DEA to Join Fight Against Illicit THC Cartridges Behind Lung Illness Outbreak

DEA to Join Fight Against Illicit THC Cartridges Behind Lung Illness Outbreak

http://ticklethewire.com/2019/09/26/dea-to-join-fight-against-illicit-thc-cartridges-behind-lung-illness-outbreak/

The Food and Drug Administration is asking the DEA to help with the ongoing investigation into a lung illness outbreak linked to vaping.

The FDA wants the DEA to help crack down on the supply side of the crisis because health experts have linked the illnesses to black market cannabis vape cartridges.

Health experts are increasingly focusing on illicit cannabis cartridges that are cut with vitamin E acetate, a thickening agent that resembles marijuana oil.

“To be clear, if we determine that someone is manufacturing or distributing illicit, adulterated products that caused illness or death for personal profit, we would consider that a criminal act,” acting FDA Commissioner Dr. Ned Sharpless testified before the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on Wednesday.

Last week, the FDA launched a criminal investigation focused on the black market makers of the cartridges.

In the past month, law enforcement has busted at least two major distributors of counterfeit, black market cannabis cartridges.

More than 53o people have been sickened by the mysterious lung illness, and at least nine people have died. In a vast majority of the cases, the patients vaped black market cannabis cartridges.

The lungs do not like a non-aqueous substance ( oil based)… they tend to “clog” the alveoli in the lungs.. the more that get clogged the more difficulty the lungs have in facilitating the air in the lungs and transporting it to the person’s arterial system.. thus the person basically suffocates and DIES.

It is amazing that a reported NINE DEATHS is a CRISIS and yet that many or more people gets shot/killed in CHICAGO on the average WEEKEND… yet when the last time that you have heard about a SHOOTING CRISIS IN CHICAGO on the national news ?

Oregon Pain Guidance

Anhedonia

Anhedonia is a diverse array of deficits in hedonic function, including reduced motivation or ability to experience pleasure. While earlier definitions of anhedonia emphasized the inability to experience pleasure, anhedonia is used by researchers to refer to reduced motivation, reduced anticipatory pleasure, reduced consummatory pleasure, and deficits in reinforcement

Patients, Privacy, and PDMPs: Exploring the Impact of Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs

Patients, Privacy, and PDMPs: Exploring the Impact of Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs

https://www.cato.org/events/patients-privacy-and-pdmps

Featuring David S. Fink, MPhil, MPH, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University; Kate M. Nicholson, JD, Civil rights attorney and pain patient advocate; Nathan Freed Wessler, JD, Staff attorney, ACLU Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project; Patience Moyo, PhD, Assistant Professor, Brown University School of Public Health; moderated by Jeffrey A. Singer, MD, Senior Fellow, Cato Institute.

Prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) operate in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. These statewide electronic databases of prescriptions dispensed for controlled substances were established in response to the opioid overdose crisis. Their purpose is to facilitate drug diversion investigations by law enforcement, change prescribing behavior, and reduce “doctor shopping” by patients who seek drugs for nonmedical use. In 28 states it is mandatory for providers to access the database and screen each time before prescribing any controlled substance to any patient. There is evidence that PDMPs have contributed to the dramatic 42 percent decline in prescription opioid volume since 2011. Many healthcare practitioners cite the inconvenience and workflow disruptions of mandatory-access PDMPs as deterrents to prescribing, while others fear scrutiny from law enforcement and licensing authorities — even for appropriate medical prescribing. This is unintentionally causing the undertreatment of patients with acute and chronic pain and, in some cases, the abrupt withdrawal of treatment from chronic pain patients. There is also evidence that PDMPs increase crime by driving nonmedical users from diverted prescription opioids to more harmful heroin and fentanyl, thus fueling overdoses. Finally, PDMPs pose a serious risk to medical privacy by allowing law enforcement to access confidential medical records without a warrant based on probable cause, which may be in violation of the Fourth Amendment. There is also the Columbia, SC pharmacies for medical assistance.

An expert panel will examine the positive and negative effects of PDMPs on patient care, patient privacy, the overdose rate, and crime, hoping to learn whether they do more harm than good.

To register to attend this event, click a button below and then submit the secure web form by noon EDT on Wednesday, October 2, 2019. If you have any questions pertaining to registration, you may e-mail events@cato.org.

Message from Robt Rose

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Vaping: after failing on tobacco, after failing on opioids — this time, can we get it right before it’s too late

Don’t make the same mistake on vaping as we did with pain killers, tobacco, says Fred Hiatt

https://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/opinion/commentary/don-t-make-the-same-mistake-on-vaping-as-we/article_c931370b-0998-5ecf-b5f6-f5036ff85cf5.html

Of course, it was pure accident that news of a possible court settlement with Purdue Pharma landed about the same time as the latest figures on mysterious vaping deaths and the burgeoning e-cigarette epidemic in high schools.

But the coincidence had the feel of a providential warning: This time — after failing on tobacco, after failing on opioids — this time, can we get it right before it’s too late?

Cigarette smoking was understood to be dangerous decades before we responded in a serious way. Decades of denial, of tobacco industry deceit and dodging by politicians, separated scientific understanding from public-health response.

Only in the past few years did we begin to even acknowledge the opioid epidemic that began 20 years ago with the over-prescription of pain medication, and only now is it beginning to be combated seriously.

In both cases, the cost of delay is almost beyond imagination. In the half-century from 1965 to 2014, nearly 21 million people died prematurely due to smoking or exposure to secondhand smoke, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. By the time Big Tobacco was forced to disgorge some ill-gotten profits, there wasn’t nearly enough to go around — even if what they forfeited had all been devoted to public health.

And though the opioid epidemic in some places may at least be cresting, on average, 130 Americans die every day from opioid overdose, the CDC reports. Again, even after Purdue and other contributors to the carnage are sued and bled, what’s left won’t begin to compensate for the human and economic wreckage.

And now: vaping.

“We’ve seen this movie before,” says Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill.

The second-term congressman from the outskirts of Chicago (his district includes the runways but not the terminal of O’Hare Airport, he sometimes points out) became alarmed in February when the 2018 National Youth Tobacco Survey reported “a startling rise in youth e-cigarette use.” In just one year, the share of high school students using the devices rose from 11.7 percent to 20.8 percent — representing a total of 3.6 million middle and high school students, the survey reported.

His alarm intensified this month, when preliminary survey results showed that the share of high school students ever using e-cigarettes had climbed to more than one-fourth in 2019. It ratcheted up further when the CDC reported a wave of unexplained serious lung illnesses and even deaths associated with vaping, mostly of street products with the active ingredient of marijuana.

And it became personal when his 14-year-old son said he had been approached at least 20 times during his first three weeks as a ninth-grader by kids asking if he wanted to vape.

As chairman of the House Oversight Subcommittee on Economic and Consumer Policy, Krishnamoorthi is somewhat better positioned to respond than other worried fathers might be. Already in July he held hearings during which Native American tribal officials and high school students, among others, testified to efforts by Juul, the biggest e-cigarette company, to win customers.

One witness, ninth-grader Caleb Mintz, told the subcommittee that, after a Juul representative met with students in his school, classmates who were already vaping breathed “a sigh of relief because now they were able to vape without any concern” and nonusers were more inclined to try it “because now they thought it was just a flavor device that didn’t have any harmful substances in it.” These days it is important for adults to find out How to safely vape CBD and then do it.

“We ended that program in the fall of 2018,” a Juul official testified. More broadly, the company says it tries to keep its product away from kids and emphasizes the benefits of e-cigarettes for people who are trying to quit smoking traditional cigarettes.

Some adults may in fact benefit. Some adults may prefer the cotton-candy and mint flavors that make e-cigarettes so attractive to young people. Some struggling small vaping shops may go out of business if they can’t sell flavored pods.

Well, you get the idea. As the government contemplates how to combat youth vaping, a countercampaign is already underway.

As it gathers steam, we should keep a few facts in mind, also courtesy of the CDC: Nicotine is “highly addictive and can harm adolescent brain development.” E-cigarettes can contain “other harmful substances besides nicotine.” And the long-term health effects of e-cigarettes are far from understood.

So, yes, we have seen this movie before. If it ends in 10 or 20 or 30 years with someone calculating the mortality and morbidity casualties of vaping, we won’t be able to say we didn’t see it coming

VA settles with Navy vet for $150G in malpractice lawsuit: report

VA settles with Navy vet for $150G in malpractice lawsuit: report

https://www.foxnews.com/us/va-navy-veteran-settlement

A Navy vet who was allegedly turned away by a Veterans Affairs (VA) hospital in South Carolina because it claimed he had cocaine in his system has been awarded a $150,000 settlement in his medical malpractice lawsuit, according to a report.

Eric Walker, 49, sued the VA after the Wm. Jennings Bryan Dorn VA Medical Center allegedly refused to treat him when he arrived with excruciating abdominal pain in 2015, according to The State.

Walker alleged that the hospital mixed up his urine sample with that of a cocaine addict. A doctor refused to treat him and told him to go home and quit drugs, he said.

“I said, ‘I don’t do cocaine,’ and he said, ‘I hear that all the time — but your urinalysis says otherwise,’” Walker told The State.

A logo of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. (Photo by Salwan Georges/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

“Dorn Emergency Room personnel informed (Walker) that his stomach pains were a direct result of ingesting multiple illegal drugs, in particular, excessive cocaine,” his lawsuit claimed, The State reported in January 2018.

Walker later went to the Lexington Medical Center. He learned he had gallstones and gallbladder and pancreatic disease, and received surgery.

The VA issued a statement to the publication on Monday, saying: “There is no evidence this veteran’s lab results were handled improperly. VA settled this case to avoid further litigation.”

“Thousands of S.C. veterans choose to be treated at the Columbia VA health care system because they know we provide exceptional health care that improves their health and well-being,” the VA said.

Walker served in the Navy from 1989 to 1993. He went on a six-month tour to the Persian Gulf as part of Operation Desert Shield, the told The State.

“I didn’t expect any money out of this. It was mainly about what can we do to make the VA better. What can we do to keep this from happening again?” he said.

“When a veteran goes to the VA, we expect good care,” Walker added. “We take care of this country. We expect to be taken care of when we get home.”

Help get contact information on 2020 candidates for FREE DoC membership

 

 

Help get contact information on 2020 candidates for FREE DoC membership:

The homepage of www.doctorsofcourage.org has the requirements and description of what is needed for this FREE gift of membership to the Doctorsofcourage membership site. I can’t do this alone. We all need to work together, and this is one area where we all benefit from the actions of a few. So please, use some of your time productively to help the war on drugs crisis. Please share this post.

Opiate Crisis Panel with 2020 Presidential Candidates – Sept 25th 7PM – 9PM EDT

National Voter Registration Day Sept 24, 2019

September 24, 2019 — Mark Your Calendars

About National Voter Registration Day

National Voter Registration Day is a national holiday celebrating our democracy. It was first observed in 2012 and has been growing in popularity every year since. Held on the fourth Tuesday of September, National Voter Registration Day will take place on September 24, 2019. The holiday has been endorsed by the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS). It is further supported by the National Association of State Election Directors (NASED), the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC), and the National Association of Election Officials (The Election Center).

What It’s About

Every year millions of Americans find themselves unable to vote because they miss a registration deadline, don’t update their registration, or aren’t sure how to register. National Voter Registration Day wants to make sure everyone has the opportunity to vote. On Tuesday September 24, 2019 volunteers and organizations from all over the country will “hit the streets” in a single day of coordinated field, technology and media efforts. National Voter Registration Day seeks to create broad awareness of voter registration opportunities to reach tens of thousands of voters who may not register otherwise.

What It Involves

  • Volunteers in their community or workplace, at schools or public events, or anywhere can register people to vote.
  • Technology to help voters find registration drives nearby and register to vote online.
  • Local organizations, businesses and election offices engaged in their own communities.
  • Tens of thousands of voters registering to vote online and offline in a single day.

What It Will Accomplish

  • Registering Voters: In 2018 over 800,000 voters used National Voter Registration Day to register to vote across all 50 states.
  • Mobilizing Volunteers: Each year the holiday’s growing number of local partners engage upwards to 10,000 local volunteers.
  • Educating Voters: Millions of voters need to register and re-register every year. By utilizing new technology and leveraging partners, we’ll educate Americans in all 50 states about how to register, sign up for election reminders, check their registration online, get mail ballots, learn about early voting and more.
  • Uniting for a Common Purpose: National Voter Registration Day is a day of civic unity. It’s an opportunity to set aside differences and celebrate democracy and the rights and opportunities we all share as Americans.