Kolodny: “..begin to take away the painkillers and start treating these patients for narcotic addiction”

Dr. Shawna Yates is Medical Director of the Southwest Montana Community Health CenterNew Opioid Guidelines Redefining ‘Compassion’ For Montana Doctors

http://mtpr.org/post/new-opioid-guidelines-redefining-compassion-montana-doctors

 

As the nation faces an epidemic of opioid drug abuse after a decade of aggressively prescribing narcotics , Montana doctors are becoming more cautious about giving painkillers to chronic pain patients.

It’s changing some patients ability to get treatment and what is considered compassionate care for chronic pain.

Last spring, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new opioid prescribing guidelines for doctors, designed to address the national epidemic.

In response, Butte Doctor Shawna Yates, the Medical Director of Southwest Montana Community Health Center, sent a letter to pain patients saying the clinic would no longer prescribe high doses of opioid painkillers.

“For me, personally, I really do try to stress that I believe in their pain,” Yates says, “that I understand where the concern that they’re having is coming from.”

But Yates says, her clinic’s new policies for the highly addictive drugs have caused a lot of patients to seek care elsewhere.

“I’ve said it more often in the last six months than ever before. I’m not leaving them. If they decide to leave, they’re leaving me.”

The CDC guidelines encourage primary care doctors to become less dependent on opioid medications for treating chronic pain because of the drugs’ serious side effects, including addiction.

The Butte clinic started tightening its prescribing policies back when it had about 700 pain patients coming in for treatment, years before the CDC released its guidelines.

It did things the CDC guidelines would eventually call for, like random drug tests, to make sure patients weren’t abusing their medication, or taking additional drugs. The clinic also required patients to only fill their prescriptions at one pharmacy.

“And many of those patients left” Yates’ clinic, she says. “There are many patients that aren’t willing to follow those recommendations.”

After the clinic put in the additional rules for pain treatment, and sent out a letter telling patients the clinic was adopting the federal guidelines, implementing a cap on how many pills it prescribed, about 400 patients left the clinic.

Doctor Andrew Kolodny, with the national advocacy group Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing, says lowering the limit on prescription painkillers is a good policy and it’ll help patients who are harmed by high doses.

“For patients who are being required to taper down who are on high doses, that’s appropriate,” Kolodny says.

Kolodny is also the co-director of the opioids policy research collaborative at Brandeis University in Boston.

“As Doctors start to figure out that we shouldn’t have been prescribing in this way, these patients are at risk of being cut off from a legal supply of opioids,” Kolodny says. “And that’s why we really do need a compassionate response for that population.”

Kolodny says the problem isn’t people using opioids because it makes them feel good, snagging a few pills to get a quick high. The issue, he says, is the millions of Americans who were legally supplied, and hooked, on these drugs during an era of medicine where opioids were believed to be a good option to treat pain.

Now, Kolodny says the most compassionate thing doctors can do is slowly, and safely, begin to take away the painkillers and start treating these patients for narcotic addiction. Because he, and some doctors around Montana, say regular use of opioids can actually make pain worse.

But pain patients like Dalaine Propp don’t like being told they drug abusers.

“We either do what they say we do or we get kicked to the curb,” Propp says.

Propp is a member a pain patient support group in Great Falls. They got together because they feel they’re being treated unfairly. There’s about 100 members in the group’s Facebook page, and this spring, a couple dozen people showed up to the group’s first meeting.

Propp says she’s tried alternatives to opioids.

“I did the physical therapy, we looked at the surgery option, we’ve done injections, and unfortunately the only thing that has kept me working and kept me going was the opiate medication,” she says. “I think this whole thing with the CDC has scared even regular practitioners to even start people on any kind of pain regime.”

“I have no doubt that there are patients who are telling you that they feel agonizing pain,” Kolodny says,”and then they take their opioid and they’re able to get out of bed and function and brush their teeth and have some type of life, and that without the opioid they wouldn’t be able to get out of bed and they’d feel like they want to commit suicide.

“I can tell you that’s exactly how people who are heroin users who are opiate addicted feel until you use your first dose of heroin in the morning you’re feeling agonizing pain and discomfort,” he says.

Kolodny says too few doctors who prescribe opioids also prescribe drugs that can help patients wean off the painkillers. If doctors want to help chronic pain patients move past opioids, he says, more doctors need that addiction medication training.

There are patients who say that once they got off opioids, it became easier to deal with their underlying pain issue, some describe it like a fog being cleared.

At the clinic where Doctor Shawna Yates works, in Butte, patients are required to go to mental health specialists and encouraged to keep up a good diet and get enough sleep.

“I think the biggest thing we need to do moving forward as a culture is find better ways to treat pain,” Yates says.

“The hardest part is to know that there are people out there that are not getting good pain relief, and with a culture that is getting older and that are suffering, that’s the part that bothers me,” she says. “We can take stuff away, and we can know that there is harm related to this. I don’t think the biggest challenge is taking these away. I think the biggest challenge is finding out what we are going to do in place of it.”

Yates says as she, and other doctors learn more about how to treat pain, she wants patients to know she’s not abandoning their care, even if that’s exactly how some patients see it.

4 Responses

  1. ** FYI **
    You can go to govtrack.us
    There you can find your representatives, senators and legislation. You can use your cell’s location to find your state’s representatives and senators along with their contact information. In the “legislation” line you can select by subject. Scroll till you see health. Select it and you can read all the various healthcare laws that can affect chronic pain management, opioid management and how Medicaid and Medicare recipients could/will be affected.
    **How we choose to manage our Chronic Pain should be our choice.
    **There is no room for the government in a responsible doctor/patient relationship.
    **Suicide is not Pain Management

  2. KLONDYN IS A IDIOT/DISTURBINGLY MENTALLY ILL,,,, 1st off we have MEDICAL CONDITION THAT ARE PHYSICALLY PAINFUL DAHHHHHHHHHHHHHH,,,,BECAUSE OPIATES ARE ALSO A MEDICINE,,AND HUMANS W/MEDICAL CONDITION SHOULD NEVER EVER BE FORCED TO ENDURE PHYSICAL PAIN FROM THAT MEDICAL CONDITION,THAT AGAINST THE LAW,FOR IT IS THE LEGAL DEFINITION OF TORTURE,,,DAHHHHHHHHH,,,,THIS GUY IS TRULY A PSYCHOPATH,,,,,,,A NUTTER,,,,CRAZY,,,,,TO THE POINT OF COMMITTING HARM TO ALL OF SOCIETY AND THEE MEDICALLY ILL W/PHYSICAL CONDITION THAT ARE PAINFUL,,,HE SHOULD BE LOCKED UP IN A LUNATIC ASYLUM,,,,SERIOUSLY!!!! OR AT LEAST EVALUATED FOR SOCIO-PSYCHOPATHIC TENDECY’S,,,maryw

  3. I’ll named the doctor,,Andrew Klondyn,,the clinic,,,the cdc,dea,hhs,dea,For their arrogance,his forced physical pain onto me,when it is literally impossible for anyone to physically feel the physical pain of another!!!!…don’t have a twitter acct,,,anyone can copy and paste this to twitter,,,MARYW

  4. From Sherry Sherman circulated on Facebook — Something that needs our action TODAY!

    Dr. Andrew Kolodny has issued an epic challenge to the pain patient community. He wants to know — “Outside of palliative care, dangerously high doses should be reduced even if patient refuses. Where exactly is this done in a risky way?” … and … “I’m asking you to point to a specific clinic or health system that is forcing tapers in a risky fashion.”

    Of course, pain patients must respond. If you have been forced to taper and you have been harmed by a specific doctor or clinic, please issue a tweet in reply to Dr. Kolodny @andrewkolodny. If you don’t have a twitter account, now is a good time to get one. Don’t be shy. Don’t hold back. Tell it like you have experienced it in 140 characters. COPY, PASTE, SHARE.

    Here is an example from my own Twitter account, within 140 characters:

    @andrewkolodny @CDCgov @WarOnPainPts @PainNewsNetwork @NatPainReport I’m one of thousands harmed by opioid denial and involuntary tapers.

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