CVS – trying to take out competition – one audit at a time ?

Network Pharmacy Sues CVS Over Suspension, Withheld Money

Law360, New York (April 07, 2015, 5:38 PM ET) — CVS Caremark Corp. has been sued by one of its network pharmacies for breach of contract after the company initiated allegedly inappropriate audits and refused to reimburse the smaller pharmacy for drug purchases, according to a lawsuit removed to New York federal court Monday.

Mirra Pharmacy Corp. claims that despite an initial audit of its practices that found nothing negative, CVS launched a second audit of massive size that turned into an investigation resulting in Mirra’s suspension from CVS’s network and withholding of about $50,000 in…

There should be a law !

wethepeopleHow many times have we heard the statement ” there should be a law ….” I once saw a quote that we have 10 – 15 million laws/rules/regulations to enforce the TEN COMMANDMENTS …

It would seem that we have reached a point that we have too many laws/rules/regulations… and/or those who are in charge with enforcing all of these… have become very selective on what they enforce… almost to the point where enforcement seems to be reserved to very narrow view point, biases or opinions as to what should or should not be enforced by those who make decisions on the initiation of proceedings.

We have a US Attorney General being held in contempt of Congress, but who is suppose to deal with those held in contempt of Congress?… the US ATTORNEY GENERAL..

The American Medical Association over a year ago passed a resolution of warning Pharmacists about practicing medicine. Has anyone seen any action taken against Pharmacists refusing to fill Rxs… insisting a pt’s dose be reduced or the Pharmacist will call the DEA about the prescribing  habits of the prescriber ?

The real law enforcement arm of both the Pharmacy Board and the Medical Licensing Board is the state’s Attorney General.. of course, we have seen in the last few weeks Attorney Generals suing the drug wholesalers for legally selling controlled substances to legally licensed pharmacies.

Then we have the HIPAA law, privacy about your person health information, anyone pay attention at the local pharmacy… the check out counter or the drive thru window area..  does anyone believe that your personal health information has  a snowball’s chance in hell of remaining private ?  Try filing a complaint with the appropriate agency and see how they jump into action.

The Americans with Disability Act… is suppose to protect those with a disability against discrimination… file a complaint and see how fast they go after the violators.

We have employees of a alphabet soup of Federal, State & Local agencies .. NSA, DOJ, DEA, IRS, FDA, EPA to mention a few.. who have went “off the reservation” and you never hear about any serious consequences.   All of these people have taken a oath to uphold our Constitution.

Congress seems to be impotent to act against any of these agencies or individuals within these agencies. These seems strange since Congress – especially the House… controls the budget for all of these agencies.

When are we going to start hearing “When is someone going to enforce the laws ?”

In Michigan.. addicts “drug of choice” is based on PRICE

Fentanyl deaths linked to heroin soar in Kent County, MI

http://www.wzzm13.com/story/news/investigations/13-on-your-side/watchdog/2015/04/06/fentanyl-deaths/25376913/

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WZZM) – A highly-addictive painkiller called fentanyl is now being used in conjunction with heroin, helping push overdose deaths in Kent County to a new high.

About 38 percent of the 67 confirmed overdose deaths in Kent County last year are due to heroin or fentanyl, according to numbers from the Kent County Medical Examiner’s Office.

“We’ve seen a great increase in the amount of fentanyl cases in the last year,” Kent County Medical Examiner Dr. Stephen Cohle said. “It’s really spiked upward. It’s cheaper and more readily available than heroin.”

The numbers mirror a national trend, which led the Drug Enforcement Administration to issue a public safety alert three weeks ago.

“Drug incidents and overdoses related to fentanyl are occurring at an alarming rate throughout the United States and represent a significant threat to public health and safety,” DEA Administrator Michele M. Leonhart said.

Heroin laced with fentanyl can be up to 100 times more powerful than morphine and between 30 and 50 times more powerful than heroin, Leonhart said.

Law enforcement seizures of illegal drugs containing fentanyl more than tripled between 2013 and 2014, with more than 3,300 submissions made to state and local police laboratories for analysis last year. Federal agents in November seized about two pounds of fentanyl that had been transported to Grand Rapids from New York. Investigators also seized several pounds of heroin outside a 28th Street SE hotel as part of the same investigation.

The growth in heroin use in recent years is helping spur use of narcotics with similar properties, such as fentanyl and methadone. In 2013, methadone was the leading cause of prescription overdose deaths in Kent County. Nationwide, it accounted for nearly one-third of all fatal overdoses – a six-fold increase over the last 10 years.

Methadone was introduced 75 years ago to wean addicts off heroin. It is widely prescribed as an inexpensive pain killer. Fentanyl arrived in 1959 and was used as an anesthetic and pain reliever. About 20 years ago, the fentanyl patch was developed and prescribed to treat chronic pain in patients suffering from cancer.

Both are now used in conjunction with heroin – and with deadly results, Cohle said. Part of the reason is cost. Methadone and fentanyl are relatively inexpensive. And with the cost of heroin rising because of demand, people are looking for a cheap alternative.

Dealers are also cutting heroin with fentanyl, and usually without the user’s knowledge, Cohle said.

“Those individuals who are packaging it have begun in the last year to add significant quantities of fentanyl to it and sometimes substituted the fentanyl for heroin,” Cohle said. “I don’t think the drug user can tell the difference so it makes it convenient for these suppliers to do so.”

Like methadone and oxydodone, fentanyl is classified by the federal government as a Schedule II narcotic, meaning it is tightly regulated. An estimated 6.6 million fentanyl prescriptions were written in 2014 , the DEA said. In addition to patches, fentanyl also comes as a lozenge.

Fentanyl goes by several street names, including China white. In the past, abusers would chew the adhesive patches or put the patches on their skin beneath clothing. Addicts are now more likely to inject it.

“The route of administration has changed,” Cohle said. “So people can even take patches off or from someone else and either chew them, they can subject them to water and try to leach out the fentanyl and inject it or they can just use the patches themselves. They could put multiple patches on themselves.”

Cohle said he performed an autopsy last year on a man with dozens of patches stuck to his body, including the victim’s genitalia. “I’d never seen anything like it,” he said.

This is not the first time law enforcement has seen a spike in fentanyl-laced heroin. Between 2005 and 2007, the DEA reported more than 1,000 people died from overdoses in Philadelphia, Chicago and Detroit. Much of the fentanyl was arriving in the U.S. from Mexico. The national outbreak 10 years ago did not impact Grand Rapids, Cohle said.

Fulton County GA … sues drug wholesalers for legally selling drug to pharmacies.

Rxtothehead

Fulton County Government sues multiple drug companies for supplying and distributing prescription drugs in GA at the alleged disregard of state laws and citizen’s welfare

http://www.pressreleaserocket.net/fulton-county-government-sues-multiple-drug-companies-for-supplying-and-distributing-prescription-drugs-in-ga-at-the-alleged-disregard-of-state-laws-and-citizens-welfare/134242/

Cardinal Health Companies, McKesson Corporation, and AmeriSourceBergen Drug Corporation are being sued by Fulton County Government (GA) for allegedly causing injuries and engaging in a course of conduct that violates Georgia law. The civil action, filed in Fulton County Superior Court by Edmond, Lindsay & Hoffler, addresses the epidemic of prescription opioid drug abuse and addiction in the state of Georgia and the related costs to Fulton County.

Atlanta, Georgia (PRWEB) April 06, 2015

A conglomerate of companies supplying and distributing prescription drugs in Fulton County and throughout the state of Georgia under the brand name of Cardinal Health Companies, McKesson Corporation and AmeriSourceBergen Drug Corporation are being sued by Fulton County for allegedly causing injuries and engaging in a course of conduct that violates Georgia law. The law suit was filed by Fulton County Government in the Superior Court of Fulton County on Wednesday, March 10, 2015 – Case No. 2015CV258133.

According to court documents, the civil action addresses the epidemic of prescription opioid drug abuse and addiction in the State of Georgia and the related costs to the County. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDCP), more than 16,500 people died in 2010 in the United States from opioid painkillers, more than from heroin and cocaine combined, and prescription painkillers are now the nation’s number one drug problem.

The prescription drug distribution system is a sprawling one that involves approximately 800 companies that sell billions of pills annually as stated in the complaint presented to the court. In 2012, sales of prescription painkillers in the United States reached $8.5 billion according to industry reports according to court documents..

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) has reported that of the 686 drug overdose deaths in 2012, 592 (86%) were prescription drugs. The annual cost to Fulton County from the abuse of prescription drug is estimated to be millions of dollars. These costs are from expenses for Fulton County’s hospitals and health agencies, courts, social service agencies, jails and prisons, etc. according to court documents.

According to further court documents,. Cardinal had sent 2,050,000 oxycodone pills to one store in Florida where the population in the town was 53,000. These defendants have supplied controlled substances to rogue drugstores and clinics which disburse controlled substances based on bogus prescriptions from physicians who are prescribing for illegitimate purposes.as stated in court documents.

The complaint found in court documents alleges that Defendants violated provisions within the Georgia Controlled Substances Act and the Georgia Pharmacy Practice Act. It alleges that Defendants have, by their acts and omissions, caused and substantially contributed to damages to Fulton County by violating Georgia law, by creating conditions which contribute to the violations of Georgia laws by others, and by their negligent and/or reckless disregard of the customs, standards and practices within their own industry.

This civil action has requested that the Court issue a temporary and permanent injunction which will mandate the defendants to inform the Georgia State Board of Pharmacy of all suspicious orders for controlled substances; direct the defendants to submit their system of determining suspicious drug orders; and enjoin defendants from distributing in Georgia any controlled substance for illegitimate medical purpose. The plaintiff, Fulton County, also asks to recover costs, losses and damages; reimbursement for litigation costs; and a trial by jury.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Fulton County by Attorneys Roderick Edmond of Edmond, Lindsay and Hoffler, LLP in Atlanta, Georgia and Mark Tate of the Tate Law Group in Savannah, Georgia. Mr. Tate says, “This litigation gives Fulton County the opportunity to force the Defendants who have profited handsomely on the ticket of Fulton County taxpayers to shift the burden of costs to where it should be.” Mr. Edmond commented that, “This is a statewide problem, and Fulton County had to take action to stem the tide of its financial losses from the prescription drug abuse epidemic.”

MASS AG getting into “lock-step” with DEA and other AG’s in doc’s WITCH HUNT ?

lockstep

Massachusetts AG targets pill mills

War on pill mills: Maura Healey targets rogue doctors fueling opioid abuse

AG Puts docs, clinics on notice

http://www.bostonherald.com/news_opinion/local_coverage/2015/04/war_on_pill_mills_maura_healey_targets_rogue_doctors_fueling

Newly minted Attorney General Maura Healey is cracking down on doctors and “pill mill” clinics illegally prescribing the addictive narcotics that are fueling the state’s deadly outbreak of opiate overdoses.

Calling it one “prong” of her plan to fight the opioid epidemic, Healey has ordered several of her top lieutenants to cull through Medicaid databases and chase tips of doctors and clinics dishing out powerful painkillers “willy-nilly.”

“I want to make sure we’re working with medical professionals so we get in place safe prescribing practices. And where we identify criminal or truly reckless prescribing practices … we’re going to need to take action out of this office,” Healey told the Herald yesterday.

The stepped-up effort, she said, is “so we can shut down pill mills or go after doctors who are wrongfully putting prescriptions in people’s hands without regard to their health or well-being or the safety of the community.”

Healey’s crackdown comes as state police yesterday reported nearly 220 suspected fatal overdoses in just the first three months of this year — a death toll that doesn’t include Boston, Springfield and Worcester. The state Department of Public Health previously reported 978 overdose deaths related to opioids in Massachusetts in 2013, up from 668 the previous year.

Gov. Charlie Baker has also assembled an opioid task force to address the emergency, with a public meeting planned for today at the State House.

The attorney general’s new push appears to dovetail with the results of a two-part Herald series last summer that found prescriptions for the powerful painkiller oxycodone have spiked by nearly 30 percent over the last three years in the Bay State. The report revealed that oxycodone in 30-milligram tablets — dubbed “Roxy” or “Perc 30s” on the street — has overtaken OxyContin as an abuser’s pill of choice.

Healey is also calling for the state to beef up its Prescription Monitoring Program. But with that, there is a “100 percent” greater emphasis on finding and vetting cases of misbehaving docs, said George Zachos, chief of the AG’s Medicaid fraud unit.

“There is a problem we’re trying to address on a number of different fronts, and this is definitely one of them,” Zachos said.

Criminal cases against doctors have been rare. Healey’s office pointed to only two examples since 2012. Of the 13 cases of prescribers the state’s Drug Control Program flagged and forwarded to various licensing boards between January 2013 and last November, none was referred to law enforcement, according to the state.

Dr. Daniel P. Alford, the director of the Clinical Addiction Research and Education Unit at the Boston University School of Medicine, said he supports Healey in weeding out “rogue clinicians” but warned there’s a gray area.

“I have investigated some cases where a clinician is over-prescribing, but it’s not pure malice,” Alford said. “It’s not as if the clinician is profiting from it. … I worry about the unintended consequences of just making people afraid of being investigated.”

But Healey emphasized that “this is not an attack on doctors.”

“This, for many of us, has hit hard, and it’s also come out of left field,” she said of the opiate crisis. “It’s time to revisit some of the practices and make sure we’re doing everything we can.”

Redefining… DENIAL OF CARE ?

'Medical Marijuana Pouring Out Of A Prescription Bottle' [Shutterstock] http://tinyurl.com/knvn5q2

Feds admit medical pot works on brain tumors — but they’re going after users anyway

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2015/04/feds-admit-medical-pot-works-on-brain-tumors-but-theyre-going-after-users-anyway/#.VSFnBrrrE6o.facebook

In a  report issued by a U.S. government-funded research group tasked with studying drug abuse and addiction, researchers are admitting that marijuana is useful in killing off specific types of brain tumors.

The report — coming from a government-backed  group with annual budget of over $1 billion — arrives at an awkward time for the administration following an announcement by the Department of Justice this week that it will continue to prosecute medical marijuana cases against individuals in defiance of Congress.

According to the Daily Caller, the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) issued a revised report for the month of April, stating, “recent animal studies have shown that marijuana can kill certain cancer cells and reduce the size of others. Evidence from one animal study suggests that extracts from whole-plant marijuana can shrink one of the most serious types of brain tumors. Research in mice showed that these extracts, when used with radiation, increased the cancer-killing effects of the radiation.”

The NIDA report reflects research reported in November last year in the Molecular Cancer Therapies journal.

While one government agency is admitting the benefits of marijuana in medical treatments, the Justice Department is pushing forward with prosecuting medical marijuana users.

In December, Congress added an amendment to a spending bill ordering the Justice Department to not inhibit states where medical marijuana is legal from implementing their laws.

In a statement on Wednesday, spokesman Patrick Rodenbush said the Justice Department does not believe the amendment applies to cases against individuals or organizations.

Justice Department officials believe the amendment only stops the department from “impeding the ability of states to carry out their medical marijuana laws,” and can still go after users.

Writing at the Huffington Post , Drug Policy Alliance Director of National Affairs, Bill Piper, chastised the Justice Department, saying they are defying the will of the voters.

“Currently, 23 states and the District of Columbia have laws that legalize and regulate marijuana for medicinal purposes. And 12 states have laws on the books regulating cannabidiol (CBD) oils, a non-psychotropic component of medical marijuana which some parents are utilizing to treat their children’s seizures, ” he wrote, adding “Four states and the District of Columbia have legalized marijuana for non-medical use.”

“The Justice Department is ignoring the will of the voters, defying Congress, and breaking the law. President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder need to rein in this out-of-control agency,” he said, calling on Congress to change federal drugs law allowing states to be free to set their own marijuana policies without federal interference.

 

Police kills mentally ill woman and dog – public’s reaction ?

A tale of two killings: what happened when Idaho police shot a dog and a pregnant woman in one day

http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/apr/03/idaho-police-shootings-jeanetta-riley-justice-for-arfee?CMP=ema_565

Fourteen hours and 45 miles apart in rural Idaho, two stories began. A community campaign led to ‘justice for Arfee’ after a pet’s killing outside a coffee shop. But there is no justice yet for the family of Jeanetta Riley

Mentally ill/addict shot/killed by cops.. public’s reaction – YAWN !

2 y/o dog – shot/killed while alone in his owner’s vehicle .. public’s reaction – OUTRAGE !

Having health insurance no one will accept ?

Supreme Court: Providers Can’t Sue Over Low Medicaid Rates

Court suggests providers are ‘incidental beneficiaries’ of Medicaid.

Obamacare is basically an extension of Medicaid. According to this Supreme Court ruling.. it would appear that the Federal government does not have to pay healthcare providers enough for particular service(s) that will cover the cost of providing the service. Historically, whatever Medicaid or Medicare does… they are basically the “leader of the pack”…all other insurances follow their lead.  Our country has a 18 TRILLION dollar debt and now the bureaucrats have no reason to provide a reasonable/adequate reimbursement for those up provide healthcare services/products what is going to be the outcome?  One possible outcome is that fewer and fewer pts will be able to find healthcare services, will have to pay out of pocket and accept what the insurance allows for the service.  Could see a lot of mid-level practitioners (nurses, pharmacists) providing first tier healthcare services.

http://www.medpagetoday.com/PublicHealthPolicy/Medicaid/50753?xid=nl_mpt_DHE_2015-04-01&eun=g578717d0r&userid=578717&mu_id=5705800

WASHINGTON — Medicaid providers cannot sue the government seeking to raise their reimbursement rates, the Supreme Court ruled Tuesday.

“Spending Clause legislation like Medicaid ‘is much in the nature of a contract,'” wrote Justice Antonin Scalia, speaking for himself and justices Stephen Breyer, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Chief Justice John Roberts in the 5-4 decision. “The notion that respondents have a right to sue derives, perhaps, from the fact that they are beneficiaries of the federal-state Medicaid agreement and that intended beneficiaries, in modern times at least, can sue to enforce the obligations of private contracting parties.

“We doubt, to begin with, that providers are intended beneficiaries (as opposed to mere incidental beneficiaries) of the Medicaid agreement, which was concluded for the benefit of the infirm whom the providers were to serve, rather than for the benefit of the providers themselves. … More fundamentally, however, the modern jurisprudence permitting intended beneficiaries to sue does not generally apply to contracts between a private party and the government — much less to contracts between two governments.”

The case Armstrong et al. v. Exceptional Child Center Inc. involved a group of child care centers specializing in children with intellectual and developmental disabilities. The centers sued the state of Idaho, claiming that it reimbursed them at rates lower than allowed by Medicaid law. The district court ruled in favor of the centers, and the appeals court agreed with that decision.

Justice Sonya Sotomayor, writing for herself and justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Anthony Kennedy, and Elena Kagan, disagreed with Tuesday’s decision, noting that the Supreme Court “has adjudicated such requests for equitable relief since the early days of the Republic. Nevertheless, today the Court holds that Congress has foreclosed private parties from invoking the equitable powers of the federal courts to require States to comply” with a Medicaid law regarding reasonable reimbursement.

“The Court relies on Congress’ provision for agency enforcement of [this law] — an enforcement mechanism of the sort we have already definitively determined not to foreclose private actions — and on the mere fact that [the law] contains relatively broad language,” Sotomayor wrote. “As I cannot agree that these statutory provisions demonstrate the requisite congressional intent to restrict the equitable authority of the federal courts, I respectfully dissent.”

Opinions on the effect of the ruling were mixed. “This decision further reinforces a long-running trend toward ever-lower Medicaid reimbursement that, at some point, will reach a level that is untenable,” Dan Ehlke, PhD, assistant professor of health policy and management at SUNY-Downstate Medical Center School of Public Health, in New York City, told MedPage Today in an email.

“Here in New York, it is already difficult for beneficiaries to find providers willing to accept Medicaid, and that is something we’re likely to see far more of in cities and states across the country,” he continued. “At what point, then, does the ‘promise’ of a Medicaid benefit cease to translate into anything particularly concrete? It runs the risk of becoming a program that does just enough to salve the conscience of those politicians who wish to claim they’re looking out for the interests of the poor, without actually doing much in that capacity.”

A study released Tuesday by the National Center for Health Statistics found that roughly one-third of physicians were refusing to accept new Medicaid patients, while nearly 85% would accept new privately insured patients.

David Howard, PhD, professor of health policy and management at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University in Atlanta, said in an email that regardless of the decision, “States will continue to squeeze provider reimbursements. The Department of Health and Human Services will have to fulfill its obligation to ensure that Medicaid beneficiaries have adequate access to care.”

And, he added, “The courts are not a good venue for addressing the complex issues surrounding Medicaid reimbursement levels.”

Michael Morrisey, PhD, professor in the department of health policy and management at Texas A&M University in College Station, said he didn’t think the decision would have much practical effect. “Providers can enter into contracts with Medicaid that include payment rates. To the extent that those payments don’t cover at least marginal costs, providers choose not to participate,” he wrote in an email.

“Indeed, many providers have chosen not to participate under current rates. While providers undoubtedly would have liked the ability to sue over inadequate rates, I suspect that the vast majority who thought the rates inadequate had already minimized their Medicaid exposure.”

Will the decision have any effect on states that have not yet expanded Medicaid coverage, as they have the option of doing under the Affordable Care Act? Possibly, Ehlke said.

“It could lead a few governors currently on the fence to open the door to a Medicaid expansion, given the green light to low reimbursement rates. However, some state policymakers could make the opposite decision, on the basis of such an expansion making little practical difference.”

Matt Grant, WESH … like a dog with a bone ?

dogwithbonehttp://www.wesh.com/news/bills-working-way-through-congress-aim-to-correct-prescription-drug-problem/32184532

Video on website

Bills working way through Congress aim to correct prescription drug problem

DEA’s former associate chief counsel: Bills would be game-changers

ORLANDO, Fla. —The problems WESH 2 News has uncovered with Florida’s prescription drug problem reach far beyond the Sunshine State. Roots of the issues causing many ill patients to be denied their medication reach all the way to Washington, D.C.

Federal laws govern what the Drug Enforcement Administration can and cannot do. Two bills are working their way through Congress taking aim at the DEA and how it does business, in terms of patients who are denied their medications.

The Ensuring Patient Access and Effective Drug Enforcement Act of 2015 is co-sponsored by two Florida lawmakers in the House by U.S. Rep. Gus Bilirakus, and in the Senate by Marco Rubio.

One of the main pillars of the bill would require the Department of Health and Human Services to report to Congress on how law enforcement activities to crack down on illegal drug activity impact patient access to medications.

The DEA’s former associate chief counsel told WESH 2 the bills on Capitol Hill would be a game-changer for those in fear of the DEA.

“I think what has happened as far as the fear you mentioned, the pharmacists or wholesalers, it actually is a result of the current enforcement environment,” Linden Barber said. “That is what creates fear, it’s the fact that there are no clear standards. There is no clear guidance.”

The Health and Human Services report would include:

  • A study of the obstacles in legitimate patient access to controlled substances
  • How collaboration between law enforcement at every level and the pharmaceutical industry can benefit patients and prevent misuse of controlled substances
  • Plus consultation from just about every group vested in the topic, including patient groups, pharmacies, wholesalers and law enforcement

The bill almost mirrors the fixes recommended by a contentious Government Accountability Office report, calling out the DEA for its role in hindering prescription access for millions of Americans.

WARNING !!! This not a POLITICALLY CORRECT POST !

skullandbones

It has been almost 2 weeks – and counting …

the news coverage of the airline pilot that committed suicide and took another 149 innocent lives with him as he flew a commercial airliner into the side of a mountain… This sort of  suicide/murder has only happened 3-4 times in the last THREE DECADES.

‘Talking heads” have been asking why medical professionals can’t determine who is suicidal and when they are going to – or could – act on their suicidal thoughts.

In this same TWO WEEK period

abt 1500 people have committed suicide .. including abt 300 veterans !

abt 600 people have died from a drug overdose … no data kept on whether these deaths are suicide or accidental

abt 600 people have died from hospital acquired MRSA.. because people staff don’t adequately wash this hands

abt 20,000 people have “caught” C-diff from being in nursing home & hospitals with abt 1100 have died

abt 20,000 people have died from tobacco use/abuse

abt 3200 people have died from alcohol use/abuse

abt 1200 people have died in auto accidents

Here is a CDC website that tracks deaths YTD..    http://www.romans322.com/daily-death-rate-statistics.php  and according to this website, ONE MORE PERSON has died from falling out of bed.. than killed in that airplane..

Haven’t  seen any WALL TO WALL coverage of any/all of these deaths ?

Then there is this past week – AND COUNTING the bureaucrats in Indianapolis passing the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA)  http://www.indianasenaterepublicans.com/blog/2015/03/26/general/protecting-religious-freedom/

I am not a legal scholar.. my legal “skill set” is pretty much limited to knowing that if you speed you may get a ticket, if you run a stop sign.. you may get a ticket.. if you spit in a cop’s face.. you will probably get your ass kicked… that being said…

All of a sudden this law stirs up a whole bunch of crap about the 13 million people belonging to and/or aligned with the LGTB portion of our population.

One poor pizza shop owner in a small town near South Bend IN http://www.inquisitr.com/1973227/walkerton-indiana-memories-pizza-becomes-first-indiana-business-to-openly-refuse-business-to-gay-weddings/

was interviewed by a local news reporter and she indicated that because of her religious views.. that she had no problem serving gays, but would have a problem if asked to cater a gay wedding… what do you think that number of gay weddings have a pizza place cater a wedding ?  She has since had to close the business and she had gotten death threats and threats of fire bombing her small pizza place.  Someone started a www.gofundme.com account to help raise $25 K to help this small pizza shop owner http://www.gofundme.com/MemoriesPizza 

as of this writing.. it has raised $750 K + in support of this small pizza place.

I wonder what would have been our society’s reaction.. if a news reporter had interviewed a pharmacist about refusing to fill a legit controlled med for a pt and the pharmacist’s personal beliefs is that anyone taking controlled meds were addicts and being a addict was “immoral” and that they have a religious objection to filling ANY CONTROLLED RX for anyone?  Would the needle on the “discrimination meter” even move – a little ?

Then there are commercials from the ASPCA  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IO9d2PpP7tQ  about abused, neglected animals.  Maybe we need to put Sarah McLachlan‘s song behind all the clips from Matt Grant’s recent 30 minute expose about pts being denied their needed/prescribed medications…maybe that could elicit some sympathy of those pts being abused and neglected ?

From my perspective, the one issue that allows those in the chronic pain community of est 106 million people as opposed to those in the LGTB community est 13 million and African/American community est 39 million..to be shoved aside and abused, neglected and marginalized …is that those in the chronic pain community are not VISIBLE and VOCAL, unlike other minority groups who are visible and “make noise”.

Indiana passes this law ( Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) ) and heads of international corporations ( Walmart, Starbucks, Apple and others ) come out of the woodwork.. as if the LGTB community is the only ones that COULD BE discriminated against by this law…

President Obama and AG Holder have injected themselves into some very local issues almost entirely on issues involving a single incident with a single person of color.  IMO, they embolden the actions and rhetoric of people like Al Sharpton, who typically does more to stir up and amplify the problem(s)… rather than attempting to resolve the problem/issues… they do just the opposite.

Is those in the chronic pain community going to let the expose by Matt Grant

http://www.wesh.com/health/state-of-pain-special-part-1/32152120

http://www.wesh.com/health/state-of-pain-special-part-2/32151834

http://www.wesh.com/health/state-of-pain-special-part-3/32152080

be the FIRST STEP to the end of abuse, neglect and discrimination against those in the chronic pain community.. or just another single expose that will soon be forgotten because those in the chronic pain community  YAWNED … and expecting  this expose to ignite a larger conversation and not understand that unless they pick up the torch, this expose becomes nothing more than a flash in the pan.