that Thursday, he and his staff met to discuss the issue: “They let me know in no uncertain terms how stressed they are, how afraid they are, how overwhelmed they are from the flood of pain patients that have come to them,” he said. 

Despite his commitment to no longer prescribe opioids for chronic pain patient, he said he hopes the clinic will “re-boot” after the hiatus.

Drug abuse is a threat to national security ?

http://video.foxnews.com/v/4464740740001/acting-dea-chief-speaks-out-about-the-heroin-epidemic/?#sp=show-clips

According to the head of the DEA… “drug abuse” AKA “black market created by Congress” is a threat to national security.  It has been too many years since my 3 hrs of Logic class in college… but.. I will substitute common sense…

So Congress created the black market for illegal opiates and MJ in 1914 with the Harrison Narcotic Act..  which the criminal element in society was more than happy to fulfill the demand for these substances… now it is estimated that some/much of the profits from these criminal elements are being funneled back into terrorists groups.. that are trying to harm/kill us.

So we are now fighting two wars … war on drugs.. and war on terrorists… largely due in part to the racist/bigoted/opiophobic mindset of Congress 100 yrs ago.

Remember… there is no required educational requirements, credentialing, experience or basically NO REQUIREMENTS to be elected to be a member of Congress. Some days, it is like the blind reading to the deft 🙁

 

The common denominator in DEAth

deathbadge

When you stand back from all the SHOUTING… you basically have three groups in the war on drugs… those who need controlled meds for necessary medical condition, those who have a mental health medical condition (Addictive personality) that are attempting to self-medicate the demons in their head and/or monkeys on their back and the DEAth.

Here is a recent article about a area with a population of 200,000 had http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/the-heroin-epidemics-toll-one-county-70-minutes-eight-overdoses/2015/08/23/f616215e-48bc-11e5-846d-02792f854297_story.html EIGHT OVERDOSES in 70 MINUTES  and 25 over TWO DAYS.

The reason behinds these peoples’ deaths is not just their abuse of Heroin alone, but because they were buying – off the street – Heroin that had been “boosted” with a form of fentanyl. That they were probably not expecting and didn’t compensate on how much of this cocktail that they “shot up”.

This type of unanticipated deaths often galvanize the relatives/loved ones to organize around and aligning with the DEA in fighting the black market that Congress created in 1914 and the subsequent “war on drugs” that Congress declared in 1970.

At the same time we have untold millions of chronic pain pts and others with subjective diseases that are being forced to be house, chair or bed confined because of lack of being able to find a prescriber that will adequately prescribe the necessary medication for fear of the DEAth.  Many are also suffering from other health issues that are predominately caused by their untreated subjective disease.  Untold number are dying from these co-morbidity issues and/or end up committing suicide because they can no longer deal with their diseases’ manifestations.  Perhaps, many are driven to buying drugs off the street in attempting to deal with their medical issues, and may end up dying because of them getting their hands on more opiates than they had intended.

We have always had some portion (1%-2%) of the population that is/has abused some substance .. other than alcohol and tobacco . The war on drugs after 45 years has not changed/stopped that portion of the population from abusing some substances.

Other countries have decriminalized/legalized the use of many/most/all drugs with a responding reduction in over dosed deaths.

Should those groups, who have lost loved ones to abusing opiates/substances, and have aligned themselves with the DEAth’s war on drugs. Should they rather be allies of those fighting for proper treatment of their subjective diseases rather than adversaries. Because the same subjective diseases is what caused their loved ones’ to lose/take their life.. and the DEAth is the primary agency behind all that denial of care for those with subjective diseases.   IMO.. those two groups have more in common than they have differences …

England’s NHS has placed a $$$ on the value of a life ?

Life-extending cancer drugs to be axed by NHS

http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/sep/03/life-extending-cancer-drugs-to-be-axed-by-nhs

NHS England de-lists costly Kadcyla drug, among 16 others, in wake of ‘overspent’ Cancer Drugs Fund

New and costly cancer drugs developed to extend the lives of patients are expected to be axed on Friday from an NHS list. Among the drugs NHS England is expected to “de-list” from the Cancer Drugs Fund is Kadcyla, which holds the record as the most expensive cancer drug brought to market, costing £90,000 annually per patient.

Kadcyla, made by Roche, was rejected from general NHS use by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice), the body that assesses new medicines for their cost-effectiveness.

Nice agreed the drug was effective for women whose advanced breast cancer no longer responded to Herceptin, but its chief executive, Sir Andrew Dillon, was outspoken about the “unacceptable” price tag. “We had hoped that Roche would have recognized the challenge the NHS faces in managing the adoption of expensive new treatments by reducing the cost of Kadcyla to the NHS,” Dillon said in April 2014.
Who should I vote for in the Labour leadership election?
More than 400 women are able to take the drug, which can extend life by six months, because it is funded by the Cancer Drugs Fund, which was set up by the coalition government. The fund was a political response to the furore that broke out whenever Nice turned down a new cancer drug.

But the fund is now overspent. It was launched as a £200m-a-year fund in 2011, but by January this year it was on course to reach £380m a year. The government announced more money, which has brought it to £340m a year, but NHS England at the same time moved to shrink the list.

NHS England this March axed 16 drugs involved in 35 different cancer treatments (some drugs are used in more than one cancer), though at least one was reinstated after the manufacturer agreed to lower the cost.

Patients now using drugs that are de-listed will continue to get them, but new patients will not. According to Roche, 1,300 women a year could benefit from Kadcyla.

Breast cancer charities and the patients agree that Kadcyla (generic name, trastuzumab emtansine) is effective and the last hope for women with a certain type of advanced breast cancer. A second Roche breast cancer drug, Avastin, is also thought to be under threat, although it does not have the same life-extending efficacy as Kadcyla. Most of the drugs threatened with de-listing add only a few weeks of life for those with terminal cancers.
In May, a group of experts from the European Society for Medical Oncology said that many modern cancer drugs were of very little benefit to patients. They published a scoring system, unconnected with cost, which showed that many did not extend or improve people’s lives for very long.

Roche pre-empted criticism of its prices with a video on YouTube in which its medical director, Daniel Thurley, and director, Deborah Lancaster, said the fund had been hugely successful, enabling thousands of patients to get access to cancer drugs. Lancaster said the financial problems of the fund arose from the great demand for the drugs “because they are so effective”. The pair said they were still talking to NHS England.

NHS England has said that the fund will be replaced, but discussions over the mechanism to be put in its place continue. The fund has always been a political hot potato. Labour is expected to capitalise on the de-listing announcement and accuse the government of betraying cancer patients and backtracking on pledges to keep supporting the fund.

Labour will stress that the Tories’ general election manifesto stated: “We will continue to invest in our lifesaving Cancer Drugs Fund.” As recently as June, George Freeman, the life sciences minister at the Department of Health, told MPs that the government had “committed to continuing to invest in the fund”.

Texas: Med Board lets DEA sneak peeks at patient records

fishing

Texas: Med Board lets DEA sneak peeks at patient records

http://watchdog.org/236858/dea-medical-board/

The Drug Enforcement Administration has been sifting through hundreds of supposedly private medical files, looking for Texas doctors and patients to prosecute without the use of warrants.

Instead, the agents are tricking doctors and nurses into thinking they’re with the Texas Medical Board. When that doesn’t work, they’re sending doctors subpoenas demanding medical records without court approval.

The DEA can’t even count how many times it has resorted to the practice nationwide. A spokesman estimated it was in the thousands.

But, as a legal brief filed last week points out, lawyers for the federal government can’t find a single case in which a court has “authorized the use of such a broad array of patient information with such a sparse record as to why it needs such information.”

Earlier this year, a federal judge in Texas did just that, setting up a showdown in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals over whether the DEA needs a reason to go rummaging through private medical records in search of pill mills and prescription drug abusers.

Without the legalese, the issue is simple: How good a reason does the DEA need to get access to medical records? The DEA doesn’t think it needs much of one.

Attorneys for Dallas-area doctors Joseph and Abbas Zadeh argue “the DEA should not be allowed to circumvent the requirements of a warrant, and should be required to show probable cause.” Failing that, they should at least have to justify their intrusions to a judge who’s acting as more than a rubber stamp.

The DEA’s practice of avoiding warrant requirements has produced this absurdity: If you have a prescription for Adderall or OxyContin, you might be safer getting your drugs on the street than through your own doctor.

Street dealers, after all, don’t keep patient records, and they’re afforded more constitutional protections than medical practitioners. That is, cops still need a warrant to search them.

In Texas, the DEA’s criminal investigators do an end run around the Constitution’s warrant requirements by getting the Texas Medical Board to order doctors to open their records.

In that 5th Circuit case that’s about to set an important precedent, DEA agents spent hours examining private medical records after tricking a nurse into believing they were with the Medical Board.

The trick was easy. Three DEA agents showed up at a Dallas doctor’s office accompanied by a medical board investigator who told the nurse “they were with the Texas State Medical Board,” according to a deposition in the case. “The other three persons along with her kept silent.”

Mari Robinson, the medical board’s executive director, testified last year in a legislative hearing that her agency does that sort of thing 20 to 40 times a year, but it took some grilling by state Rep. Bill Zedler, R – Arlington, to get that out of her.

“How many times do you show up (at a doctor’s office) with the DEA and not tell ‘em that the DEA is with you,” Zedler asked Robinson at a Sept. 24 hearing.

“I’m not sure what you mean by that,” Robinson said.

“Well, I mean that when they show up, they say, ‘We’re with the Texas Medical Board.’ Period.”

“That is what we do for our part,” Robinson said. “The DEA has its own responsibility.”

Zedler gave an example almost identical to the facts in the Zadeh lawsuit: Medical board investigators got the DEA two hours’ access to confidential medical records through misrepresenting who they were; when the doctor’s lawyer showed up demanding to see some ID’s, the party ended.

“You don’t find that an unconstitutional search through fraudulent non-disclosure,” Zedler demanded. “Did your investigators not know that they had DEA agents with them?”

There wasn’t “anything that we did” that could be unconsidered unconstitutional, Robinson answered, but she couldn’t speak for the DEA.

It turned out that each of the 20 to 40 times a year medical investigators turn up unannounced demanding to see records they’re actually working with the DEA.

The problem is this: The medical board has authority to issue “administrative subpoenas,” as they’re called, because it’s in the business of administering the medical industry. The DEA isn’t. It’s in the business of criminal investigations, which can be hindered by the Fourth Amendment.

The entire apparatus of administrative law is something of a shadow government grafted onto a constitutional system back in the New Deal era, and this shadow government has few safeguards. Rather than checks and balances, the regulatory state is characterized by agencies that handle all the investigation, prosecution, adjudication and appeals in-house, with little interference from other bodies.

The DEA has noticed how convenient it is simply to write a letter demanding all the evidence one might need. So in some cases, such as the Zadeh’s, where the initial subterfuge fails, the DEA simply writes the doctors its own administrative subpoena, even though, by its own admission, it’s looking for evidence in potential criminal cases against doctors and patients.

All too often, the doctors behave much like the telecom companies who were pressured by the National Security Administration to share customer records.

In fact, there are so few cases of doctors actually fighting back the government’s lawyers are building their argument on a case from 1950 in which regulators got access to the financial records of the Morton Salt Co.

RELATED: Texas Medical Board considers arming itself

In 2014, a federal court in Oregon agreed with the American Civil Liberties Union that a database of prescriptions was protected by medical privacy rights, and the DEA would need a warrant to access it.

That expectation of privacy will also factor into the decision before the 5th Circuit. Unlike some privacy rights, this one is no novelty.

Arguing on behalf of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, attorney Andrew Schlafly points out that patient privacy dates back 2,500 years to the Hippocratic Oath, which states, “All that may come to my knowledge in the exercise of my profession… which ought not to be spread abroad, I will keep secret and never reveal.”

The 5th Circuit may not decide to impose a standard of “probable cause” on law enforcement, but any standard of evidence would be an improvement on nothing, which is what investigators apparently have on the Zadehs.

Zedler has examined volumes of secret Medical Board records under his legislative privilege, and although he’s sworn to secrecy about them, he said during the hearing the medical board had confirmed the Zadehs weren’t running pill mills, and that there was “zero evidence of non-therapeutic prescribing.”

Yet a federal court upheld the subpoenas based on vague testimony from a DEA investigator that “(i)nformation developed in that investigation indicated (that) Dr. Joseph Zadeh (and Dr. Abbas Zadeh)… may have violated” the law.

That little phrase illustrates the difference between typical law enforcement and whatever the DEA is up to here.

Cops don’t swear that “information developed.” They tell the judge what it is if they want their warrant signed.

Contact Jon Cassidy at jon@watchdog.org or @jpcassidy000.

September is national suicide prevention month

40,000 people will commit suicide very year in the USA, including 22 veteran every day.

ONE MILLION people ATTEMPT suicide every year.

 

September is Chronic Pain Awareness Month

US retailers lose about 1.5% to shoplifting… the drug cartels lose abt 1% to the DEA’s enforcement actions… and we are winning the war after 45 yrs ?

Embedded image permalink

For every ton of cocaine the DEA seized en route to the US, up to 100 more made it through undetected

US retailers lose about 1.5% to shoplifting… the drug cartels lose abt 1% to the DEA’s enforcement actions… and we are winning the war after 45 yrs ?

 

When pained lives are pushed to “end it all “

This is a comment that was made on this post on my blog

Do some lives matter more than others ?

IMO, this brings home the point as to the physical/mental desperation that some chronic painers have reached, who have been denied pain management or provided some “token doses” to treat their otherwise debilitating pain.  This is no small minority in our society.  I did not want this person’s story to be just a comment or “foot note” that may have otherwise gone unnoticed.

I have Adhesive Arachnoiditis, CRPS and a host of diagnoses that cause constant, debilitating pain. At 31 years old, I was on a small dose of Vicodin, antidepressants (low dose for neurogenic pain), Gabapentin, Flexeril and NSAIDS. At this point, I’d been living with this pain for four years. I now know that I was horribly under medicated for my condition. I wrote a clear note as to why I was leaving, left my drivers’ license with organ donor status and called 911 with the hope that my organs could be preserved for donation. I was outside and put the gun to my brain stem. At that moment, I was tackled by a neighbor who’d overheard my brief call to 911.
Had I been successful in my attempt, I have little doubt that my death would have been documented as Opiod related or R/T “Opiod use disorder” rather than unrelenting physical pain.
I have little doubt that suicides resulting from Chronic Pain are oft reported as Opiod related deaths, fueling the misleading data on the number of deaths related to “drugs” weather they are legally prescribed and being taken as directed or not.
In my County, no matter the cause of death, if Opiates are in the system of the deceased, the death is automatically recorded as drug related. HOW is this fair, accurate or providing accurate information about drug related deaths? It seems to me it aids those who wish to ban pain relieving medications for all but cancer patients, those working in the drug and alcohol treatment field and the DEA.
People living with pain that is oft more severe than cancer pain do not seem to matter in the U.S.A.
Pained lives DO matter.