Reconciling the New HHS Opioid Tapering Guideline with CDC and State Policies

Reconciling the New HHS Opioid Tapering Guideline with CDC and State Policies

https://www.practicalpainmanagement.com/resources/ethics/reconciling-new-hhs-opioid-tapering-guideline-cdc-state-policies

How clinicians can best approach opioid prescribing – as well as discontinuation – going forward.

The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released in October a Guide for Clinicians on the Appropriate Dosage Reduction or Discontinuation of Long-Term Opioid Analgesics.1 In the new document, HHS emphasizes that “Opioids should not be tapered rapidly or discontinued suddenly due to the risks of significant opioid withdrawal.” National media portrayed the new guideline as a “reverse course on strict restrictions”2 from the federal government—but does this guidance really reflect such a massive shift? How do the new recommendations interact with pre-existing laws?

The new HHS guideline makes clear that, while there are many instances in which opioid tapering is recommended, rapid tapering or sudden discontinuation of opioids can lead to acute withdrawal symptoms, increased pain, serious psychological distress, and suicidal thoughts. Sudden discontinuation may also increase the chance that a patient will seek out illicit opioids in an effort to manage pain and withdrawal symptoms.

Therefore, in the absence of a life-threatening issue, the agency does not recommend abrupt opioid dose reduction or discontinuation.

Many have questioned why the HHS issued a new guideline given its alignment with the CDC and FDA communications on opioid tapering and discontinuation. (Image: iStock)

Where the HHS and CDC Align

The CDC’s Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain,3 treated as the gold standard of opioid prescribing guidelines since its release in 2016, made a number of recommendations related to opioid tapering. In nearly every way, the CDC’s recommendations are mirrored by the new HHS guidance. Both federal agencies agree that tapering or discontinuation of opioid therapy should:

  • be considered when pain and function are not meaningfully improved as compared to pain and function prior to opioid use
  • be considered when the benefits of opioid use no longer outweigh the risks, but should not be considered when the benefits of opioids continue to outweigh the risks
  • be done safely and slowly enough to minimize opioid withdrawal symptoms and signs (eg, drug craving, anxiety, insomnia, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, diaphoresis, mydriasis, tremor, tachycardia)
  • be done with appropriate expertise and care in the case of pregnancy, as opioid withdrawal is dangerous for the patient and the fetus, including an increased risk of spontaneous abortion and premature labor.

Given the agreement between the two documents, it’s easy to question why the HHS Guide was even developed. The answer? To resolve misconceptions regarding tapering and discontinuation that have existed since the release of the CDC’s original guidance.

Within the CDC opioid prescribing guideline, recommendations related to tapering and discontinuation represented a very small part of the document. In large part, the CDC focused on initiating opioid therapy, establishing treatment goals, opioid selection, dosage, dura­tion, and follow-up. Perhaps most notably, and most at-play when it comes to miscon­ceptions that have result­ed in unwarranted opioid tapers, is the CDC’s rec­ommendation to avoid increasing dosage to ≥ 90 MME/day.

Mis­application of “90 MME/day” recommendation has been so prolific that both the FDA, as well as the CDC, recently addressed the issue. In early 2019, the FDA issued a Drug Safety Communication4 stating that it had received reports of serious harm in patients who were physically dependent on opioid pain medicines suddenly having their medicines discontinued or the dose rapidly decreased, going so far as to caution against abrupt discontinuation. Not long after, the CDC re­leased its own media statement5 in which it emphasized that 90 MME/day is not a hard limit, and that its dosage recommendation does not suggest discontinuation of opioids already pre­scribed at higher dosages.

Further, the CDC made it clear that its guideline does not support abrupt tapering or sudden discontinuation of opioids. They went so far as to say that, “…policies that mandate hard limits conflict with the Guideline’s emphasis on individualized assessment of the benefits and risks of opioids given the specific circumstances and unique needs of each patient.”

HHS Guide Supports State Policies—With One Possible Exception

In recent years, most states have adopted their own laws, rules, and guidelines related to opioid prescribing, and a number of those policies have sections related to tapering and discontinuation. In Arizona, for example, in regard to Workers’ Compensation, a patient’s treatment plan must include the criteria and procedures for tapering and discontinuing opioid use.6 In South Carolina and West Virginia, among other states, guidance states that if opioid therapy is discontinued, a patient who has become physically dependent should be provided with a safely structured tapering and withdrawal regimen.7,8 In all of these cases, state recommendations and requirements may easily be followed while still working within the federal recommendations from HHS.

While the new guidance from HHS aligns with state policies in nearly all cases, there is one state in which clinicians may feel a certain amount of confusion and unease when trying to reconcile local mandates with federal guidance: Kentucky.

The Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure has a rule which states that, when a drug screen or other available information indicates that a patient is non-compliant, the physician shall: do a controlled taper; stop prescribing or dispensing the controlled substance immediately, or refer the patient to an appropriate specialist.9 While this requirement does not completely conflict with federal guidance, in that the “or” statement allows for referral to a specialist rather than tapering or discontinuation, it would be easy for a clinician to assume that they must taper or immediately discontinue—particularly if they intend to keep treating the patient themselves.

It is worth noting that Oregon-based clinicians may also feel a disconnect between state and federal policies, as Oregon’s Medicare program previously had a strict tapering mandate for certain patients, but this mandate has recently been relaxed to allow for individualized tapering plans.10

What about Individualizing Care?

For clinicians that have been operating under both real and perceived pressure to reduce and/or discontinue their patients’ opioid prescriptions, it may feel as if the new HHS guidance is a huge shift in federal policy. Upon closer inspection, however, the new guidance supports nearly all pre-existing federal and state guidance in regard to opioid tapering. What the guidance does differently is to rephrase and clarify opioid tapering recommendations in order to help clinicians avoid the many misperceptions and misapplications that have been associated with the opioid prescribing policies released in recent years at the federal, state, and even local levels.

Who Has the Final Say?

If your state currently has, or later implements, a policy related to opioid tapering that conflicts with a federal policy, which policy is controlling?

  • If a federal law or rule directly conflicts with a state policy (whether a law, rule, or guideline), the federal law will be controlling. This scenario should not apply at this time, as federal policy related to opioid tapering is currently guidance, not law.
  • If federal guidance or recommendations conflict with a state law or rule, the state requirements will be controlling since they have the force and effect of law, while the federal guidance does not. This scenario would occur, for example, if your state implemented a rule that mandated immediate discontinuation based on certain factors—something that federal policy currently recommends against.
  • If federal guidance or recommendations conflict with state guidance or recommendations, clinicians must carefully use their best judgment to weigh both sets of recommendations against the risks and benefits of opioid therapy to their particular patient’s situation. In cases where a clinician feels their judgment may be questioned because they’ve opted to take the advice of one set of recommendations over another, it is strongly recommended that the clinician clearly document their thought process and ultimate decision in the patient’s medical record.

So, what is the bottom line for your practice and patients? As with all medical decisions, opioid tapering and discontinuation should be based on the individual patient’s circumstances. There is no one-size-fits-all approach and in every case the clinician needs to weigh the risks and benefits of the current therapy, develop an individualized care plan with their patient, and re-evaluate and adjust that plan regularly.

 

Practical Takeaways with Jennifer P. Schneider, MD, PhD,

Based on direct quotes from the CDC and HHS opioid guidelines discussed in this column, here are some practical takeaways for clinicians to consider:

  • The guidelines are intended for treatment of chronic non-cancer pain; not acute, cancer, or end-of-life pain.
  • “Decisions to continue or reduce opioids for pain should be based on individual patient needs.”
  • The guidelines do not ban prescribing >90 MME/day but rather to “carefully justify this decision.”
  • “If the current opioid regimen does not put the patient at imminent risk, tapering does not need to occur immediately”…If a taper is indicated, ensure a “multimodal approach including mental health support if needed is in place prior to initiating taper.”
  • “At times tapers might have to be paused and restarted again when the patient is ready.”
  • “Slower tapers (eg, 10% per month or slower) are often better tolerated than more rapid tapers, especially after opioid use for >1 year.”
  • “Closely monitor patients who are unable or unwilling to taper and who continue on high-dose or otherwise high-risk opioid regimens.”

Thus, these guidelines clearly recognize that some patients with chronic pain benefit from opioid treatment, including those who may benefit, or are benefitting, from >90 MME/ day. They do not advocate: never initiating opioids above a specific dose; reducing every patient on opioids to a dose below that dose; tapering all patients off opioids; or avoiding starting any chronic pain patient on opioids. Instead, clinicians are encouraged to carry out careful initial and ongoing assessments that address function, behavioral health, red flags (eg, addiction risk, misuse, noncompliance), and other modalities.

Once again the DEA seems to be MIA… so what if they decide that they are perfectly happy with the original CDC guidelines and ignore these clarification(s) and revisions and continue to raid/shut down practitioners’ offices based on their previous interpretations of the CDC guidelines. Because what is the DEA going to do… go after the various CARTELS that it is claimed generated > 100 billion/yr and are heavily armed and tend not to take kindly to anyone who tries to interfere with their business plan.

we have had 115 LEO deaths in 2019 https://www.odmp.org/search/year        including 5 who work at the FEDERAL LEVEL ..https://www.odmp.org/search?state=U.S.%20Government&from=2019&to=2019&filter=nok9  none labeled as working for the DEA. Does this suggest that anyone working for the DEA has the lowest risk of anyone in law enforcement to be killed while on duty ?

“sick” pain joke :-)

Epidural Steroid Injections / APDU’s Warning Letter to Pfizer

Dr. Hooman Noorchashm of the American Patient Defense Union (APDU) recently sent a strong letter to Mr. Doug Lankler, the Executive Vice President and General Counsel for Pfizer Global in NYC. Alarmed by increased reports of severe medical events caused by the off-label epidural administration of Pfizer’s steroid, Depo-Medrol®, the APDU decided to step into the debate. (Note: Epidural Steroid Injections or ESI’s are NOT FDA approved nor are they approved anywhere on the planet due to reports of severe adverse events, including death.) Here I read Dr. Noorchashm’s letter where he not only requests that Pfizer’s risk-managers move swiftly to issue a warning to all practitioners that set the standards of care for spinal-related pain management, he strongly encourages Pfizer to try once again to force the FDA to place an absolute “Contraindication (ban) for the off-label epidural administration of Depo-Medrol” in the United States. It should be noted that back in 2013 Pfizer Inc. did send an amended label request to all global Health Authorities with major changes to the Warnings & Contraindication Sections for Depo-Medrol, including a new specific “Contraindication for Epidural Administration” at all levels of the spine. Many nations have complied without protest. Among them are New Zealand, Australia, Canada, France, Italy, Switzerland, Russia with 12 more pending. Unfortunately the United States’ FDA is not among them. Why not? Aren’t we Americans worthy of the same protections? Even though Pfizer submitted their label change request 6 years ago to all Global Health Authorities, the FDA repeatedly refused to accept these changes because only they hold the CORE Data-Sheet (CDS) for the steroid, nowhere else. Therefore if Pfizer’s New Warnings were enacted into the US-FDA’s CDS for Depo-Medrol, they would then filter down to all versions of the drug (whether they be generic or compounded formulations, etc.). That would have ended the off-licensed, unsafe but lucrative practice of Epidural Steroid Injections using Depo-Medrol (Methylprednisolone Acetate) all over the world. Pfizer’s request in 2013 to initiate these very important safety warnings were met with strong oppositional forces from interventional pain management societies in the USA (we prefer to call them Injection-Mills). The powerful and lucrative ESI INDU$TRY have many friends embedded within the government. This conflict of interest tilted the FDA’s prime directive to prevent harm in favor of keeping them and “Wall Street” happy. ESI therapies are not as efficacious as advertised, carry severe risks and therefore are not FDA approved. Despite this, it appears the agency deliberately played down the seriousness of these off-licensed injections with Pfizer’s blessings. So what game are they playing with our health? Need proof of their game? Back in 2014 an FDA advisory panel of medical experts voted 15 to 7 to “Contraindicate (ban) CESI’s” after three days of testimony and yet the FDA ignored their recommendation and said “no”. The decision was therefore rejected by the FDA without any real explanation other than their fear of disturbing a lucrative industry and their Wall $treet investors. I can honestly say that the patient community I represent owes Dr. Noorchashm a debt of gratitude for his tireless efforts against the increased use of Pfizer’s Depo-Medrol for epidural administration despite its poor safety and efficacy records. The slaughter will sadly continue until Pfizer demands the FDA to do the right thing, adding an “ESI Contraindication” and a “NOT FOR Epidural Administration” Black Boxed Warning to the CORE Data-Sheet in the USA. Link to Pfizer’s 2014 Tracking Changes for Depo-Medol: https://jmp.sh/ooWuGCw Link to Pfizer’s Completed Global DataSheet for Depo-Medrol. (Only New Zealand, Australia, Canada, France, Italy, Switzerland, Russia with 12 more pending accepted Pfizer’s urgent update. Unfortunately the United States’ FDA rejected their request fearing stock market reaction: https://jmp.sh/uxCiBGK Link to APDU’s Warning Letter to Pfizer: https://medium.com/@patientdefenseuni… PLEASE FILE A MED-WATCH VOLUNTARY ADVERSE EVENT REPORT WITH THE FDA if you believe that you or a loved one may have been harmed by an ESI… Please file a FDA MedWatch Report. Use Form 3500B Link: https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/script… Thank you for watching! Dennis J. Capolongo Director / EDNC TheEDNC@verizon.net

Canada Healthcare : over 300 patients in the province died waiting for surgery from 2015 to 2016 because of a shortage of anesthesiologists

Sally Pipes dispels myths surrounding single-payer health care proposals

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/sally-pipes-sanders-warren-want-medicare-for-all-like-canada-but-canadian-health-care-is-awful

Health care

Democratic presidential candidates Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren want you to believe Canada’s health care system is a dream come true. And they want to make the dream even better with their “Medicare-for-all” plans. Don’t believe them.

In truth, Canada’s system of socialized medicine is actually a nightmare. It has left hospitals overcrowded, understaffed and unable to treat some patients. Americans would face the same dismal reality if Canadian-style “Medicare-for-all” takes root here.

Canada’s health care system is the model for the “Medicare-for-all” plan that both Sanders, I-Vt., and Warren, D-Mass., embrace.

expert discusses the Affordable Care Act, rising prescription drug costs and the Trump administration’s plans for health care reform.

North of the border, all residents have taxpayer-funded, comprehensive health coverage. In theory, they can walk into any hospital or doctor’s office and get the care they need, without a co-pay or deductible.

More from Opinion

Sanders and Warren would one-up Canada by providing all Americans with free prescription drugs, free long-term care, free dental care, free vision care, and free care for people with hearing problems.

Who could possibly object to all that free care?

Well, politicians in Canada object. They say even their country can’t do what Sanders and Warren want because all this free care would cost too much and cause other problems.

But for Sanders and Warren, money is no object. They can just raise taxes as higher and higher and higher.

And the huge tax increases needed to fund “Medicare-for all” would hit us all – there aren’t enough millionaires and billionaires to foot the bill.

It’s true that everyone in Canada has health coverage. But that coverage doesn’t always secure care. According to the Fraser Institute, a Canadian think tank, patients waited a median of nearly 20 weeks to receive specialist treatment after referral by a general practitioner in 2018. That’s more than double the wait patients faced 25 years ago.

In Nova Scotia, patients faced a median total wait time of 34 weeks. More than 6 percent of the province’s population was waiting for treatment in 2018.

Waiting for care is perhaps better than not being able to seek it at all. The hospital emergency department in Annapolis Royal in Nova Scotia recently announced that it would simply close on Tuesdays and Thursdays. There aren’t enough doctors available to staff the facility.

Canadians can’t escape waits like these unless they leave the country and pay out of pocket for health care abroad. Private health insurance is illegal in Canada.

Private clinics in Canada are not allowed to charge patients for “medically necessary” services that the country’s single-payer plan covers. And the government has deemed just about every conceivable service “medically necessary.”

For the past decade, Dr. Brian Day, an orthopedic surgeon who runs the private Cambie Surgery Centre in British Columbia, has tried to offer Canadians a way out of the waits by expanding patient access to private clinics. He’s been battling his home province in court for a decade to essentially grant patients the ability to pay providers directly for speedier care.

During closing arguments in Day’s trial before the British Columbia Supreme Court at the end of November, Dr. Roland Orfaly of the British Columbia Anesthesiologists’ Society testified that over 300 patients in the province died waiting for surgery from 2015 to 2016 because of a shortage of anesthesiologists. And that was in just one of the province’s five regional health authorities!

Shortages of crucial medical personnel and equipment are common throughout Canada. The country has fewer than three doctors for every 1,000 residents. That puts it 26th among 28 countries with universal health coverage schemes. If current trends continue, the country will be short 60,000 full-time nurses in just three years.

In 2018, Canada had less than 16 CT scanners for every million people. The United States, by comparison, had nearly 45 per million.

These shortages, combined with long waits, can lead to incredible suffering.

In 2017, one British Columbia woman who was struggling to breathe sought treatment in an overcrowded emergency room. She was given a shot of morphine and sent home. She died two days later.

That same year, a Halifax, Nova Scotia, man dying of pancreatic cancer was left in a cold hallway for six hours when doctors couldn’t find him a bed. Yes, people must sometimes be treated on hallway floors because of severe overcrowding.

In fact, some Canadian hospital emergency rooms look like they belong in poverty-stricken Third World countries.
WBUR Radio, Boston’s NPR station, documented these terrible conditions in a story about a hospital in Nova Scotia earlier this month.

Americans who find the promise of free health care difficult to resist would do well to take a hard look north.

Sure, “Medicare-for-all” as pitched by Sanders and Warren sounds good. But the reality is far from what these two far-left candidates are promising. Like a drug that helps you in one way but causes even more serious problems, “Medicare-for-all” has dangerous side effects that can be hazardous to your health.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE BY SALLY PIPES  

Evernote complies with DEA

Evernote complies with DEA

https://dlike.io/post/@arunava/evernote-complies-with-dea

I don’t know if i should categorise this under Tech but anyways let’s mobe on with it. It seems Evernote which is a Note Taking App and very useful if I may add recently gave data on an User of theirs to the DEA. Now it has been notified that the user was allegedly a Dark Web Drug Dealer so that sounds good in a way but since it was only alleged this does leave a sour taste in my mouth.

The DEA did get warrants to do so but still Evernote should have resisted a little as the next one could be anyone else. This does serve as a breach of privacy as many people do keep important stuff on that App and after this news came out a lot of users are already jumping ship as they are looking for better Privacy options.

 

all sunshine…. lollipops…. & roses…key stakeholders focused on (pain) policy solutions

I’m so energized by two meetings in DC this week with key stakeholders focused on policy solutions that promote individualized, multimodal, comprehensive, person-centered, integrative pain care. Some takeaways – our voices do change policies; earlier access to treatment is key; we must implement HHS best practices pain management task force report recommendations; increasing awareness/education about what comprehensive pain care looks like is of highest priority. All these efforts – and so many more – make a difference together. No shortage of good work to do. patientaccess afbpm voicessummit aacipm acute chronicpain @AACIPM Kate Nicholson Dania Palanker Cindy Steinberg Jianguo Cheng MD, PhD, FIPP John Prunskis Vanila M. Singh MD

Maybe it is just me… but looking at the sign from this “solution summit” and looking at the “fine print”  VOICES FOR NON-OPIATE CHOICES

POLICIES TO ADDRESS ACUTE PAIN AND OPIATE ADDICTION IN AMERICA

It appears that this “summit” with all these “important people” are apparently trying to validate – the false belief – that all opiate prescribing leads to ADDICTION.

I wasn’t at this summit… but… nothing posted about it – that I read – mentioned any treatment of chronic pain.  There is no mention of anyone representing the DEA nor the CDC, but I get the gist that of the meeting was in line with the DEA’s and other entities misapplying of the CDC’s 2016 opiate dosing guidelines. Color we skeptical in how the results of this summit could benefit the chronic pain community

 

Epidurals Are DANGEROUS! Here’s My True Story From Experience – Dr Mandell

This is my own personal experience regarding the Dangers of Epidural Injections.  Epidural Steroid Injections are Dangerous for Neck & Back Pain Relief

Here is a post from just YESTERDAY — WORSE CASE — of having a ESI !! Epidural Steroid Injections / R.I.P. Dearest Jimmy / FDA-AADPAC

There is a lot of $$ change hands giving pts ESI’s and if the pain clinic is not giving the pt oral opiates… then the pain clinic practitioner has little concern about the DEA’s oversight of their practice… since no controlled substances are used in ESI’s.

More Than 80,000 Spinal Cord Stimulator Injury Reports Filed With FDA | NBC Nightly News

Some 60,000 spinal cord stimulators are surgically implanted every year. They send a mild electrical current to the spinal cord to relieve chronic pain. An NBC News investigation in partnership with the Associated Press found tens of thousands of injury reports had been filed with the FDA.

Is this an example of who is going to run our country in the future ?

 

16yr old vs. can opener

Epidural Steroid Injections / R.I.P. Dearest Jimmy / FDA-AADPAC

Epidural Steroid Injections / R.I.P. Dearest Jimmy / FDA-AADPAC

  It is claimed that there are 10 million of these ESI’s are given annually.  Both the FDA and the manufacturer of Methylprednisolone DO NOT RECOMMEND that this medication being administered as a ESI.

It is also claimed that abt 5% of pts getting these ESI’s will incur adhesive arachnoiditis   .. which is an INCURABLE, VERY PAINFUL HEALTH CONDITION and it is caused by the needle/syringe is inserted ONE MM TOO FAR..

Anything injected into the spinal fluid must not only be sterile and pyrogen free – as all injectable medications must be… it must also be PRESERVATIVE FREE and a SOLUTION…  methylprednisolone and that whole category of meds contain preservatives and is a SUSPENSION.

In the recent past CMS ( Medicare & Medicaid) was discussing/proposing to INCREASE what practitioners were paid for performing these ESI’s. I do not know if they ever finalized this propose increase.  They want to ENCOURAGE practitioners to provide more of these ESI’s.