One Bitter Pill

You know when bureaucrats have an agenda – like seeking to be elected to a higher office … or a phobia… there seems no end that they will go to… to address either.

The AG of Indiana has pushed the Medical Licensing Board to pass EMERGENCY REGULATIONS addressing the physician’s ability to prescribe opiates for those who are in chronic pain.

http://www.in.gov/pla/files/Emergency_Rules_Adopted_10.24.2013.pdf

And this website  is his “little baby” http://www.in.gov/bitterpill/ 

The real BITTER PILL is to those chronic pain pts that will have difficulty in finding/getting adequate treatment..

Below is the “reader’s digest” version of the new regulations that  are going into effect Dec 15, 2013

I find the first quote really laughable …”first do no harm”… I guess that denying chronic pain pts adequate therapy as not doing any harm.

Of course in Indiana… package liquor stores can be open 20 hrs/day… 07:00 till 03:00 next day. wouldn’t want to deprive alcoholics their drug of choice… no harm or addiction there..

Tobacco products can be sold 24 hr/day… no harm or addiction there.. Nicotine has no addiction potential ? … unless you consider the 440,000 people that die every year from tobacco use/abuse

In Indiana gambling is illegal.. unless is the state run lottery and/or state licensed casinos … there is no one addicted to gambling – RIGHT ?

But the common denominator here…. a very healthy flow of tax money into the state coffers …

maybe bureaucrat and hypocrite should be synonyms !

“FIRST DO NO HARM”

The New Indiana Law for Safer Opioid Use In Chronic Pain Management

As of Dec 15, 2013 at the start of chronic opioid treatment, a provider must…

  • Perform detailed history and physical
  • Review records from previous healthcare providers
  • Have the patient complete an objective pain assessment tool
  • Do a risk Assessment, including both:

                    Mental Health assessment- use validated tool

                       Risk Assessment- use validated tool

  • Tailor a diagnosis & treatment plan with functional goals
  • When appropriate, use non-opioid options
  • Counsel women on neonatal abstinence syndrome
  • Perform urine drug screens to screen for illicit or un-prescribed drugs
  • Query INSPECT
  • Meet with patient quarterly
  • If the patient’s opioid dose reaches a morphine equivalent of 60 milligrams/day, face to face review of the treatment plan is required, including consideration of consultation and counseling of risk of therapy, including death
  • Sign a Treatment Agreement including..
  • Goals of treatment
  • Consent to drug/monitoring/Permission to conduct random pill counts
  • Prescribing policies, including prohibition of sharing medications & requirement to take medications as prescribed
  • Information on pain medications prescribed by other physicians
  • Reasons that opioid therapy may be changed or discontinued.

*Any patienton≥60opioidpillsX3moor>15MorphineEquivalentDoseDailyX3mo (exclusionsincludeterminallyill,nursinghome,palliativecare&hospicepatients)

Source: IndianaMedicalLicensingBoardPrescribingrules:http://www.in.gov/pla/files/Emergency_Rules_Adopted_10.24.2013.pdf

Ten Key Prescribing Recommendations

  1. Do your own evaluation and establish a working diagnosis
  2. Assess mental health status; ask about alcohol and substance abuse
  3. Set functional goals with your patients and outline expectations for treatment
  4. When prescribing opioids, obtain information consent and review/sign treatment agreement
  5. Use non-pharmacologic treatments and non-opioid medications initially for treatment
  6. Run an INSPECT report at least every 3-6 months and more often as needed
  7. Perform urine drug monitoring to check for unexpected drug use and to ensure compliance
  8. Avoid dangerous medication combinations, such as opioids and benzodiazepines or other sedating products
  9. Limit opioid dose to 30-50 mg per day  (morphine equivalent) to minimize risk and adverse effects
  10. See patients at least every 3-4 months and obtain a pain management consult if pain is poorly controlled or if multiple co-morbidities are present

More information at www.bitterpill.in.gov

 

 


 

3 Responses

  1. What an intrusion into my Medical privacy & Doctor/Patient confidentiality. I am now suffering because of this law. Sure wish I knew a good lawyer that would be willing to take on the State. I would really like to talk to them!!

  2. Going to the doctor today I now have to agree to random drug tests for a medication I have used for years. get out of my personal life Big Brother.

  3. Aren’t there ALREADY enough legislators attempting to practice medicine????

    Leave the legitimate chronic pain patients alone! Let existing law deal with the rest. Sheesh.

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