The times they are a changing at a pharmacy that once claimed Where America Shops

Walgreens Seals $10 Billion Take-Private Deal With Sycamore

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/walgreens-seals-10-billion-take-private-deal-with-sycamore/ar-AA1ApjdU

Walgreens’s almost centurylong run as a public company is coming to an end. The embattled drugstore chain has struck a deal to be taken private by Sycamore Partners in one of the biggest leveraged buyouts in recent memory.

Sycamore has agreed to pay $11.45 a share in cash for Walgreens Boots Alliance, representing an equity value of around $10 billion and 29% above where the stock was trading last year. Shareholders could also receive up to an additional $3 a share down the road, based on proceeds from selling the company’s primary-care assets.

The total value of the deal, including debt and the potential future payouts, would be almost $24 billion. The companies expect the deal to close in the fourth quarter of 2025.

The sale is the culmination of a decade of struggles for a historic American retailer with thousands of pharmacies that are fixtures on neighborhood street corners. The market value of Walgreens Boots Alliance surpassed $100 billion in 2015 but had been battered in recent years. Walgreens originally went public in 1927.

The company’s new owners will now have the chance to fix the business out of the public eye.

“Going private is going to let us be more focused, more nimble, more long-term in our decision-making, in the context of the challenges that we continue to face,” said Chief Executive Tim Wentworth. “That gives us both the time and the ability to focus in a way to transform Walgreens.”

Wentworth, who took over as Walgreens CEO in October 2023, had embarked on a turnaround effort. The company has said it plans to shed around 1,200 stores over three years.

But its shares had generally continued to languish, with investors skeptical about the long-term growth prospects of a company built around the difficult retail-pharmacy business.

Wentworth said the deal is a good one for shareholders and allows them to avoid the risk as the company works to change its trajectory.

The retail struggles

Fixing the company won’t be easy.

Walgreens had failed to stay ahead of forces reshaping retail and healthcare, including the rise of e-commerce and the growing power of the drug-industry players known as pharmacy-benefit managers, which negotiate pricing with pharmacies and manufacturers.

While Amazon.com and others stole business from the front of the Walgreens stores, pharmacy-benefit managers squeezed margins on the prescriptions dispensed at the back of the stores.

The combined assault made the stand-alone retail pharmacy business a tough sell to investors. When the company cut its longstanding dividend, investors grew even more frustrated.

Stefano Pessina, a veteran dealmaker, merged Alliance Boots with Walgreens in 2014 in a bid to cement a global pharmacy behemoth. The combined company was still built on retail pharmacy, though.

Walgreens missed on an attempt to connect with a health insurer, the strategy pursued by rival CVS Health. A later plunge into primary-care clinics also failed to turn the tide.

Pessina stepped down as Walgreens’s CEO in 2021 and remains chairman and the biggest individual shareholder, with about a 17% stake in the company. As part of the deal with Sycamore, Pessina has agreed to roll his stake entirely back into the business and maintain a significant ownership.

Wentworth launched a strategic review after he took over. The new CEO said the takeaway was that retail pharmacy was central, but it needed to change.

Wentworth said Sycamore, which has a long history in the retail business, was the right partner because it brings expertise and a record of overseeing turnarounds. The company will remain based in the Chicago area.

A big bite for Sycamore

The Wall Street Journal first reported in mid-December that Sycamore was in talks for a deal and earlier this week reported that talks were advanced.

The transaction would rank among the largest leveraged buyouts globally in the past decade, at a time when there have been fewer such big deals with public-company valuations and interest rates remaining elevated.

The deal also includes a so-called go-shop period for Walgreens to solicit other potential suitors for 35 days.

Sycamore is a retail specialist but has never tried as big a deal as Walgreens, which will test its strategies. The firm has been discussing splitting up the company’s business divisions and financing them individually, according to people familiar with the matter. It is a playbook Sycamore has followed in the past, including when it bought office-retailer Staples in 2017 for $6.9 billion.

Walgreens includes its namesake Walgreens retail business in the U.S., the UK-based pharmacy chain Boots, the specialty pharmacy group Shields Health Solutions and the U.S. healthcare provider VillageMD.

If Sycamore is successful in shedding the assets of the VillageMD primary-care business, Walgreens shareholders could be paid up to an additional $3 per share, or about $2.7 billion, the companies said Thursday. Wentworth said the idea was to give shareholders a way to benefit from improvements in some of the primary-care businesses, which would ideally be sold at higher values after their operations are bolstered.

Even with the plan to shed assets quickly, the deal is a giant for Sycamore, leading it to tap a number of banks and private-credit firms for funding. There are more than a dozen parties already lined up to provide financing, according to people familiar with the matter.

Walgreens currently has around $9 billion in debt as well as opioid-related liabilities and other items that Sycamore had to account for in the total $23.7 billion price tag.

The Walgreens deal should also offer some hope for dealmakers and private-equity firms that have been sitting on the sidelines and waiting on an M&A rebound. There weren’t any deals announced in the U.S. in February that cleared $10 billion. It was the first month without such a deal since January 2023, according to data provider LSEG.

Centerview Partners served as Walgreens’s lead banker, and the law firm Kirkland & Ellis was the company’s legal adviser. UBS Investment Bank was the lead banker to Sycamore, with Davis, Polk & Wardwell acting as legal counsel. Morgan Stanley also advised Walgreens, and Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Citi and Wells Fargo also helped advise Sycamore.

Alarm Bells are Ringing: Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program Will Fail Without Changes

Our next “health crisis” may be on the horizon. CMS is trying to save $$ on our national “medication cost”, which is admirable, but their apparent solution may cause a massive creation of “pharmacy desserts”.  When we opened our independent pharmacy in 1976, about 45,000 pharmacies – abt 80% were independent pharmacies.  I don’t remember the exact number but Walgreens had < 1,000 stores. Today they have about 8,500 stores and at one time they had gotten up to abt 11,000 stores. They recently stopped paying dividends on their stocks after doing so consistently for 90+ yrs. I read recently where it is reported that Walgreens is looking at taking the company PRIVATE, no longer being a publicly traded company.

Walgreens was founded in 1901 when Charles R. Walgreen Sr. purchased a drugstore on the south side of Chicago where he had been working as a pharmacist13. The company grew rapidly over the next two decades, and in 1927, Walgreen Co. became a publicly traded company when it listed its shares on the New York Stock Exchange.

Here is a list of the publicly traded companies that have paid dividends > 100 yr-:

  • York Water (YORW): This company holds the record for the longest dividend-paying streak, having paid dividends for 208 years

  • Procter & Gamble (PG): Has been paying dividends since 1891, which is over 133 years.

  • Coca-Cola (KO): Has been paying dividends since 1893, over 131 years.

  • Colgate-Palmolive (CL): Has been paying dividends since 1895, which is 129 years.

  • General Mills (GIS): Has been paying dividends since 1898, over 126 years.

  • Exxon Mobil (XOM): Has been paying dividends since 1882, although its future dividend sustainability is questioned.

  • Eli Lilly (LLY): Has been paying dividends since 1885, over 139 years.

  • Consolidated Edison (ED): Has been paying dividends since 1885, although its future dividend sustainability is also questioned

While the total number of active stocks fluctuates, an average of 6,000 at any given point in time, would be a good estimate.

Alarm Bells are Ringing: Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program Will Fail Without Changes

https://www.drugtopics.com/view/alarm-bells-are-ringing-medicare-drug-price-negotiation-program-will-fail-without-changes

If CMS doesn’t reconsider its mandate, which forces independent pharmacies to go deep into a hole and lose money, many of them will close.

On either side of the political aisle, you’ll find a desire to reduce prescription drug cost for Americans. Former President Biden made the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program a centerpiece of his health care agenda. President Trump has already formalized his commitment to preserving the Medicare cost-savings program.

Recently, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced the next 15 drugs to be negotiated. They are all popular brand-name drugs for common illnesses, including blockbuster semaglutide (Ozempic). Independent pharmacists support lowering prescription drug costs; however, as we notified the last administration and stress now following a new national survey and a research report, the program as it is currently designed is doomed to fail.

There are 2 main problems. First, the federal program forces pharmacies to lay out thousands of dollars per week to acquire the drugs and then wait potentially weeks to receive refunds from the drugmakers. Second, it mandates that independent pharmacies serving Medicare Part D patients participate, even if doing so drives them out of business.

In the study, we found that pharmacies will face payment delays of at least a week beyond current terms; they will lose $11,000 per week in cash flow; and they could lose as much as $43,000 annually. As any small business owner knows, such disruption can put a company out of business.1

The national survey found that more than 32.8% of independent pharmacists have already decided not to stock 1 or more of the drugs in anticipation of the financial hit.2 Another 60.4% said they are considering not stocking 1 or more of the drugs. There are more than 18,000 independent pharmacies in the country, and many serve rural and under-served communities. Our survey indicates that if changes aren’t made to the program, only a fraction will participate. That will leave millions of Medicare patients stranded without the drugs they need.

If CMS doesn’t reconsider its mandate, which forces independent pharmacies to go deep into a hole and lose money, many of them will close. It could be a catastrophe for Medicare patients.

Many independent pharmacies are already teetering because of the predatory behavior of the 3 largest pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), which control 80% of all prescriptions in the US. All 3 – CVS Caremark, Optum Rx, and Express Scripts – own or are owned by giant insurance companies like UnitedHealth Group and Cigna. They also own mail-order pharmacies.

The big PBMs and insurance companies impose billions of dollars in backdoor fees on independent pharmacies. They determine which pharmacies patients must use, they often steer patients to their own pharmacies, they decide how much patients must pay out of pocket, they frequently reimburse small pharmacies less than it costs them to acquire drugs and fill prescriptions, and they often reimburse those pharmacies less than they reimburse their own pharmacies.

Because of the conflicts of interest and self-dealing, made possible by vertical integration, pharmacies were struggling long before the new program. This could be the straw that breaks the camel’s back.

The alarm bells are ringing. Congress must act this year to ensure local pharmacies survive. There is strong bipartisan support for PBM reform, and President Trump has said many times he wants to “get rid of the middlemen.” President Trump has an opportunity to fix the glaring flaws in the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program. Otherwise, all the good intentions that inspired the program will be wasted.

B. Douglas Hoey is CEO of the National Community Pharmacists Association, which represents more than 18,000 independent pharmacies across the country.

Anti-Obesity Medicines Are Not All Created Equally

Anti-Obesity Medicines Are Not All Created Equally

https://thetimesweekly.com/2025/03/anti-obesity-medicines-are-not-all-created-equally/

The new FDA-approved weight loss medicines have changed the game for people with obesity, offering millions of people a chance to transform their health, prevent disease, and live longer lives. But as demand for these treatments soars, an illegal industry is growing alongside it. Criminal networks, counterfeiters, and rogue compounding pharmacies are taking advantage of patients’ needs, flooding the market with fake, unsafe, and untested knockoffs. In December 2023, the FDA seized thousands of counterfeit injection pens within the U.S. drug supply chain. A Tennessee woman’s home was also raided by police, where officers found more than 300 vials of counterfeit weight loss drugs—semaglutide and tripeptide—that she had been supplying to med spa clinics. After testing, one of the vials contained nothing but water. This is the reality of an unregulated black market. People think they are injecting medicine into their bodies that will improve their health, but they could be injecting poison—or nothing at all.

For counterfeiters and other profiteers, the market is ripe for exploitation — high patient demand and a rising obesity epidemic create the perfect conditions for their illegal trade to thrive. The result? A knock-off weight-loss drug market populated with med spas, online “telehealth” sellers, and unauthorized compounding pharmacies pushing dangerous counterfeit or untested compounded medications. The Black community is especially vulnerable given its higher prevalence of obesity. In 2023, non-Hispanic Black or African American adults were 30% more likely to be obese than non-Hispanic white adults, with 43 percent of non-Hispanic Black adults over the age of 18 classified as obese. As the Executive Director of the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE), I oversee an organization whose mission is to protect our communities from harm. Law enforcement officers are already seeing the rise of counterfeit weight loss drugs spread through our communities. Just as with illicit street drugs, enforcing the law is critical to get these dangerous products off the market. But equally critical is to stem consumer demand.

The Trump administration has an opportunity to help curb this rising demand. Currently, there is a proposed rule at the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare (CMS) rule that would provide coverage for FDA-approved weight loss drugs, thereby significantly increasing access to these innovative medicines. Unlike other chronic diseases, obesity treatments have been excluded from Medicare coverage. The result has been limited access to authentic medicines, creating a high demand for knock-off versions. While law enforcement must do its part to rein in bad actors, the new administration can help by finalizing the CMS proposed rule. Providing greater access to safe and effective medicines would go. A long way to put illicit suppliers on notice and out of business. No one should be exposed to the risks that come with untested, unregulated injectable medicines and I am confident President Trump will make the right decisions to protect American public health.

Novo Nordisk unveils DTC pharmacy NovoCare, offers discounted Wegovy

Novo Nordisk unveils DTC pharmacy NovoCare, offers discounted Wegovy

https://www.mmm-online.com/news/novo-nordisk-dtc-pharmacy-novocare-discounted-wegovy/

The home shipments — which will be fulfilled by CenterWell Pharmacy — include Wegovy injections of 0.25 mg, 0.5 mg, 1 mg, 1.7 mg and 2.4 mg.

Novo Nordisk has officially entered the direct-to-consumer (DTC) platform game.

The Danish drugmaker unveiled NovoCare Pharmacy on Wednesday morning, offering home shipments of the popular GLP-1 Wegovy at $99 per month for cash-paying patients.

This is less than half of the current price for the drug for uninsured patients.

The home shipments — which will be fulfilled by CenterWell Pharmacy — include Wegovy injections of 0.25 mg, 0.5 mg, 1 mg, 1.7 mg and 2.4 mg.

In addition to the home delivery capabilities, the drugmaker said NovoCare will support patients with benefit verification, refill reminders as well as access to live support from a case manager.

“Novo Nordisk continues to advance solutions for patients that improve affordability and access to our medicines, whether they have insurance or not. Today, over 55 million people in the U.S. have coverage specifically for weight management medicines, and 90% of Wegovy patients with coverage pay $0 to $25 a month for Wegovy,” said Dave Moore, EVP of U.S. operations and global business development and president of Novo, in a statement. “With NovoCare Pharmacy, patients and prescribers alike have another option that provides convenient access to all doses of real, FDA-approved Wegovy at a reduced cost in our high-quality pen.”

In the release detailing the launch of NovoCare, the drugmaker acknowledged the prominence of compounded pharmacies and telehealth companies offering compounded versions of Wegovy and fellow GLP-1 Ozempic.

The company said NovoCare offers “reliable access to authentic, FDA-approved” Wegovy while alluding to the “dangers of fake or illegitimate” compounded semaglutide — the active ingredient in the drugs.

This comes on the heels of the FDA announcing an end to the shortage of Wegovy and Ozempic late last month after more than a year of ongoing scarcity challenges.

The launch also came nearly one month after Novo called out suppliers of compounded weight loss drugs in a print ad in The New York Times following Hims & Hers’ controversial Super Bowl ad.

In light of the announcement, Novo’s stock was trading up nearly 4% by noon.

Of note, Novo’s decision to offer discounted Wegovy also came one week after Eli Lilly announced that it would expand offerings of its hit weight loss drug Zepbound.

The drugmaker will now offer 7.5mg and 10mg doses of Zepbound, which uses the active ingredient tirzepatide, in single-dose vials.

The medications are available for $499 during a patient’s first month and refills that occur 45 days after through Lilly’s Self Pay Journey Program. Lilly also lowered the cost for its existing 2.5mg and 5mg vials.

With the introduction of NovoCare, Novo also now joins the ranks of Lilly and Pfizer in terms of Big Pharma companies that have rolled out DTC platforms within the past year.

In January 2024, Lilly debuted its LillyDirect service, which marked the first DTC push for GLP-1 drugs like Zepbound and Mounjaro.

A few months later, the company announced a partnership with Amazon to distribute select medications through LillyDirect.

Then, in August, Pfizer announced its digital DTC platform PfizerForAll.

In practice, PfizerForAll will provide patients with access to care services, prescription fills and options to save on medicines.

Through the site, consumers are able to make same-day in-person or telehealth appointments with independent healthcare professionals, sign up for home delivery of prescription medicines, OTC treatments or diagnostic tests, schedule vaccination appointments and pay for medicines or access Pfizer’s patient support services.

Pfizer directed consumers to visit the site at the end of its minute-long Super Bowl ad.

Senior citizens are rattled by news that Medicare telehealth coverage could expire next month

Senior citizens are rattled by news that Medicare telehealth coverage could expire next month

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/senior-citizens-medicare-telehealth-coverage-expiring-rcna193487

Advocates say the coverage has bipartisan support, but efforts to make it permanent have been unsuccessful.

For Kaye Peterson, 67, the expansion of Medicare telehealth coverage during Covid-19 was a godsend.  

Peterson, who has Type 1 diabetes and lives in an assisted living facility, no longer drives, so she depends on extended family when she needs in-person appointments with specialists who are roughly an hour away from her home in Lebanon, Kentucky. But for routine primary care, she simply uses her iPhone. 

Soon that may no longer be possible. On March 31, Medicare telehealth “flexibilities” established during the Covid-19 pandemic are set to expire. Recent social media posts, including the one that alerted Peterson to the change, have prompted an outcry from beneficiaries and their families who rely on the service. 

“I’m in a care facility full of people in wheelchairs and on oxygen,” Peterson said. “It’s just a commonsense rule that needs to be extended.” 

Health advocates say the telemedicine options now at risk are particularly important for older adults who are homebound or, like Peterson, live in rural communities far from their doctors’ offices.  

The current flexibilities were enacted when Congress waived restrictions in March 2020 under President Donald Trump and were extended several times under President Joe Biden.

If Congress doesn’t act, on April 1, the previous rules will largely be restored, which means most telehealth appointments will be covered only if they’re provided in person at rural medical facilities.

There will be exceptions for certain services, such as mental health care and some visits for home dialysis treatments. 

A lapse could have ramifications for millions of Medicare beneficiaries. Roughly 13% of the nearly 22 million people with traditional coverage received a telehealth service from October to December 2023. 

Dr. Cecil Bennett, a family medicine physician in Newnan, Georgia, outside Atlanta, estimates that half of his clinic’s patients are on Medicare. Some already have telehealth appointments scheduled months out. He often uses telehealth to deliver simple information, like lab results, and fears that some patients may miss necessary appointments if they require in-person visits, allowing conditions to worsen.  

There will be exceptions for certain services, such as mental health care and some visits for home dialysis treatments. 

A lapse could have ramifications for millions of Medicare beneficiaries. Roughly 13% of the nearly 22 million people with traditional coverage received a telehealth service from October to December 2023. 

Dr. Cecil Bennett, a family medicine physician in Newnan, Georgia, outside Atlanta, estimates that half of his clinic’s patients are on Medicare. Some already have telehealth appointments scheduled months out. He often uses telehealth to deliver simple information, like lab results, and fears that some patients may miss necessary appointments if they require in-person visits, allowing conditions to worsen.  

In a statement to NBC News, Sen. Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del., who co-introduced a bipartisan bill to solidify the provisions when she was in the House, described the flexibilities as “vital” — “especially for those in underserved and rural communities and those with accessibility or transportation barriers” — and said she is still fighting for permanent protections.

Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., whose viral social media posts brought attention to the looming deadline, said he plans to introduce similar legislation.  

“What is the rationale for this other than making life more difficult for many seniors?” Khanna said on X.

With the fate of telehealth still uncertain, Bennett is waiting to see whether the appointments he has booked can proceed.

“I really hope that Congress acts quickly,” he said. “I know that they kick the can down the road — I’m fine with that as long as they keep kicking the can.”

Why Reliable Opioid Death Data is Impossible

Why Reliable Opioid Death Data is Impossible

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2024/07/why_reliable_opioid_death_data_is_impossible.html

If we’ve learned anything from our national COVID experience, it’s that science is not a collection of fixed, eternal declarations. Tools and terminology useful in the process of discovery can also be instruments of confirmation. A microscope can be a portal to the unexpected, or a prop in a theatrical performance.

True crime documentaries and news reports of deaths often feature a statement such as, “toxicology was performed,” “toxicology is pending,” or “toxicology showed X, Y and Z.” The word, “toxicology,” has an aura of a thorough, definitive procedure.

Typically, “toxicology” is understood as analogous to drug screening the living, but methods and reliability are very different. Usually screening for the living is something like a 10-panel test of a fresh sample of urine, plasma, or serum (occasionally hair), with results for limited categories (positive for opioid could mean morphine, oxycodone, or codeine, other medications, or recently-consumed poppyseed cake). Cross-positive results can be caused by unrelated consumption, such as quinine in tonic water (false positive for opiates), ephedrine, fluoxetine, metformin, and pseudoephedrine (false positive for methamphetamine,) and the proton pump inhibitor pantoprazole (positive for marijuana).

Because of the multitude of conditions and processes particularly affecting human remains, post-mortem testing is vulnerable to widely varied confounding artifacts and processes. Decomposition and/or bacterial action can alter the location or concentration of drugs or metabolites, a process called postmortem redistribution. In addition, physical and chemical changes within the body, or subsequent contamination, can create or destroy chemicals. Burial can affect results.

Factors affecting results are not only numerous, but often impossible to discover in retrospect. Who could determine temperature changes in a room in the hours or days before a body was discovered?

For post-mortem drug testing, whole blood collected from the femoral artery is preferred as somewhat shielded from ongoing changes. If unavailable, other options — all more vulnerable to confounding factors — include blood from the heart, tissue from solid organs, fluids from other areas of the body (e.g, eye or stomach). Some professionals recommend sampling multiple locations to potentially piece together better data.

Not only is there no standard set of tests, there aren’t standardized protocols for performing tests or collecting samples. The National Association of Medical Examiners publishes a list of recommended standards, but following them isn’t mandatory. Forensic procedures vary widely by location (there are over 2000 death investigation offices in the U.S.).

Regarding post-mortem drug testing, one professional stated, “There is no reliable or obvious connection between concentrations measured in life and subsequent to death. Consequently, concentrations measured after death cannot generally be interpreted to yield concentrations present before death. The definition of lethal concentrations is extremely difficult.”

Even if post-mortem results could reliably indicate concentrations prior to death, it wouldn’t prove the drugs caused the death. Individual sensitivity to medications varies. Anaphylaxis can follow previous unremarkable exposure. Combining medications can increase or decrease absorption, or produce a toxic interaction. Because metabolizing opioids varies widely, and tolerance increases with use, some people are unharmed by a dose that would suppress respiration in others. Prescribed morphine could be detected in a patient who died of cancer or a pain patient who was a passenger in a fatal car crash.

One paper I read discussed eight deaths attributed to drugs. Potential candidates for the study were excluded if there was missing medical and/or social history, or advanced decomposition. All the subjects studied had positive post-mortem drug assays — and physical details consistent with other causes of death, e.g., pneumonia. All had pulmonary edema, three with foam and/or fluid in the lungs. One woman had a history of suicide attempts, and plastic over her face. A 16-year-old girl had a potentially deadly heart condition, myocardial fibrosis. The paper said results were, “not specific but suggestive for drug abuse” with “no distinct findings indicating intoxication or poisoning” and “not evocative of specific substance misuse.”

Beyond difficulties interpreting post-mortem tests, reason for skepticism of drug-death statistics is raised by the way data is collected and formatted. The CDC’s coding for opioid overdoses is often applied to cases including multiple drugs. Among individuals counted as opioid overdoses, 69.2-87.5% have 1-4 other drugs on the death certificate, with benzodiazepines involved in 77%. For years, CDC codes counted as “prescription opioid overdoses” deaths linked to opioids that included illegally-manufactured fentanyl, and diverted methadone (The vast majority of methadone is not prescribed, but administered via substance abuse treatment. Methadone prescribing for pain decreased sharply from 2009 to 2019). For years, deaths were being attributed to prescription drugs the decedents most likely never used.

Further complicating matters, claims of rising opioid deaths is the inconsistent data CDC receives. In some jurisdictions, and some timeframes, overdose as a cause of death didn’t even specify a drug. This was the case for 12% of overdose deaths in 2017-18, and in 19- 22% during 2012-13.

Keep in mind only 7.4% of U.S. dead are autopsied. But every decedent gets a cause of death. Numerous causes of death, such as cardiac arrhythmia, leave no physical clues. These unreliable statistics center on a small number (3%) of U.S. deaths. Years of data massively overstating prescription overdoses, have justified policies with devastating effects for the estimated 50.2 million Americans with chronic, severe pain and pain prescribers. The data has been used justifying massive federal drug control spending ($261.3 billion, 2012-2020 with equal spending by state governments).

Government anti-opioid efforts focus — not effectively — on teens and young adults. But most deaths in the opioid overdose category are in the 45-54 age group — more frequently prescribed opioids for chronic pain. Risk of death from all kinds of causes is higher in the 45-54 age group, chronic pain adds slightly elevated risk.

Opioid death statistics are always good for a headline. A 2018 Boston Globe article reported 1/4 of Massachusetts residents knew someone who died from opioids. Massachusetts opioid death total in 2017 was 1,977 — 0.0289% of the state population of 6,863,560. A little quick math suggests that, for 1/4 of MA residents to know one of those unfortunate individuals, each decedent would have to have had approximately 867 friends and family (not counting out-of-state loved ones!). Massachusetts data available at the time could have shaped a very different article. The 2016 and 2017 totals — 2,107 and 1,977 respectively — showed opioid deaths had declined by 130 while Massachusetts’ population increased by 136,280.

It’s common that someone pointing out a flaw in a system or process, is met with demands that the criticism include recommendations for correction. Unfortunately, so many problems affect U.S. overdose death statistics — from unpredictable microbes, physical processes, and environmental conditions to the inconsistency in years-old data coding — that it’s not possible to even hypothesize a way to clean up the data. The best this observer can suggest is discontinuing use of fatally flawed statistics to drive federal policy and spending.

Shots Fired!! Two of the most prestigious medical journals just came out fiercely against epidural injections

Shots Fired!! Two of the most prestigious medical journals just came out fiercely against epidural injections / RFA.

The British Medical Journal just published a “Practice Guideline” paper with these damning statements:

“For people living with chronic radicular spine pain, the guideline panel issued strong recommendations against: epidural injection of local anaesthetic, steroids, or their combination.”

“For people living with chronic axial spine pain, the guideline panel issued strong recommendations against: joint radiofrequency ablation.”

The New England Journal of Medicine’s “Journal Watch” then doubled down on this stance (links in comments):

“The unfortunate reality is that some patients with chronic cervical or lumbosacral pain don’t respond to standard first-line noninvasive measures. They are understandably desperate for relief, and clinicians understandably feel obligated to “do something”.

However, none of the procedures covered in this guideline afforded clinically important pain relief with moderate certainty, according to the panel. In their concluding remarks, the authors also address the high cost of these procedures in the U.S., noting that “the substantial reimbursement… may act as a perverse incentive for their delivery.”

I’m a little bit stunned.

What do policy-makers want? For every spine patient to live eternally in a purgatory of PT and acupuncture and cognitive-behavioral therapy… even if they aren’t getting relief?

What is the impact of this philosophy on workforce productivity, long-term disability, and human misery?

Don’t get me wrong… I love the “less is more” mentality.

But do these journals/authors know the power of these words… especially when exploited by denial-addicted insurance companies?

It’s funny… a lot of conversations tend to pit spine surgeons like myself AGAINST our interventional pain colleagues.

On this day… maybe we need to band together.

Who else will act as custodians and stewards of spine care in this country?

Taif J. Mukhdomi Dr. Soubrata V. Raikar Raul Monzon MD Chris Centeno, M.D.

Your Body, Your Health Care

AVAILABLE APRIL 8TH. Pre-order at retailers now.

• Published By Cato Institute

At a time when individuals feel increasingly disenfranchised by their health care choices, Dr. Jeffrey A. Singer’s groundbreaking new book, Your Body, Your Health Care, offers a compelling vision for a future in which patients regain control over their health decisions and care. The book underscores the importance of personal autonomy, highlighting how the patient-practitioner relationship has been overshadowed in recent decades by paternalistic and overbearing government intervention.

As government regulations continue to encroach upon personal health care choices, patients find themselves at the mercy of policymakers dictating their treatment options, from which health professionals they can consult to what substances they can ingest. In this timely work, Dr. Singer, a seasoned surgeon and policy expert, delves into the philosophical underpinnings of a health care system that respects individual sovereignty and moral agency.

“In the following pages, I want to inform you about how lawmakers and policymakers at all levels of government have failed to heed the pronouncement that ‘every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body,’” Dr. Singer emphasizes. “I hope to expose the harmful unintended consequences of this paternalism. Finally, I want to point out roads leading to a future where the government respects the autonomy and rights of all adults.”

Your Body, Your Health Care not only validates the grievances of patients but also presents a philosophical framework for the relationship between individuals, the health care system, and the state. Through thoughtful analysis of issues such as prescription requirements, the right to self-medicate, access to harm-reduction techniques, and licensing laws, Dr. Singer proposes a road map for reforming health care policy that prioritizes individual rights and provides essential reading for anyone concerned about the future of health care in America. It serves as a clarion call for change, urging readers to recognize their rights and the preservation of personal sovereignty in America.

Praise for the book

“Dr. Singer’s writing is engaging and always informed by his clinical experience, sharp insight into the unintended consequences of policy, and ethical commitments. Your Body, Your Health Care is a book worth reading, arguing over, and thinking about. Ultimately, Dr. Singer’s book provides a stark reminder that patient autonomy is still a vital ethical principle worth keeping.”
—Jay Bhattacharya, MD, PhD, professor of health policy, Stanford University

“Dr. Singer’s book is well written, well researched, and very provocative. Whether or not the reader agrees with everything that Dr. Singer writes about the regulatory state, they will be challenged to think differently and/​or to defend to themselves why they disagree. If the reader is a policymaker, they may be taking notes as to legislation to propose.”
—Sen. Bill Cassidy, MD (R‑LA)

“In an era when government officials and health experts are way too quick not only to tell you what’s best for you but also to mandate it with the force of law, Dr. Jeffrey A. Singer’s Your Body, Your Health Care is a righteous vaccine for the body politic.… His maximalist case for patient autonomy, informed consent, and the right to self-medication is exactly what we need in a world that is busting open with nearly infinite new treatments and cures for everything that ails us.”
—Nick Gillespie, editor at large, Reason

“Singer delves into some of the most pressing and contentious health care issues in the United States today. His criticism of the FDA is both thought-provoking and disturbing, as are many other sections in the book. Everyone concerned about government intrusion on patient autonomy should read this.”
—Josh Bloom, PhD, director of chemical and pharmaceutical research, American Council on Science and Health

About the author

Jeffrey A. Singer is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and works in the Department of Health Policy Studies. He is president emeritus and founder of Valley Surgical Clinics Ltd., the largest and oldest group private surgical practice in Arizona, and has been in private practice as a general surgeon for more than 35 years.

Opioids – how forced tapers do more patient harm than just increased pain

Opioids – how forced tapers do more patient harm than just increased pain

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/opioids-how-forced-tapers-do-more-patient-harm-than-just-neen-monty-ugrwc

Taking away my opioid pain relief is not only medically endorsed torture, it is taking away my ability to access treatment for my severe, late-diagnosed, long-standing disease, CIDP.

I have been very sick lately.  Why?  Because I missed my fortnightly IVIG infusion.  This infusion is very important, it treats my severe, long standing, late-diagnosed chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP).

This is the worst pain that I experience.  It is constant and severe, neuropathic and nociceptive pain.  It is caused by the demyelination of my nerves, and the consequent spasming of my muscles.  Again, it is constant, severe, chronic pain.

It is secondary pain.  Secondary to another disease, in this case CIDP.  Having been in pain for almost 20 years, I have addressed all the psychosocial aspects of pain. I have modified all the modifiable features of my pain.

The only thing that reduces my pain, enough so that I can function for an average for four hours a day, is opioids. Oxycodone, to be precise.

My pain management doctor is force tapering me.

She has no medical reason to do this.  NONE. She is misinformed and following outdated guidelines.

But last time I checked guideless were….guidelines.

NOT hard and fast rules!

As a doctor, she is supposed to provide individualised care. She is supposed to use her clinical judgement, not just follow a checklist.  She is to improve my life, not destroy it.

But she has all the power and I have none.

I tried a day without pain medication a few weeks ago and it was unbearable. I lasted 26 hours before I caved and took the pain medication.

Two weeks ago, I saw my GP. And she berated me for abandoning the taper.  She insisted I try again.

So, I did.

I saw her Friday.  I forgot on Saturday and took my normal dose.  Sunday, I took the reduced, taper dose.

Sunday was unbearable.

Monday was unbearable.

I woke up Tuesday, unable to walk, let alone drive. I go every second Tuesday.  I called the infusion centre to let them know that I could not drive, and I could not sit in the infusion chair for four hours, even if I had transport.

They were very kind, empathetic and compassionate. At least two nurses there are openly outraged that this is happening to me. The doctor there is wonderful, but he can’t say much about the taper, but he is…perplexed, shall we say. At the treatment plan that is clearly making my life harder and ruining my functional life.   He is watching me deteriorate and he askes me why my pain doctor is doing this.  I told him ‘Guidelines’.  He shook his head but said nothing.

That Tuesday, after being unable to attend my infusion, I was so angry and fed up and unable to cope with the pain anymore that I took my normal dose. Tuesday was still agonising.

Wednesday, I took my normal dose, but it was not enough to cut it.  I was in terrible pain all day.

Thursday, I stated to feel a reduction in pain. Once pain gets out of control like that, its impossible to get it back under control with your ‘usual’ dose. So, the great irony here is that I wound up using MORE pain medications because of this asinine forced taper. To get my pain back under control.

But the other thing I realised is how much the IVIG infusion does for my other symptoms. The fatigue.  The dizziness on standing. The muscles weakness.  The general feeling of being sick…malaise? I don’t know if that’s the right medical word.

Feeling like you have the flu, all the time.  Aches and pains, sure. Severe neuropathic pain, sure. But the fatigue was unreal. The heaviness in my legs…I could barely lift them.  I needed a wheelchair, even in the house.   And my house is not set up for the wheelchair, because mostly I can get by with a walker in the house.

I spent most of the week in bed anyway, not just because of pain but because I was too weak and too sick to do anything.

My life is slipping away from me. Because this doctor is not only condemning me to constant, severe pain.  Pain that NO ONE can live a functional life with.  But also, she is preventing me from accessing treatment for my DISEASE.  She is preventing me from having any chance of remission or even slowing progression.

She is killing me. Plain and simple.

I’m sure most people will not be happy with that characterisation, but what would YOU call it?

She is killing me slowly and painfully. She is torturing me to death.

Again, my pain is not functional. It is not psychosomatic. It is not psychosocial. It is not primary. It is NOT non-specific.

It is pathological pain.

There is known disease process going on. Biopsy proven nerve damage, demyelination and remyelination, naked axons and axonal degeneration.  This is permanent, because four neurologists couldn’t read an MRI and ignored a lumbar puncture.  I have no ankle reflexes, which is impossible to fake, in case you think my biopsy was faked somehow.  And I have lost a lot of muscle mass.

I have severe disease. It is VERY painful.

The four neurologists who dismissed me as a neurotic or hysterical woman, and called it ‘functional’ ruined my life when they failed to diagnose my disease. Because of THEM, I live with constant, severe, pain and I live with severe disabling weakness.  IF they’d diagnosed me early, I would have had a chance at treatment, at remission. But no.  They were lazy and decided it was ‘functional’.  Thereby condemning me to a lifetime of pain and disability.

You could say my disease and disability are iatrogenic, because of doctor failure.   Four of them.

Now, insult to injury, pain management doctors refuse to treat the pain that severe, late-diagnose disease causes.

Just take a moment to consider just how FAR doctors have let me down. How badly they have failed me.

Ten years ago, presenting with severe disease, I would have been given empathy support and PAIN RELIEF.

Now? I am given pain science education which obviously does nothing for pathological disease.

I am given psychological treatments for pathological disease.

I am given the eye rolls, because ‘it can’t be that bad’.

I am given nothing.  No empathy, no compassion, no pain relief.

I am given nothing.

No one can argue that this taper is for my benefit.

This is happening to people all around Australia, every day.

Help us STOP THE FORCED TAPERS!

Pain Patient Advocacy Australia.

The FPM and the RACGP are using FLAWED AND OUTDATED opioid prescribing guidelines. HELP US UPDATE THE GUIDELINES AND STOP THE MEDICALLY SANCTIONED TORTURE OF PEOPLE LIVING WITH PAINFUL, PROGRESSIVE, INCURABLE DISEASE!

There’s Big Money in Withholding Pain Relief

There’s Big Money in Withholding Pain Relief

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2025/02/there_s_big_money_in_withholding_pain_relief.html

Pain is the most common reason for seeking medical care.  Although pain is experienced only by individuals, under federal policy, pain is a public health challenge, even a global health priority.  In a way, this isn’t surprising, as modern definitions of health and public health are expansive, even including transitory mental and emotional states.

Public health as a concept arose along with eugenics during the Progressive Era.  Although the two concepts weren’t completely congruent, both were compatible with government assuming authority to act on behalf of the health of the population.

Logically, a healthy community isn’t a thing.  All populations include some individuals with disease or infirmity.  But the concept of public health offers an opportunity for authoritarian control.  Health-linked government actions extend beyond reasonable efforts like  sanitation, clean water, and emergency stockpiles for disasters or epidemics.

Since 2010, the National Pain Strategy, created by the NIH and Institute of Medicine (IOM) has been our government’s “comprehensive population health-level strategy for pain.”  The Federal Pain Research Strategy (FPRS) was added later.  Congress has a Best Practices Inter-Agency Task Force to align with the NPS.  The NIH has an Office of Pain Policy.  The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke has an Office of Pain Policy and Planning.

The Executive Summary of the FPRS lists these priorities: “dissemination and implementation of research to support the translation of scientific discoveries into clinical practice and improve the lives of people in pain.”  The IOM anticipates “cultural transformation in pain prevention, care, education and research” via population-level strategy.

The fact that millions of law-abiding Americans suffer chronic and severe pain is clearly not news to our government.  Massive federal funds are earmarked for research seeking alternative pain treatments and shoring up unfounded links between prescribed opioids and opioid use disorder, overdoses, and deaths.

Since 2005, the Blueprint for Neuroscience Research has funded research initiatives, training opportunities, tools, and neuroscience resources focused on pain.  Participating federal agencies include the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research.  The Blueprint’s 2025 budget is $2.8 billion.

Helping End Addiction Longterm (HEAL) dominates internet searches related to pain care.  Another collaboration of multiple federal agencies, HEAL funds 1,800 projects in 50 states and spent over $3 billion between 2019 and 2023.  Research funded by HEAL includes opioid use disorder and addiction, managing pain while reducing opioid use disorder, preventing opioid use disorder and addiction, new and non-addictive analgesics, new pain targets and mechanisms, and finding links between pain and substance abuse.

Opioid use disorder” — distinct from substance abuse disorder — was first incorporated in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition (DSM-5) in 2013.  NIMH refused to support DSM-5 because of inclusion of diagnoses not supported by laboratory measurements.  NIMH shifted funding away from research based on DSM-5.  Clearly, things have changed since then.

Drill into every federal funding opportunity involving pain, and the priorities are clear.  Connect prescribed opioids with opioid use disorder, substance abuse, or addiction.  Develop and promote non-opioid treatments.  Promote non-opioid treatments whether they work or not (they don’t).  Minimize prescribing and maximize demonization, as if prescribed opioids were a global threat to carbon-based life forms.

Problematic opioid use following a prescription is extremely rare.  JAMA data published in 2016 on over half a million surgery patients not prescribed opioids for at least a year.  A reference sample of 18 million subjects received no surgery or prescriptions.  Subsequent opioid misuse ranged from 0.119–1.14% for the surgery patients and 0.136% for reference subjects.  In 2018, the BMJ published data following over 2 million patients prescribed opioids for the first time after surgery.  The post-surgery misuse rate was 0.6%.  But federal budgets continue to support research seeking a link that years of data already disproved.

The Federal Pain Research Strategy Summary includes one key admission: “Novel pharmacologic treatments for pain have not emerged for some time.”  Not for lack of spending.

Often treatments prescribed for pain are not opioids, despite lack of evidence that alternative treatments have any significant benefit.  Psychiatric medications such as gabapentin, amitriptyline, and duloxetine have been prescribed off-label for decades, with scant evidence of efficacy.  Gabapentin withdrawal symptoms are remarkably similar to opioid withdrawal.  Spinal stimulation implants aren’t guaranteed to relieve pain, while patients have reported negative side-effects for years.  No alternative has yet shown effectiveness for pain that comes close to opioids.  All that can be inferred from existing evidence is that some physical treatments, like chiropractic, may help reduce pain in conjunction with an analgesic.

It’s almost refreshing to see an NIH publication admit that research focuses on “opioid use, misuse and addiction” with a “dearth of federal funding for studying interventional pain management.”  Interventional pain management means invasive procedures, including spinal stimulation, nerve blocks, and surgery.  Our modern medical establishment calls this a holistic approach.  Existing opioids have no place in this vision of pain care.

In 2017, half of Americans had tried alternative treatments, but only 20% used them instead of conventional care.  As of 2021, only 2% of Americans had tried acupuncture.

Among pain patients surveyed in 2024, 77% were willing to consider alternative treatments, and 65% were willing to try acupuncture.  Pain makes people desperate.  Desperation makes people vulnerable to unfounded ideas.

Untreated pain affects endocrine, cardiovascular, immune, neurological, muscle, and skeletal function.  Pain patients suffer exhaustion, memory deficit, attention deficit, and cognitive decline.  Decreasing activity, declining fitness, and increasing obesity are followed by joint weakness, neuropathies, muscle contractions, hypertension, and tachycardia.  “Cardiovascular death is a common occurrence among persistent pain patients, likely due to a multitude of factors.”

Government funding for anything-but-opioids continues.  Taxes pay for researching and promoting mindfulness (teaching pain patients what to think), swearing (when patients tire of being told what to think), placebos (faking re-classified as legitimate treatment), yoga (a religious practice), and deep brain stimulation.  So much more than merely wires inside your skull, deep brain stimulation is wires inside your skull plus bilateral upper chest implants.  When there’s effective oral medication (opioids), who would choose enough implants to qualify as a Borg?

The only transformation of pain care that should occur in the U.S. is to return prescribing decisions to doctors and stop government bureaucrats practicing medicine without a license.