Dr. Thomas Kline, MD, PhD: Medical Myths Revealed : IT IS TIME TO ACT 02-29-20

Yes there are problems, but far far less than reported. Just like wearing masks to prevent coronovirus has been shown to be waste of time (hand washing is key) people do it .FEAR. We will do anything to keep dope fiends out of our neighborhoods so we have a medical police state with interrogations,(i was just interrogated by a pharmacist today), denials of medications, raided doctors and druggists. Addicts do not go to pharmacies but drug hustlers do, but only 1%. Do we use a cannon or a nightstick. We need to stop check point charlie mentality. It did not work. People always figure a way over the wall. How much do we expend? How many do we harm. THIS NEEDS TO STOP WERE ARE CLOSE TO THE PROP/CDC GOAL OF NO PAIN MEDICINES FOR AMERICANS – EVER

Dr. Thomas Kline, MD, PhD: Medical Myths Revealed ENOUGH IS ENOUGH TIME TO ACT 02/28/20

Terrorism is fear engendered without clear reason. Medical terrorism started in 2016 with the unauthorized “voluntary” CDC guidelines now reviewed in detail by JATH, LLC and the results are startling.

Dr. Thomas Kline, MD, PhD: Medical Myths Revealed: War on Doctors Day 8… 2nd Part 1

https://youtu.be/BdyV7ANw9vE

I want crooks caught too. They steal prescriptions and dont pay taxes.
But what are the real tip offs. Only 1.5 % divert. How does one catch the 1.5% without harming the 98.5% who are not diverting and need opiate pain medicine which is the only stuff that works.

What a Narxcare score means to chronic pain/subjective disease pts

 

 

This is the latest and greatest thing that Appriss Health has brought to the market place that is designed to created a “FICO ” type score as to the pt’s risk of OVERDOSING.

Notice that a pt who is taking  50 + MME their “risk score” jumps dramatically and the pt gets to 90 MME/day and jumps even more.. actually in the UPPER 1/3 of the highest score on the chart.

https://apprisshealth.com/solutions/narxcare/

According to Appriss’ own comments the reference range was developed in 2014 from a Ohio study on just 1687 “unintentional OD deaths”..

Just how did they determine the at the OD was UNINTENTIONAL – and there is nothing to suggest from this reference that the OD’s were from prescription meds only !

There was a report from Ohio in 2017 that 99% of OD’s contained ILLEGAL FENTANYL  Dayton Ohio area: 99% of opiate OD’s tested positive for ILLEGAL FENTANYL ANALOG

First of all no one in these studies COMMITTED SUICIDE ?  We have about 50,000 suicides every  year and one million attempts and who believes that people ODing jumped from ZERO PER-CENT in 2014 in Ohio to 99% in 2017 ?

Apparently some state’s PMP programs have interfaced Narxcare within their reports on pts.  It has been reported that Walmart was one of the first pharmacies to implement this database program.

Apparently this program use the defective MME conversion programs to come to some of their conclusions — YES all MME conversion programs are inaccurate and defective !

Is this just another example of convoluting the truth so that it helps perpetuate the fabricated opiate crisis ? 

It would not surprise me that some chain pharmacies will interface this report into their pharmacy software programs and allow it to create HARD STOPS that a pharmacist cannot over-ride and will be given no choice but to turn the pt away without their necessary medication.

 

 

 

 

NBC: TV Show New Amsterdam (02/25/2020) – promoting ZERO OPIATES for pain pts ?

The NBC network has seemingly waded “hip-deep” in fighting the war on drugs and our fabricated opiate crisis… this clip is from the show 02/26/2020 and I am currently watching Chicago  Med  (NBC) and there is a doctor on the show who is opiate abuser.

There was a trailer on Law & Order Special Victims Unit for tomorrow night on NBC where the story line is about a doc that trades opiate Rxs for sex.

The number of shows – on all the networks – that seem to have taken on the task of helping to address/solve the fabricated opiate crisis

They just announced that there is a CROSS-OVER event from Chicago Fire and Chicago P.D. dealing with the national epidemic has reach Chicago.

Has the fabricated opiate crisis … reached a fabricated HYSTERIA ?

UnitedHealthcare appears to be shifting Medicaid patients to a large group practice that it owns

NJ Insurer Dumps 100s of Doctors

https://www.medpagetoday.com/publichealthpolicy/ethics/85090

Insurer Steers Patients to Its Own Practice

UnitedHealthcare appears to be shifting Medicaid patients to a large group practice that it owns, taking them away from their long-time doctors — hundreds of whom were unceremoniously dumped from the insurer’s network, NJ.com and Kaiser Health News report.

UnitedHealthcare has dropped many physicians in its central and northern New Jersey Medicaid physician network while bringing more patients to Riverside Medical Group, a large practice owned by its sister company Optum. Patients told the news outlets that in some cases UnitedHealthcare directed them to Riverside when informing them that their doctors were no longer in-network.

UnitedHealthcare said the changes are part of a larger cost-control effort and aren’t intended to boost Riverside’s business.

Rasha Salama has been taking her two kids to Inas Wassef, MD, a pediatrician in her home town of Bayonne, New Jersey, for five years. Wassef speaks their native Arabic and has office hours at convenient times: “She knows my kids, answers the phone, is open on Saturdays, and is everything for me,” Salama told KHN/NJ.com.

Wassef and two dozen other doctors filed a federal lawsuit in September to get reinstated in UnitedHealthcare’s network and continue seeing their patients.

Could this be an example of how pts will be treated if we get a SINGLE PAYER NATIONAL HEALTH CARE SYSTEM. United Health is the same entity that has the ENDORSEMENT OF AARP…

This currently only affecting MEDICAID PTS.. those who have little/no freedom of choice of what healthcare providers they can chose as their healthcare providers and as the article states…   UnitedHealthcare said the changes are part of a larger cost-control effort and aren’t intended to boost Riverside’s business.

But “boosting Riverside’s Business” means MORE PROFITS for United Healthcare and it appears that it has little to do with better pt care and better outcomes and quality of life for those Medicaid pts having United Health dictate who will provide be their healthcare provider.

CVS/Caremark/Silver Scripts/Aetna has some 40+ million covered lives under their Aetna insurance and they have there Immediate Care Centers in many of their pharmacies and they are starting to create HealthHub centers https://www.cvs.com/content/health-hub and those who have Silver scripts Part D insurance knows that prescriptions filled at pharmacies other than CVS pharmacies pay a HIGHER PRICE on all  of their prescriptions.

With United Health doing this… how much longer before CVS gets on the same path of optimizing profits on each of the pts that have CVS in control of their Part D prescriptions and/or has Aetna insurance.

Don’t Punish Pain Texas chapter head says opioid crackdown hurts many who need help

‘Don’t Punish Pain’ Texas chapter head says opioid crackdown hurts many who need help

https://kfdm.com/news/local/dont-punish-pain-texas-chapter-head-says-opioid-crackdown-hurts-many-who-need-help

There are 50 million Americans suffering from chronic pain and the opioid crisis is making the hurt even worse.

Many say the fight against opioid addiction is punishing those seeking relief.

We discovered the problem only a couple of weeks ago while doing a story about how the opioid epidemic is on the rise on our area.

Immediately after that report aired, we heard from many of you telling us about another crisis stemming from opioids. The challenge–to find doctors who will prescribe them for those who must have relief.

John Schoellman is head of the Texas chapter of ‘Don’t Punish Pain.’ He’s sounding the alarm on how the effort to combat the opioid crisis is creating another crisis.

“What’s happening with the chronic pain patient now is they don’t get their medication now, some have heart attacks, their blood pressure goes up so high they have heart attacks,” said Schoellman. “Some actually go to the streets and try to get the pain medicine because they’ve been cut completely off, and this exactly goes against what they’re trying to fix, the drugs, the overdoses.”

Schoellman suffers from chronic pain after years of repairing televisions. Still, he led an active lifestyle, thanks to the prescription pain medication he received, which came to an abrupt end.

“They told me, look, we can’t give the pain medicine any more.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, reacting to the opioid addiction epidemic, urged doctors not to prescribe opioids to chronic pain patients like Schoellman to avoid the risk of addiction and overdose.

“CDC guidelines, which were written in 2016, were written by a group of addiction specialists, not pain doctors. They didn’t even request a pain doctor on the committee.”

The CDC walked back those guidelines, warning abruptly discontinuing a patient’s opioid prescription could lead to greater harm. Schoellman and many others with chronic pain found it severely altered their lives

“That was horrible for them,” said Schoellman. “They’d been taking it for 20 to 30 years as prescribed and able to work like myself, and then when the guidelines came, we couldn’t do anything any more.”

Despite the CDC’s about-face, Schoellman says the Drug Enforcement Administration continues to target doctors. That, he says, has had a chilling effect on them. Schoellman says the lack of pain management is having a debilitating impact on his health.

“I wouldn’t have a surgery one, and I would be active. I would be a contributor to society and not a dependent on it or a burden, because I had to go on disability because of it and I hate that.”

But Schoellman is contributing to society. The College Station man who once fixed televisions now goes on tv to raise awareness.

Schoellman and his group plan to rally in Austin at the Texas Medical Board on March 20, demanding a solution to their suffering.

“You have to fix it. We’re not part of the opioid crisis, we are a casualty of the opioid crisis.”

Schoellman now has a pain pump device in his body delivering medication to his back, but he says it provides only limited relief.

That Don’t Punish Pain rally in Austin is noon until 1:30 p.m. March 20 at the Texas Medical Board.

Attorneys Looking for Class Action Participants, Health Care Providers Firing Doctors & Contact Congress

Attorneys Looking for Class Action Participants, Health Care Providers Firing Doctors & Contact Congress

http://nationalpainreport.com/attorneys-looking-for-class-action-participants-health-care-providers-firing-doctors-contact-congress-8843669.html

Pain Patient Advocacy Attorney Surfaces

Attorneys in Louisiana are looking into bringing legal action on behalf of patients nationwide suffering from chronic pain lasting 3 or more months, or suffering from:

  • associated with a cancer diagnosis;
  • pain from sickle cell disease;
  • palliative or nursing home care;
  • pain from nerve injuries;
  • pain from osteoarthritic changes;
  • chronic intractable pain

They are also looking for patients who are experiencing difficulties in getting pharmacies to fill their legitimate prescriptions for opiate medication as written by their treating medical provider.

For more information about the firm, visit their website.

Let us know if you contact them and what they tell you. Know they are looking for enough patients to create a class action—so they’ll be asking for a lot of personal information. Decide whether you want to participate.

Big Health Care Provider Pushing Poor Patients

United Health Care is dropping doctors from its Medicaid network to move its poor and working-class families to medical practices owned by the giant health care provider

Here’s the story from nj.com

Chronic Pain Advocate, Terri Lewis Ph.D. brought this article to the attention of her followers on Twitter:

UHC is dropping hundreds of doctors in its NJ Medicaid Dr network. The move is forcing thousands of low-income patients to forsake longtime physicians.

Will this impact specialty, chronic care?

You betcha.

Are You Talking with Your Elected Officials About Chronic Pain?

We ran a story this weekend making sure that each of you—from your couch, your car or your phone, can tell you elected official about chronic pain.

We received a lot of positive reaction for the reminder.

Do you know who your congressman/congresswoman is? You can find out here.

I don’t mean to nag—ok maybe I do—but you should tell your story to him/her. Tell it efficiently (don’t complain, just inform) and encourage them (or one of their staff) to contact you, your social media group or a sympathetic doctor/nurse/provider.

 

The Real “Death Panels”: Oregon Medicaid planned to cut off opioids to chronic pain patients

The Real “Death Panels”: Oregon Medicaid planned to cut off opioids to chronic pain patients

https://tarbell.org/2019/03/gambling-with-lives-oregon-medicaid-cutting-off-opioids-to-chronic-pain-patients/

At the height of the Tea Party and Republican campaign against the Affordable Care Act, the GOP raised a false alarm about “death panels” that would purportedly kill the disabled based on a subjective judgment and “pull the plug on Grandma.”

But to real grandmothers like 60-year-old Wendy Morgan, who has suffered excruciating back and neck pain in the wake of two botched surgeries, degenerative disc disease and severe pain from MS for decades, there’s now a genuine death panel:  the Oregon Health Authority’s pain and evidence committees. They were slated on March 14 in Salem to finalize mandated opioid cut-offs to zero for Medicaid patients with chronic back and neck pain conditions, plus fibromyalgia. 

“This is going to come as quite a shock to a lot of people,” Wendy said before the vote. She had made preliminary plans with her husband to kill herself last spring after her opioid dosages were already cut 97 percent under pressure from government  agencies. “I never did anything wrong, always followed the doctor’s orders, but I was treated like a drug addict.” She managed to function as a homemaker even after she was forced to quit her sales job in 2009 and go on disability, but after her primary care doctor dropped her for using high doses of opioids and her pain specialist started a drastic taper in 2016, “I felt like killing myself,” she said. She went weeks without sleep, remained housebound, unable to even shower without agony and sunk into a deep depression. “It was an absolute nightmare,” she says.

Her husband, Larry Gordon, a retired postal worker, briefly but angrily testified on her behalf at a hearing in January before OHA’s Health Evidence Review Committee (HERC), as his wife of over 40 years sat quietly next to him.

If the plans are eventually voted in, the agency will target overwhelmingly disabled patients with 170 separate medical conditions that cause spine and neck pain for a total forced cut-off to zero opioids; these draconian limits  go far beyond even the CDC’s 2016 recommended voluntary 90 Morphine Milligram Equivalent (MME) upper limits for new — not long-term — pain patients. These voluntary guidelines have been “weaponized” in drastic cut-offs nationwide and spurred a wave of suicides by chronic pain patients.

Larry, dressed in a blue ball cap, windbreaker and blue jeans, proclaimed, “Doctors are abandoning patients left and right. Look at what’s happening in the real world: there’s people dying. If you take opioids away from intractable pain patients, they only thing they have left is to go straight to suicide. I had to tell my children that their mom’s going to kill herself because no one else will help her.”

Larry and his family have been petitioning local stakeholders, including the Oregon Medical Board and local newspapers, in order to bring attention to chronic pain patients’ access to painkillers. Click Here To Read The Gordon Family’s Full Story In Letters

Fortunately, Wendy recently found through a network of pain patients a Portland clinician willing to quietly resume her high dosages of methadone and occasional oxycodone pills, amounting to a quite rare medication level of 1100 MME. It’s not clear how long this arrangement will last, but for now, she says, “This nurse practitioner saved my life.” Her pain is worse than before because the years of forced tapering worsened her MS, but at least she can visit her grandchildren, go to their recitals and ball games, take a shower. “I can live a normal life.” 

Now that the Oregon panel has tabled the vote, she can breathe a sigh of relief if her other supply of medication fails — for now. 

That option was about to be closed off to a significant portion of patients –variously estimated between 60,000 and 80,000 chronic pain patients — who are part of the 25 percent of  all Oregonians who are on Medicaid. This latest delayed Oregon action flies in the face of mounting alarms by three former White House drug czars and over 300 leading health professionals and academics who warned in an open letter to CDC and Congress about the dangerous, unintended consequences of the  harsh crackdown on opioids for legitimate pain patients, as chronicled recently in The New York Times. These professional critiques have been joined by over 120 pages of anguished testimony from patients across the country about the agonizing impact of the resulting  hard-line approaches in their lives.

True, rigorous evidence that such policies are driving up suicides rates is relatively scarce, even though there are horrifying examples of patients like Jay Lawrence in Tennessee shooting himself on a park bench with his wife holding his hand. However, an important study published in 2017 in the peer-reviewed journal General Hospital Psychiatry found that veterans cut off from opioids after long-term use engaged in suicidal actions and thoughts at a rate nearly 300 percent higher than the overall veterans community, whose members are already killing themselves at a rate of 20 people a day. 

Oregon’s proposed but now tabled actions are even more extreme than the CDC guidelines spurring such tragedies, says the organizer of that open letter, Dr. Stefan Kertesz, a noted addiction researcher and primary care doctor specializing in vulnerable populations at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. “They’re gambling with the lives of a subset of patients,” he says. “There’s something cruel in going after patients with these conditions: it’s completely untested and there’s no evidence that you can swap in yoga and cognitive therapy across the state for opioids.” (Note: Like Kertesz, most, but not all, of the hundreds of clinicians across the country protesting the national and Oregon opioid cut-offs actually don’t have a history of sleazy ties to the drug industry.)

Look, for instance, at the dangers facing people like Sierra Brown, a former nurse who once had private insurance but is now a disabled Medicare-Medicaid patient who was denied pain medication for her damaged spine resulting from previously undiagnosed lupus and Sjorgen’s auto-immune disease . She fears she will continue to be treated like a drug-seeking addict if the influential Medicaid policies are eventually voted in. (She and others point out that Medicaid’s prescribing standards also influence private insurers.) Yet she has been given a reprieve of sorts: after showing up vomiting in agony at an ER last month, she was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, but only after the admitting doctor first told her, “If you’re here for pain medications, we’re not giving you any.” Now, she is viewed as a near-angelic victim of cancer, and was generously provided with all pain medications she needed to be taken every few hours, from Dilaudid to Tramodol. “Pain-wise, I’m fine,” she says, relatively speaking. “Their attitude totally flipped. It’s totally disgusting.” But once she achieves her hoped-for remission  because they spotted her cancer early, “I’m scared I won’t be getting any pain medicines because of the law’s crackdown.”

In Oregon, making the case for keeping opioids away from patients like Sierra when they don’t have cancer, is the alternative medicine community. Some of them don’t seem to be much more immune from conflicts of interest than drug company shills, critics say. In fact, the ad-hoc Chronic Pain Task Force, an advisory subcommittee that’s helping drive Oregon’s move to shut off opioids for pain patients, is dominated by holistic practitioners with a financial stake in ending opioids by hyping a smorgasbord of alternative therapies that have weak or limited evidence that they work for any chronic pain patients at all  — let alone with that minority of long-term chronic patients who use opioids.

Indeed, OHA commissioned the nationally respected Oregon Health and Sciences University (OHSU) to do a review of the skimpy evidence on the efficacy of tapering and alternative therapies. In its rush to back alternative therapies as an “evidence-based” replacement for the removed opioids, the Medicaid agency brushed aside the OHSU findings that  \concluded the studies’ quality were variously “very low” for tapering, and “limited” or “insufficient” for the alternative therapies.  Even the agency’s own summary of the available  evidence branded all of the holistic therapies, some with potentially major  new funding streams, as having “no clinically significant impact” on long-term pain. Instead, the agency seems to be relying in part on a 12-year-old survey of the personal opinions of an earlier OHA advisory panel that found these alternative medicine  treatments as somehow having “fair” to “good” evidence for “moderate benefit.” In addition, Kertesz asks about the OHA’s dismissive approach to the new OHSU review it commissioned: “Why are they ignoring their own report that says there’s no evidence that a mandatory taper has been properly assessed, and certainly hasn’t been proven to be safe and effective?”

As of this writing, the OHA press office didn’t reply to repeated emailed and phoned requests for comment or rebuttal to the criticisms aimed at the now-tabled opioid proposal.

Oregon-style forced taperings continue unabated, with doctors across the country reacting to mounting pressure from agencies including state licensing boards and the DEA to slash their opioid prescribing — and then kicking out their chronic pain patients who have become known as pain or opioid “refugees.” Human Rights Watch recently issued a stinging report condemning such actions: “Many patients are involuntarily cut off medications that improve their lives or say they are unable to find a doctor willing to care for them.” Yet Oregon is the only state — so far — that tried to move so decisively to adopt these potentially deadly practices as official state policies. One possible factor, argues University of Southern Illinois rehab specialist, Terri Lewis: The financially-strapped Oregon Medicaid system is moving under a Medicaid waiver to reduce spending and limit care for disabled chronic pain patients who merit palliative care but aren’t actually getting it. 

This proposed punishing crackdown doesn’t stem primarily from what patients often see as sheer sadism on the part of officials. Instead, it’s driven apparently both by a desire to save money and  a well-meaning yet misguided, simplistic and wrong-headed response to the alarming rise of opioid-related drug overdoses, largely from illegally manufactured fentanyl — not legally prescribed pills. It’s an oft-told story:  how Big Pharma companies and their crooked distributors ramped up an oversupply of opioid pills starting in the late 1990s, but much of the flooding of the marketplace was clearly fraudulent and intended to hook a new generation of substance abusers who already had addiction histories. Why else flood one West Virginia town of 9,200 people with nearly 21 million pills?  Yet while prescriptions have fallen nationally nearly 20 percent since 2012, overdose deaths haven’t been stemmed at all, rising to as high as 70,000 deaths in 2017, more than AIDS, guns and car crashes killed people in any one year. Yet as few as 15 percent of opioid deaths today are due to prescription drugs, often stolen — even as 75 percent of  new heroin users started by using  “diverted” opioid pills they weren’t prescribed. Kertesz has pointed out that today’s prescription drug dosage limits are  a “funhouse mirror image” of the drug industry’s earlier propaganda to lower the “pain score” of patients and give out way more pills: it is still a focus on a number, not on the actual well-being of  patients.

Meanwhile, Oregon’s chronic pain patients remain political orphans whose plight is largely ignored by people across the political spectrum. They are scrambling on their own in blog posts, on Twitter and Facebook to try to get other people — or even their own factionalized pain community —  to fight back against the steamrolling impact of the Oregon Medicaid rules that will surely flatten them if the tabled rules come up for another vote.  Amara is a disabled Medicaid patient and co-founder of the Oregon Pain Action Group. She is suffering from a host of severe disc injuries following a botched epidural during childbirth and lives in intractable pain.  She told Tarbell, speaking anonymously for fear of retaliation, “It’s catastrophic and things are already so bad.”

She and others have been given a reprieve, but the specter of this cutoff still looms in the future if Oregon decides to go ahead with their plans in a future date. Pain patients know that their quality of life — if not their lives — are hostage to a delayed state vote. Tarbell will keep monitoring this proposed vote to see if it returns. 

 

Watch this before you waste your time contacting your elected official over a issue