Telemedicine patients with opioid use disorder struggle to fill prescriptions

I was talking to a gal this week that I have known for 3+ decades and she is involved with a local recovery center because her Nephew also had a fatal OD. She was telling me that the judges in the drug courts are getting really pissed because people assigned to the drug court are not able to obtain or maintain sobriety because of the erratic available of all controlled meds, just like a lot of chronic pain pts are dealing with.  Here is a hyperlink to the nearly 600 page agreement between the 45 state AG and the three major drug wholesalers https://www.pharmaciststeve.com/?attachment_id=49645 

where they agreed to reduce the amounts of controlled meds that are sold to community pharmacies, and not share with those pharmacies what the amount of controls they are being allotted to each community pharmacy.

If anyone is interested, each wholesaler is licensed by the state board of pharmacy in each state, and

state boards of pharmacy typically have oversight of drug wholesalers, though the extent and specifics vary by state. Their primary charge,  is to protect public health by regulating the safe handling, storage, and distribution of pharmaceuticals, which includes oversight of wholesale distributors to ensure drugs move securely through the supply chain.
Should all these pts who are having difficulty in getting their controlled meds because the pharmacy they patronize, cannot get enough inventory of controlled meds from these drug wholesalers. File complaints with the BOP over the major drug wholesaler are not meeting their goals as outlined by the BOP regulations?  Here is a hyperlink to all the boards of pharmacy https://nabp.pharmacy/about/boards-of-pharmacy/ if you wish to file a complaint for not being able to get your controlled medications because of the agreement that the three major drug wholesalers made to sell less controlled meds to all community pharmacies.

Telemedicine patients with opioid use disorder struggle to fill prescriptions

https://stateline.org/2025/08/22/telemedicine-patients-with-opioid-use-disorder-struggle-to-fill-prescriptions/

Nearly a third of patients surveyed had a hard time getting buprenorphine.

Nearly a third of telemedicine patients with opioid use disorder had to go without buprenorphine because they had trouble filling their prescription at a pharmacy, according to a new study.

The study, published in the medical journal JAMA Network Open this month, surveyed 600 telemedicine patients across five states: Florida, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio and Texas. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved buprenorphine for treatment of opioid use disorder. The drug reduces a patient’s cravings for opioids and reduces the likelihood of a fatal overdose.

The most common reason that patients had trouble was that buprenorphine was unavailable at the pharmacy, followed by coverage-related issues and the pharmacy’s hesitancy in filling a telemedicine prescription.

Previous research has shown that some pharmacists, fearing scrutiny, hesitate to dispense buprenorphine, which is a controlled substance. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services say people with opioid use disorder “who need buprenorphine [should be] able to access it without undue delay,” the authors note.

Roughly half of the patients who participated in the survey were covered by Medicaid. A majority of patients had been in treatment for at least six months, and half lived in rural areas.

The analysis didn’t find statistically significant differences between patients in rural and non-rural areas. But the authors noted that the study only surveyed participants from those five states, and results might be different in other ones.

In general, they noted, patients living in rural areas might have a harder time finding buprenorphine and other opioid use disorder drugs at a pharmacy because there are fewer pharmacies in rural areas.

The study underscores recent data suggesting a lack of access to opioid use disorder medication. An analysis released last year by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that in 2022, only a quarter of people with opioid use disorder received recommended medications. About 4% of U.S. adults have opioid use disorder.

Other research has shown many pharmacies lack buprenorphine. Two studies found that between 42% and 51% of U.S. pharmacies did not have buprenorphine in stock, and availability varied widely across states.

The JAMA Network Open study was led by Workit Health, a telemedicine addiction treatment app that operates in four of the states included in the survey. Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh, Johns Hopkins University, and Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine in Pennsylvania also contributed. In their conflict of interest disclosures, some of the authors reported holding equity in Workit Health.

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