Benefits in chronic pain patients with dysphagia outweigh safety concerns from food effect

FDA Panel Likes New Abuse-Deterrent Opioid

http://www.medpagetoday.com/Neurology/PainManagement/53528?xid=nl_mpt_DHE_2015-09-14&eun=g578717d0r

WASHINGTON — In a second joint meeting of two FDA advisory committees, all 23 panelists voted unanimously to approve an abuse-deterrent formulation of extended-release oxycodone (Xtampza).

Panelists felt that the new formulation, which is comprised of tiny microspheres of drug collected inside a capsule, would pose a significant advantage for the large number of chronic pain patients who have difficulty swallowing pills — without any additional safety risk posed by the need to take the drug with food.

Giving dysphagia patients opioids has been a challenge with other abuse-deterrent products because these properties prevent crushing, a common route of abuse. The new capsule, on the other hand, can be opened and sprinkled into food or delivered via feeding tube.

“Overall I think this is not only an incremental advance, but a step forward from the available products we have,” said panelist Sharon Walsh, PhD, of the University of Kentucky.

“A large number of patients are going to take this drug because they have swallowing disorders, and it will become the go-to drug,” said panelist Raeford Brown, MD, also of the University of Kentucky. “It’s an advance in abuse-deterrence and I think we will see a meaningful reduction in abuse with this drug.”

Drugmaker Collegium Pharmaceuticals presented evidence from pharmacokinetic studies as well as a phase III randomized controlled trial, both of which suggested that the drug would be hard to abuse via the intranasal or intravenous routes.

Those studies did, however, show that Xtampza’s bioavailability is increased when taken with food. Panelists did express concerns that fluctuations in oxycodone blood levels could occur if patients weren’t careful about how they took the drug, but ultimately they were reassured by safety data from the clinical study.

“The phase III study was well conducted, there was efficacy based on pain scores across meals, and the low rate of adverse events suggests the food effect is forgiving and unlikely to be of major clinical significance,” said panelist Brian Bateman, MD, of Harvard.

That conclusion differed vastly from Thursday’s joint meeting of the Anesthetic and Analgesic Drug Products Advisory Committee and the Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee, which evaluated Purdue Pharma’s abuse-deterrent, immediate-release oxycodone formulation. That drug had the opposite problem — it had diminished bioavailability when taken with food. Panelists were so concerned that patients would take the drug incorrectly — potentially leading to overdose if they took too much from not feeling an immediate response if taken with food — that they voted nearly unanimously (23 to 1) against approval.

The FDA said it initially advised Collegium to reformulate the product to avoid the food effect, but its final version was still susceptible to increased bioavailability with food, so the agency recommended the additional clinical studies to demonstrate safety when taken with food.

If approved, Xtampza will join four other abuse-deterrent extended-release opioids on the market, including three from Purdue — OxyContin, Targiniq, and Hysingla — and Pfizer’s Embeda.

But Judy Staffa, PhD, RPh, director of epidemiology in the office of pharmacovigilance at the FDA, warned that abuse-deterrent formulations have not yet proven that they diminish opioid abuse in the real world.

 “We have not yet seen data that suggests abuse-deterrent OxyContin makes a significant reduction in abuse,” Staffa cautioned. “The data out there have limitations…. [We’ve seen] premarketing data. The jury is still out as to how abuse-deterrent formulations have done in the real world. We just don’t have the data we’d like to see yet.”

Earlier this year, Purdue Pharma pulled an application and cancelled a related FDA advisory committee meeting that was supposed to evaluate “postmarketing studies evaluating the misuse and/or abuse of reformulated OxyContin” and whether those studies “have demonstrated that the reformulated product has a meaningful impact on abuse.”

“If you don’t choose recovery every single day this will be your only way out,”

I’m sure this photo makes a lot of people uncomfortable it may even piss a few people off but the main reason I took it was to show the reality of addiction. If you don’t choose recovery every single day this will be your only way out. No parent should have to bury their child and no child as young as ours should have to bury their parent. This was preventable it didn’t have to happen but one wrong choice destroyed his family. I know a lot of people may be upset I’m putting it out in the open like This but hiding the facts is only going to keep this epidemic going. The cold hard truth is heroin kills. You may think it will never happen to you but guess what that’s what Mike thought too. We were together 11 years. I was there before it all started. I knew what he wanted out of this life, all his hopes and dreams. He never would’ve imagined his life would turn out this way. He was once so happy and full of life. He was a great son, brother, friend but most importantly he was a great dad. He loved those kids more than anything. But as we all know sometimes life gets tough and we make some wrong choices. His addiction started off with pain pills then inevitably heroin. He loved us all so much he decided enough was enough and went to rehab at the end of last year. He got out right before Christmas as a brand new man. He had found His purpose for living again, he found his gorgeous smile again, he became the man, the son, the brother, the dad that we all needed him to be again. He did so good for so long but then a couple months ago It started with a single pill for a “tooth ache” which inevitably lead him back down the road of addiction instead of staying the coarse of recovery. He said he could handle it, that he could stop on his own and didn’t need to get help again. Well he was wrong, last Wednesday he took his last breath. My kids father, the man I loved since I was a kid, a great son and a great person lost his battle. I just needed to share his story in case it can help anyone else.

Mom’s shocking viral photo shows “reality of addiction”

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/moms-shocking-facebook-instagram-photo-reality-of-addiction/

An Ohio mom is raising awareness on social media of the tragic toll being taken by America’s heroin epidemic.

“I’m sure this photo makes a lot of people uncomfortable it may even piss a few people off but the main reason I took it was to show the reality of addiction,” Eva Holland wrote. The photo, posted on Facebook and Instagram, shows Holland and her two young children posing by the open casket of their father, who died after struggling with heroin and prescription pain pills.

“The cold hard truth is heroin kills. You may think it will never happen to you but guess what that’s what Mike thought too,” she wrote.

Holland said she and Mike had been together 11 years. His addiction problem began, like so many others, with prescription pain pills, and later progressed to heroin. She said he went to rehab late last year and came out “a brand new man.” But after a few months of healthier living, he relapsed over the summer.

“It started with a single pill for a ‘tooth ache’ which inevitably lead him back down the road of addiction,” Holland wrote. “He said he could handle it, that he could stop on his own and didn’t need to get help again. Well he was wrong.”

Mike died on September 2, CBS affiliate WTRF reports. Although the coroner has not yet released his official cause of death, Holland is certain it’s connected to his struggle with drugs.

Now, she wrote in another Facebook post, “Lucas will grow up without his dad there cheering him on during his games and Ava will never have her dad walk her down the [aisle].”

Such tragedies are becoming increasingly common. Between 2001 and 2013 there was a five-fold increase in the total number of heroin deaths in the U.S., according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

Over the past decade, heroin use more than doubled among people ages 18 to 25, and the CDC finds those who are addicted to prescription opioid painkillers are 40 times more likely to become addicted to heroin.

“If you don’t choose recovery every single day this will be your only way out,” Holland wrote. “I just needed to share his story in case it can help anyone else.”

Suicide rates highest among oldest Montanans

Suicide rates highest among oldest Montanans

http://m.helenair.com/news/state-and-regional/suicide-rates-highest-among-oldest-montanans/article_abd31634-680d-11e2-ae6b-0019bb2963f4.html?mobile_touch=true

BILLINGS — Some live with punishing chronic pain.

Some have lost physical function, or no longer have cognitive ability. Some have lost their lifelong spouse.

They are lonely, bored and depressed.

They are Montana’s senior citizens.

While they seem like the least likely candidates, the elderly are killing themselves with greater regularity than any other age group in Montana. That’s also true across the country, eroding the myth that teens run the highest risk of suicide.

Even though in 2010 the elderly, those 65 and older, made up 13 percent of the country’s population, they accounted for nearly 15.6 percent of all suicides, according to the American Association of Suicidology.

By the year 2025, nearly one in four Montanans will have surpassed the age of 65, jumping from about 100,000 now to 240,000. In fact, Montana is already projected to rank fourth in the nation in percentage of seniors by 2015.

And it’s an increasingly vulnerable population. One senior citizen committed suicide every 90 minutes in the U.S., or about 16 each day, resulting in 5,994 suicides among those 65 and older.

In Montana in 2010, at least 41 Montanans over age 65 killed themselves, according to the Montana Office of Vital Statistics. This gives Montana a rate of approximately 25 suicides per 100,000 elderly, outpacing the national rate, which is about 15 suicides per 100,000 elderly.

The statistics play out every day in real time. As recently as Jan. 3, Billings police responded to a report of a 65-year-old Billings woman who hanged herself in her garage.

In Montana, the rates of suicide are highest among those ages 55-65. That’s a group referred to as the “young-old,” those who are not quite elderly, but not middle-age either.

During 2010 and 2011, a total of at least 91 “young-old” Montanans killed themselves. More Montanans in this age group committed suicide than any other segment of the population, including teenagers.

The primary issue involved with elderly suicide is undiagnosed and untreated depression, which is not a normal part of the aging process, said Karl Rosston, suicide prevention coordinator for the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services. Depression is characterized by sadness, loss of interest, sleep disturbances, loss of appetite and loss of energy.

“Add the Montana issue of isolation, and you have a major issue,” Rosston said.

The tragedy is that good treatments are available for depression, said Dr. Yeates Conwell, a professor at the University of Rochester who researches suicide among the elderly. The issue isn’t addressed for several reasons, including that older people tend not to talk about their mood. They tend to focus on their aches and pains and get limited time in the doctor’s office.

Americans get an average of 18 minutes with their primary care physician during each visit. Getting to the emotional state, underlying sadness and hopelessness, is often very difficult for the primary care doctor, Conwell said, especially when they are caring for someone with numerous medical conditions and medications.

Primary care doctors are critical in helping prevent suicide among the elderly because older people, especially older men, are reluctant to seek out and accept mental health services. But they are often seen by family doctors and nurses within days or weeks prior to killing themselves, Conwell told The Billings Gazette.

Seventy-five percent of suicide victims 55 and older visited a general physician in the month before the suicide. In fact, 20 percent see a general physician on the same day they kill themselves and 41 percent within a week.

“That’s one of the important lessons that teach us where we ought to be looking to help most,” Conwell said.

There is also a stigma attached with having depression in the elderly, said Dr. Patricia Coon, a geriatrician at Billings Clinic. Many elderly do not believe they suffer from depression or they don’t believe medicine is going to help.

“They think if they go see a psychiatrist they’ve got to be crazy or loony,” Coon said. “This is the group that fought World War II, came home very stoic and lived through the Great Depression. To them, it’s a sign of weakness to have a psychiatric illness.”

Even if they choose to see a psychiatrist, there are so few mental health professionals in Montana that patients can wait anywhere from two weeks to three months or longer to see a psychiatrist. In some corners of the state, there is one psychiatrist serving an immense multicounty area.

Other common risk factors among the elderly include the recent death of a spouse, loss of physical function, loss of cognitive ability, physical illness, uncontrollable chronic pain or the fear of a prolonged illness, perceived poor health, social isolation and loneliness. Major changes in social roles also play a role, such as retirement, loss of driving privileges, or loss of financial independence.

Some survive on meager fixed incomes and have incurred debt. They have no way of paying those bills and carry a tremendous sense of guilt. They feel as though they are shirking their responsibilities.

“They can get the feeling they are a sustained burden on others, particularly members of the family, like offspring, even grandchildren,” said Dr. Don Harr, who practiced psychiatry in Billings for decades. “They feel it’s a duty to cease being a burden on others.”

Social issues, financial woes and medical problems are ubiquitous, but there is no single reason that older people kill themselves, said Conwell. Suicide among the elderly is much more complex.

Society tends to discuss suicide in the elderly as an irrational act or an act of self-determination because of a desire to see its parents and senior citizens in the community as in charge, whole and capable, Conwell said. That, however, is not always the case.

“Mental illness is by far the rule,” Conwell said. “It’s the exception that an older person takes their own life without diagnosable psychiatric illness.”

The number of suicides among the elderly is a microcosm of what’s happening in the state overall.

During 2010, at least 227 Montanans took their own lives. Another 225 people committed suicide in 2011. That’s about 22 people per 100,000 residents, nearly twice the national average.

Montana’s suicide rate has ranked in the top five for more than three decades and most recently spiked.

In addition to the unique factors that contribute to elderly suicides, their plight is complicated by some of the same factors that contribute to the state’s overall high rate of suicide: a shortage of mental health professionals and facilities and the prevalence of firearms.

Guns are the favored means of committing suicide among elderly in Montana, which ranks third in the nation for per capita gun possession. In general, men use guns to kill themselves because weapons are more apt to be fatal. Women are more inclined to overdose with oral medication, which makes them more likely to be rescued.

Alcohol or substance abuse plays a diminishing role in later-life suicides compared to suicides among youth.

Although older adults attempt suicide less often than those in other age groups, they have a high completion rate. For all ages combined, there is an estimated one suicide for every 100 to 200 attempts. Over the age of 65, there is one estimated suicide for every four attempted suicides, according to the American Association of Suicidology.

White men over age 85 were at the greatest risk of all age, gender and race groups. In 2012, the national suicide rate for these men was 47 per 100,000, more than twice the current rate for men of all ages.

The rate of suicide for women typically declines after age 60, after peaking from age 45 to 49. Women who become widows are more self-sustaining because of their background in taking care of the home, family and daily activities whereas men relied on the skills they used to work outside the home.

“This adds to their sense of loss of purpose because they are not particularly doing anything they feel is important,” Harr said.

Widowers are especially at high risk because older men, especially of the current generation, rely on their wives to create the social calendar and maintain social connections. When their wives die, the men cease to socially engage. Most men are not ready for retirement. They feel worthless once they stop working and are at a loss as to how to fill the hours. Some become closet consumers of alcohol.

“You don’t think of elderly people abusing alcohol, but they do,” said Coon. “It’s a depressant and increases impulsivity.”

Seniors at high risk of committing suicide have certain personality and behavioral traits that family members and caregivers might notice, including irritability, higher than normal dependency, feelings of helplessness as well as hopelessness, ability to manage crisis and varying degrees of antisocial behavior.

The statistics and known risk factors are only a starting point, Conwell cautioned. One of the challenges is that there is not nearly enough known about the issue, which can be detrimental.

“The tendency is to speculate or oversimplify what, I’m quite sure, is a very complicated process,” Conwell said.

The Drug Enforcement Administration has delivered a message to pharmacists — start filling legitimate pain prescriptions.

DEA addresses prescription access issue

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

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. —The Drug Enforcement Administration has delivered a message to pharmacists — start filling legitimate pain prescriptions. 

WESH 2 News was there for the Florida Pharmacy Association conference in Ft. Lauderdale, a few miles from a South Florida stretch of road once dubbed the “pain corridor of the world.” The DEA addressed fallout from the pill-mill crackdown.

“Those types of pharmacies have nothing to do with legitimate medical needs,” said Susan Langston with the DEA’s Miami field division.

Langston urged a room full of more than 150 pharmacists, to fill legitimate prescriptions.

Related: Pharmacy rejects pain prescription for 4-year-old with cancer

“Not everybody’s going to fit into a checklist, but they still need their prescriptions filled,” Langston said.

The DEA has been blamed by pharmacists, the attorney general, and the governor for the prescription access problem, something the DEA denies.

“As long as you’re doing your job, doing your best and doing what you can not to participate in drug abuse and diversion, then you’re not going to have any problem with the DEA,” Langston said.

Gerald Capek has been a pharmacist for 50 years. He’s turned away legitimate patients because he didn’t have enough pain medication in stock.

WESH 2 News asked Capek if it is frustrating to turn away patients.

“Absolutely,” he replied.

“The wholesalers set arbitrary limits what they’re going to sell to you,” Capek said.

Some pharmacists blame wholesalers for setting quotas on the amount of drugs they’ll sell to pharmacies — a practice the DEA said it has nothing to do with, and has criticized.

All agree something needs to change and the DEA is pledging to help.

A week from today a state subcommittee will meet in Tallahassee. The group is tasked with coming up with ideas, and rule changes, that will help patients with legitimate pain prescriptions get their medication. Those ideas will then be voted on at the Board of Pharmacy meeting next month

cops called because prescription was illegible and not properly filled out ?

Pharmacy prescription pickup gets man arrested with 6 days in jail

The pharmacist didn’t bother contacting the prescriber about illegible and properly filled out Rx.. just called police and the pt is not suing the pharmacist/pharmacy ?

http://www.recordonline.com/article/20150913/NEWS/150919708/101008

  • Posted Sep. 13, 2015 at 7:45 PM
  • A Pennsylvania man has filed a civil rights lawsuit against three Town of Warwick police officers, saying he was unlawfully arrested and prosecuted for having a painkiller prescription filled at a pharmacy.

    Joseph Quattrochi’s lawsuit, filed in the Southern District of New York, also names the Town of Warwick and the Town of Warwick Police Department as defendants.

    The three officers – Michael Moon, Jason Brasier and Felix Oresto – are being sued individually and in their official capacities.

    The allegations stem from a July 3, 2014 incident when Quattrochi, a Tamiment, Pa., resident, came to pick up the painkiller, oxycodone, from the Apple Valley Pharmacy in Warwick. The prescription, written by Dr. Carl Anderson, had been dropped off a couple of days earlier.

    According to the lawsuit, a pharmacy employee had contacted Warwick police and reported that the prescription was illegible and not properly filed.

    After Quattrochi left the pharmacy with the medication, he was stopped by the three officers and arrested for forgery and unlawful possession of a controlled substance.

    Quattrochi told the officers that the prescription was not a forgery and was given by his doctor, the lawsuit says, but he was taken to town court, arraigned and denied bail.

    According to the lawsuit, Quattrochi spent six days in jail and was released July 9 without bail. All charges against him were dismissed Sept. 5.

    The lawsuit says the three officers had a duty to contact Dr. Anderson or take other steps to determine if the prescription was genuine.

    By arresting and prosecuting Quattrochi, the lawsuit says, they deprived him of “his constitutional right to be free from false arrest under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.”

    Warwick police did not return phone calls for comment.

    James Gerstner, deputy supervisor for Warwick, said the town has received the lawsuit and had forwarded paperwork to its attorney and its insurer. 

    Quattrochi is seeking unspecified monetary damages and attorney fees.

    heasley@th-record.com

Basic business plan.. find a need and and customers will beat a path to your door ?

Midwest meth-making down, but Mexican imports fill the void

http://www.columbiatribune.com/news/midwest-meth-making-down-but-mexican-imports-fill-the-void/article_8e7c820e-4311-5ada-bbdd-ca03fc84e520.html

ST. LOUIS (AP) — The manufacture of methamphetamine is sharply down in certain Midwestern states that have had the most trouble with the drug over the years, but it remains as popular as ever with users because of an influx of cheap Mexican imports, experts say.

Laws restricting the sale of an ingredient found in many cold medicines and key to making meth seem to have had their intended effect: The Drug Enforcement Administration does not provide partial-year data on meth lab seizures, but drug fighters in several states that generally register the most meth lab busts say they have seen a startling decline.

Missouri is on pace for 40 percent fewer meth lab seizures this year than last, according to Missouri State Highway Patrol data. Oklahoma busts are on pace to drop 33 percent, and Tennessee’s are down 48 percent.

But the steep decline does not mean users are turning away from the highly addictive drug.

“What we’re hearing throughout the Midwest from our colleagues is they’re all seeing meth labs drop, but it’s critical to note that no state is saying meth use is down,” said Mark Woodward of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics. “It’s just that they’ve switched sources from cooking it to importing it.

“Meth use and addiction are still epidemic,” he said.

The number of meth lab seizures nationwide peaked at nearly 24,000 in 2004. The problem got so bad that restrictions were placed on the sale of cold and allergy pills containing pseudoephedrine, which gets mixed with household products like lighter fluid or drain cleaner to make homemade meth. Those medications were placed behind the counter, with buying limits and tracking of sales.

By 2007, fewer than 7,000 meth labs were seized across the country. Makers and users responded by finding a way to make meth with fewer pills — a dangerous concoction typically mixed in a 2-liter soda bottle. This “one-pot” or “shake-and-bake” method led to more people making the drug and a corresponding spike in busts, with the national total back above 15,000 in 2010.

Laws got even tougher. Oregon, Mississippi and some cities and counties in high-meth states began requiring a prescription to buy pills containing pseudoephedrine.

By last year, seizures had dropped to about 9,500, according to DEA statistics.

Seizing the opportunity provided by the tougher enforcement of homemade meth in the United States, Mexican cartels have turned to an old recipe known as P2P that first appeared in the 1960s and 1970s, experts said. It uses the organic compound phenylacetone — banned in the United States but obtainable in Mexico, the DEA said — rather than pseudoephedrine.

As a result, the purity of Mexican meth rose from 39 percent in 2007 to essentially 100 percent, Jim Shroba, special agent in charge of the DEA office in St. Louis, has said. Meanwhile, the price dropped by two-thirds.

Tennessee, which often has been No. 1 or No. 2 in seizures, is “seeing a significant influx in availability of Mexican meth,” said Tommy Farmer, director of the Tennessee Methamphetamine and Pharmaceutical Task Force.

Woodward said Oklahoma police commonly hear that users have accepted Mexican meth, once considered inferior to the homemade drug.

“And they don’t have to risk blowing up their lab or getting caught at a pharmacy,” he said.

For more than a decade in the early 2000s, Missouri was the national leader in meth lab seizures. But data from the Highway Patrol for the first six months of 2015 shows Missouri with 314 seizures, on pace for 628. That would be a big drop from the 1,045 seizures last year. Just three years ago, Missouri had more than 2,000 meth lab seizures.

Source of pain is “all in the head ” ?

WRONG MED … extreme fatigue and bruising on his arms, shoulders, back, and thighs

Walmart and pharmacist sued over claims of negligence after allegedly filling wrong prescription

http://madisonrecord.com/stories/510637987-walmart-and-pharmacist-sued-over-claims-of-negligence-after-allegedly-filling-wrong-prescription

A Cahokia man is suing a Walmart pharmacy and one of its pharmacists after they allegedly provided him with the wrong prescription.

Leroy Turner filed a complaint Aug. 25 in St. Clair County Circuit Court against Wal-Mart Inc. and Christopher L. Hurtte, alleging negligence.

On Feb. 3, the complaint states, Turner brought a prescription for Cardura, a medication to treat high blood pressure, to the Cahokia Walmart pharmacy, where Hurtte instead provided him Warfarin, a blood thinner, without Turner’s consent or knowledge. Turner was not prescribed a blood thinner, the complaint states, and a blood thinner was actually contra-indicated when the patient has high blood pressure.

After taking Warfarin for several weeks, Turner called his doctor out of concern for his extreme fatigue and bruising on his arms, shoulders, back, and thighs. His doctor told him to “double up” on the medication, not knowing he was taking Warfarin by mistake.

Turner doubled up on the medication and experienced additional and increased symptoms for about a week before realizing he was taking the wrong medication.

The complaint alleges Walmart and Hurtte were negligent in providing Turner the wrong prescription. Turner seeks a judgment of $50,000 against each defendant, plus court costs.

He is represented by Belleville-based attorney Matthew J. Marlen PC.

St. Clair County Circuit Court case number 15-L-482

“Until we get rid of our problems by letting each individual be productive”

untitled

“It’s extremely scary.” Indiana battles No.1 ranking in pharmacy robberies

http://wthitv.com/2015/09/14/its-extremely-scary-indiana-battles-no-1-ranking-in-pharmacy-robberies/

BRAZIL, Ind. (WTHI) – The Hoosier State ranks at the top of a new list, but it doesn’t come with any bragging rights.

Pharmacy robberies are rising nationwide as the prescription drug epidemic increases, and Indiana leads the U.S. in these crimes.

Being tucked in the small community of Brazil is a luxury that makes working at Lynn’s Pharmacy relatively safe, but “it’s still scary when you come to work,” said Owner Lynn Hostetler.

The pharmacy has never been robbed at gunpoint, but Hostetler said they have been the victim of a couple burglaries, with the last one being nearly seven years ago.

“It’s always the case with drugs, because if you got money or drugs you always have to be careful.”

Hostetler said robberies were common in the seventies until the FBI began investigating those robberies, “that’s when they declined tremendously.”

In recent years, Indiana has cracked down on doctors overprescribing prescription narcotics, shutting down several so-called “pill mills.” In addition, the statewide database Inspect aims to identify patients filling multiple prescriptions for narcotics, who could then be diverting those pills.

These efforts, although positive, may have inadvertently fueled robberies

“There are less physicians writing prescriptions, so I believe they rob the drug stores to obtain the narcotics for sale not for use,” said Hostetler.

Lynn’s Pharmacy has spent more than $20,000 on security. From cameras, and alarms, to dispensing narcotics amongst other drugs that are not arranged in alphabetical order, “all kind of things I don’t want to talk about on TV,” said Hostetler.

All precautions that Hostetler said he has to take to keep his employees and his patrons safe as some criminals are turning to extreme measures

“They are parts of gangs and they use young people to come in, because if they are under age you don’t get sent off to federal prison.”

In a drug dependent society, Hostetler said he’s uncertain if there’s anything more the state could do to cut back on robberies. “Until we get rid of our problems by letting each individual be productive, responsible citizens I don’t think we’re going to see anything get better.”

More than 130 Indiana pharmacies have reported robberies since the start of 2015, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration, which tracks any incident in which prescription drugs are lost.

To counter such thefts, CVS/pharmacy announced last week that it has installed time-delay safes in more than 150 stores in the Indianapolis metro area to deter would-be robbers.

Such thieves like to get in and out of a store as quickly as possible, but time-delay safes require pharmacy employees to enter a code and then wait for a period of time before a safe will open.

Walgreens, which also has the safes in a number of its stores in other states, installed them in Indiana last year, too.

MD license suspended… no charges filed… guilty until proven innocent ?

Marysville doctor’s license suspended after 2 patient deaths

http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/health/marysville-doctor/

This is the state of WASHINGTON… where it is mandated that METHADONE is drug of choice for Medicaid pts and it is well known that every 1000 pts, in Washington ,started on Methadone on average … 2 pts will die within a few weeks. Because prescribers are FORCED to prescribe this medication and the are not well versed on its potential lethal idiosyncrasies.  But is save the state money and was apparently mandated by some “pencil pusher” with a spread sheet.

The Marysville family doctor, accused of overmedicating patients, has 20 days to reply to charges by the Washington State Department of Health.
Section Sponsor
By Jennifer Sullivan
Seattle Times staff reporter

The state has suspended the medical license of a Marysville family doctor accused of overmedicating patients, which authorities attribute to the deaths of two people.

About half of the patients Dr. Ann C. Kammeyer saw in her family practice were people in need of help with pain management, according to the state Department of Health. After the deaths of two patients this year, the state and the federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) began investigating Kammeyer.

On Sept. 1, the health department charged her with “unprofessional conduct by improperly prescribing opioid medication to numerous patients.” Her medical license, issued in 1981, was immediately suspended.

According to the statement of health-department charges: “The evidence shows a pattern of incompetence and negligence which created an unreasonable risk of harm and/or the deaths of three individuals, two of whom were her patients.”

Kammeyer has 20 days from the charging date to respond, said department spokeswoman Kelly Stowe.

“She has the right to tell her side of the story,” Stowe said.

Kammeyer, 65, could not be reached Friday. Her office phone went unanswered and a voice-mail box was full.

Kammeyer has not been charged with a crime.

According to the health department, complaints were filed against Kammeyer in 1989, 1997, twice in 1998, 2001 and in 2009. All of the complaints were closed without discipline, agency officials said.

The charges, signed by Assistant Attorney General Kristin G. Brewer and Melanie de Leon, executive director of the state Medical Quality Commission, say Kammeyer is not a pain-management specialist and is “wholly unqualified” to run a pain-management practice.

After investigating the records of the two women who died, one Feb. 10 and the other March 22, as well as looking at the records of another 10 patients, investigators concluded Kammeyer was improperly prescribing oxycodone, OxyContin, methadone, Valium, Xanax and Ativan. In many cases patients were taking lethal combinations of narcotics, the charges said.

The DEA started a separate undercover investigation into Kammeyer, using an employee of hers to write a prescription for someone she had never seen or met, according to the Department of Health.

DEA spokeswoman Jodi Underwood said Kammeyer “is the subject of an ongoing DEA investigation.” Underwood declined to comment any further.

The patient who died March 22 is referred to in the health-department charges as “Patient A.” She had a lethal combination of fentanyl, oxycodone and oxymorphone in her system — all medications prescribed by Kammeyer for chronic-pain management, fibromyalgia and mental illness, according to the charges. While the woman’s chart notes appear to have ended on Dec. 22, 2014, Kammeyer continued to prescribe her medication until March 12, charges said.

The woman who died Feb. 10, labeled “Patient B,” had a combination of alprazolam, oxycodone, ethanol, cannabis-related products and opiates in her system, according to the Department of Health. Kammeyer was treating the woman for chronic-pain syndrome, mental-health issues, hypertension and a “host of other illnesses,” charging documents said.

In addition to her two patients, the health-department charging documents allege Kammeyer contributed to the death of a third person, an adult grandson of “Patient A.” One of the woman’s fentanyl pain patches was found in his mouth.