Has the “illegal fentanyl OD’s” causing a shift in “drug of choice” to be abused ?

DEA warns of national methamphetamine comeback

https://www.abc12.com/content/news/557138522.html

As the opioid epidemic swells in the United States, there’s another deadly drug that’s making a comeback.

“We’re talking super labs,” said former Drug Enforcement Administration Agent Kevin Hartmann. “Super labs that can produce multi hundred kilograms of methamphetamine.”

In 2005, Congress passed the Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act which regulated the sale of legal drugs, like Sudafed and cough suppressants, which were used to manufacture meth locally.

It worked for a while. Officials say, it almost eliminated the production of meth in the U.S.

“That’s the good news,” said Hartmann. “The bad news is that these producers of meth ramped up operations in Mexico and now they have these super labs that provide the majority of meth to the United States.”

The drug enforcement administration says meth seizures have increased 255 percent since 2012. Last year, agents in the Omaha Division took more than 1,600 pounds of the synthetic drug off the streets.

Now, Hartmann is calling on Congress to grant officers more authority to intercept cartel communications. Republican Sen. John Thune of South Dakota believes the solution is to strengthen border security.

“That’s a combination of technology and drones and manpower,” said Thune. “Because one of the best ways to shut that down is to make sure it never gets to South Dakota in the first place.”

According to the DEA, methamphetamine is 71 percent cheaper than it was in 2005.

New Survey Data Confirm That Opioid Deaths Do Not Correlate With Pain Pill Abuse or Addiction Rates

New Survey Data Confirm That Opioid Deaths Do Not Correlate With Pain Pill Abuse or Addiction Rates

www.reason.com/2019/08/21/new-survey-data-confirm-that-opioid-deaths-do-not-correlate-with-pain-pill-abuse-or-addiction-rates/#comment-7904072

New data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) provide further evidence to support a counterintuitive conclusion: The dramatic increase in deaths involving prescription analgesics since 2000 cannot be explained by a dramatic increase in misuse or addiction rates, because there was no such increase.

Prior NSDUH data showed that rates of past-month “nonmedical use” and past-year “pain reliever use disorder” barely changed from 2002 (when the survey began in its current form) through 2014, even as deaths involving these drugs rose by 175 percent. The survey questions on these topics changed in 2015, so the more recent numbers are not comparable. But we now have four years of data with the new wording, and they tell a similar story.

According to NSDUH, the rate of “prescription pain reliever misuse” fell in 2016 and 2017, even as deaths involving those drugs continued to rise. The rate fell again in 2018, and that year deaths may also have declined, judging from preliminary CDC data. The rate of “pain reliever use disorder,” meanwhile, fell in 2016 and 2017 but stayed the same in 2018.

The lack of correspondence between deaths involving prescription analgesics and illegal consumption or addiction rates suggests that patterns of use changed in a way that made fatal outcomes more likely. If nonmedical users started taking prescription narcotics more frequently, in higher doses, or in more dangerous combinations with other drugs, those shifts would help explain the increase in deaths.

In 2017, just 30 percent of opioid-related deaths involved prescription analgesics, and the records compiled by the CDC indicate that 68 percent of those cases also involved heroin, fentanyl, cocaine, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, or alcohol. The role of drug mixtures is probably even bigger than those records suggest. In New York City, which has one of the country’s most thorough systems for reporting drug-related deaths, 97 percent of them involve more than one substance.

The evidence does not favor a simple narrative in which more opioid prescriptions led to more abuse and addiction, which in turn led to more deaths. The “opioid crisis,” which seems to be part of a long-term upward trend in drug-related deaths that began in 1979, might more accurately be described as a problem of increasingly reckless polydrug use, a problem that cannot be solved—and may be worsened—by demanding wholesale reductions in pain pill prescriptions.

Class Action LawSuit

Class Action LawSuit

www.doctorsofcourage.org/class-action-lawsuit/

CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT
Needed: Victims’ stories

A law firm has shown interest in class action for chronic pain patients who have suffered damages as a result of being denied their medications by a chain pharmacy. That would be such places as CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Rite Aid, Kaiser Permanente (HMO), or mail order chains.

What they need to establish a realistic case are legitimate, verifiable stories of how legitimate patients have been denied their medications without just cause. They also need to know how this action caused damages. There are the worst cases of suicide, unintentional death, heart attacks, loss of job, but there are also damages accepted by the court that would be less drastic, such as inability to go to work, loss of quality of life, stress over being able to provide for the family, PTSD, anxiety, depression, costs of other medications for related conditions, etc.

We want to start with a presentation of 100 cases. To show how widespread this is, I would like to pick 2 from each state. Eventually all cases received would be shared, so please contribute your case, even if your damages were mild. As their interest is piqued, they will be asking for more cases and we want to have an armamentarium to just reach in and pull out.

Do not worry about sending us what happened to you. For the investigation phase, we will redact all names from the report given to the law firm. We will not share your personal information, but we will need to be able to contact you once the case is accepted. We do need your name, location, email address, and phone number for contact.

An example of other people’s horror stories can be found at https://pbmabuses.org/. Feel free to also add your story there.

This is something that all pain patient advocacy groups should advocate for. Please ask them to put this notice on their home page of their website, and post it on every facebook page, twitter account, Instagram that you have access to. Make this go viral.

Send your story to:

lindacheek@doctorsofcourage.org

There will also be a place on DoctorsofCourage.org for you to send your story through a message box.

This has the potential to be bigger than the tobacco law suits, so get on board and let’s hit a homer.

Prosecutors: former DEA agent Chad Scott is a liar; defense says witnesses are tainted

Prosecutors: former DEA agent Chad Scott is a liar; defense says witnesses are tainted

https://www.nola.com/news/courts/article_e0071a16-c28f-11e9-8e43-e30b1d68b458.html

NO.chadscott.082019.0008.JPG

For nearly two decades, Chad Scott helped push criminal cases through federal courtrooms as a decorated field agent for the Drug Enforcement Administration, eventually leading a multiagency task force based on the north shore, where he patrolled the heavily traveled drug corridor of Interstate 12.

But for the second time this year, Scott sat Monday at the defense table in a federal courtroom in New Orleans and listened to a special team of prosecutors describe him as an out-of-control liar who leveraged his job as a way to coerce drug dealers to give him what he wanted.

His defense attorneys countered that Scott was an outstanding agent who is being railroaded by resentful drug dealers and convicted cops looking to get a better deal from the feds.

The arguments kicked off Scott’s retrial on seven counts of perjury plus obstruction of justice and falsification of government records. Earlier this year, a jury deadlocked on the charges against Scott, and U.S. District Judge Jane Triche Milazzo was forced to declare a mistrial.

U.S. Department of Justice special prosecutor Charles Miracle’s opening presentation Monday sought to build a stronger foundation and narrative than the government did in the first trial.

During his half-hour opening statement, Miracle told the newly empaneled jury of seven men and five women that Scott’s case was about “honesty and integrity” and that Scott had repeatedly lied to get things he wanted.

“These are not minor lies,” Miracle said. “These lies had consequences.”

Miracle told the jury that Scott had betrayed the trust of his employers and the entire criminal justice system.

He acknowledged, in an effort to head off what will be a focus of the defense’s presentation, that the witnesses against Scott are not innocent men: Three of them are admitted drug traffickers who moved scores of kilograms of cocaine and heroin; two others are former drug task force officers who have since pleaded guilty to federal crimes.

“A number of witnesses in this case have criminal backgrounds,” Miracle said, but the evidence they will present “fits together with common sense and logic.”

Specifically, Miracle said, the prosecutors will show that Scott ordered Frederick Brown to buy him a truck like the one Brown himself drove. Brown did so, and Scott picked it up in Houston while there for a water skiing tournament. Days later, Scott turned in the truck at his Metairie DEA office with forms that said Brown had surrendered it in Metairie as part of his role as an informant for Scott. He also told Karl Newman, a task force officer who is slated to testify against Scott, to say they had gotten the truck in Metairie, Miracle said.

The truck was later allocated to Scott to use as his undercover vehicle.

In the perjury counts, Scott is accused of lying on the stand about the relationship between Brown and a trafficker named Jorge Perralta. Scott also faces an obstruction of justice charge for allegedly trying to convince Brown and a man named Edwin Martinez to say that Brown knew Perralta. Brown will testify that he never met Perralta, Miracle said.

Scott’s attorney, Matthew Coman, signaled the defense’s intention to attack the government’s case even more aggressively than it did the first time, spending the first few minutes of his own opening statement scoffing at the government’s witnesses.

Perralta, one of the drug traffickers who is expected to testify, “will admit he supplied kilo after kilo of heroin to this conspiracy that made its way to Hammond, Louisiana,” Coman said. “From Houston to our hometown.”

Despite those admissions, Coman noted, Perralta will walk in and out of the court a free man because he has been granted immunity in return for his testimony against Scott. Similarly, Martinez faced life in prison, Coman said. But because of a deal with prosecutors, he could be released next year.

Newman refused to tell the government what it wanted to hear until prosecutors added new charges to his indictment, Coman said. Then, faced with the possibility of 30 years in prison, Newman caved and agreed to testify as prosecutors wanted, Coman argued.

“This is the government’s case: people that sold drugs and have something to gain,” he argued.

“On the other side of the ledger, Chad Scott is a 20-year veteran of the DEA who put his life on the line on a regular basis” and is innocent, Coman said.

The trial is expected to last about two weeks.

how many times has the Rx dept staff embarrassed you at the pharmacy counter ?

Isn’t it about time the pts started to embarrass them ?  The post linked below… is what I am talking about… this pt’s embarrassment was posted in a local OHIO newspaper

Stark has filed a complaint with the Ohio Board of Pharmacy against Walgreens’ Pharmacist, refusing to fill meds she had taken for EIGHT YEARS

Want to share your embarrassing story with all those on the web ?…  I will publish them – minus  your personal information..

Tired of a pharmacy telling your that “they are not comfortable” filling your prescription/medication to treat your health condition ? Maybe -you – the pt needs to make them really feel uncomfortable… share your story with me… I will post it… name names… if it is a chain pharmacy…. give me the name of the pharmacist…. give me at least the town they are in…

Let’s see how comfortable they are when their chains start getting BAD PR because of their actions/decisions

 

Are you ready to go fishing or still just want to “cut bait” ?

See the source image

I was involved in a interesting conference call tonight… on the call was a person who has contacts with some of the very large law firms.  According to contacts within these law firms put it simply how law firms think…. when it comes to taking on a class action law suit… first is MONEY and second is JUSTICE.

It has been stated that all that is needed is abt ONE HUNDRED DENIAL OF CARE HORROR STORIES involving a large healthcare/insurance corporation to peak the interest of these major class action law firms.

There ia a handful of chain pharmacies that control >50% of the community pharmacies

There is three Prescription Benefit Managers (PBM) that control abt 80% of all prescriptions filled

There is a handful of insurance companies that control the majority of health insurance business and if – or not – pts get certain therapies paid for.

Who is ready to TAKE A STAND… share your denial of care horror story… about these entities basically practicing medicine without a license.

Those involved with the conference call came away with the idea of collecting those horror stories – confidentially – until we reached or exceeded that magical ONE HUNDRED NUMBER …  Then share these HORROR STORIES with the law firm – while initially redacting the person’s personal information.

OR … do you just wish to continue to call/write  your member of Congress ?  – THAT GOES NO WHERE

Continue to sign petition that GOES NO WHERE

Whine, Bitch, Moan to each other on hundreds or thousands of Face Book pages… or keep sending out tweets expressing your dissatisfaction of some employee of one of these healthcare entities that really could care less if you are being thrown into cold turkey withdrawal every month for a few days.

OR you could continue to “LIKE” a Face Book or Twitter post BUT NEVER SHARE A POST.  A post WILL NEVER GO VIRAL without being SHARED !

You need to decide if you will continue to “cut bait” or ready to GO FISHING ?

 

Here is a interesting website – Patient Horror Stories

Patient Horror Stories

www.pbmabuses.org/horror-stories/

PBMs have very real and negative impacts on patients with cancer and our entire health care system. Read for yourself just how horrific PBMs are in the following collection of real stories. While these stories are real, we changed personal details to protect the privacy of patients.

Stark has filed a complaint with the Ohio Board of Pharmacy against Walgreens’ Pharmacist, refusing to fill meds she had taken for EIGHT YEARS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sanduskyregister.com%2Fstory%2F201908150028%3Ffbclid%3DIwAR1TmBZegIyp6sMKmKq1_2JlUh9MEPDs_LpoxGOZKKvqK3O1XlkrQe1zlME&h=AT3pQP1_GUy39YO3VS8ta72h6LIyA2YakUQ6-CXLLZxclmnPQ6IIrbq5bbvN-29iFE3QC9voIEQ64-RWDYYYcBDdRgE1iB2c3rI20GwmPzjtEIO289qp4-mvmKqVY6CmC6JoMcGRgNlk

SANDUSKY — Chronic pain patient Awna Stark used the same prescriptions, from the same doctor, at the same pharmacy, for more than eight years when the Walgreens pharmacy in Fremont suddenly ended their service to her.

Stark, 45, a Sandusky resident, said the Walgreens would not fill her pain prescriptions and even refused to fill her seizure medications, which aren’t a controlled substance.

A patient of local pain specialist Dr. Bill Bauer, Stark has filed a complaint with the Ohio Board of Pharmacy, alleging the pharmacy failed to meet its professional obligations. She’s also filed a complaint under the Americans With Disabilities Act, alleging that she’s a disabled person who was denied service.

Neither complaint has been resolved yet, Stark said.

Stark, who said she was denied service at the Fremont Walgreens at the end of May, is a former nurse who said she smashed her toe in 2008 on a concrete barrier in a Chicago parking lot.

A doctor hit a nerve while performing surgery. She now has nerve problems all through her body.

After trying a variety of technologies and drugs but never managing to “get ahead” of the pain, she said, she now takes morphine, oxycodone and fentanyl patches. It’s a trio of medications that allow her to cope and function. She also takes anti-seizure medication.

Stark met her husband, Sandusky native Shawn Stark, in downtown Sandusky.

“He bought me a drink. We were married six months later,” she said.

The couple, now together 20 years, have a blended family with four children.

Stark had knee surgery a few days ago, and she’s been trying to take care of him.

“He’s taking care of me more than I’m taking care of him. I’ve had 14 surgeries now. He’s a good guy,” she said.

The Starks say they are very aware there’s an ongoing drug epidemic. Shawn Stark’s mother died of a drug overdose, and one of the Starks’ children has battled addiction.

But Shawn Stark said it’s unfair to punish pain patients because of the drug epidemic.

“It’s heartbreaking on a daily basis to see my wife go through this,” he said.

“I’ve seen her where she can’t have a fan blowing on her, it hurts too much,” he said. “To see those lumped together infuriates me. I want to see legitimate patients who have problems get their medicine.”

Stark said the pharmacist who cut her off refused to talk to her. The Register called the Fremont Walgreens and was told the pharmacist is on vacation.

The Register also contacted a spokeswoman for Walgreens.

Walgreens spokeswoman Molly Sheehan responded, “We support our pharmacists in exercising their professional judgment while also trying to balance patient access to medication.”

Ali Simon, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Board of Pharmacy, said she cannot comment on cases being investigated by the board.

Simon said a pharmacist is not required to fill every prescription that comes in.

“Based upon information obtained during a prospective drug utilization review, a pharmacist shall use professional judgment when making a determination about the legitimacy of a prescription. A pharmacist is not required to dispense a prescription of doubtful, questionable, or suspicious origin,” Simon said.

She noted a patient can transfer a prescription to another pharmacy — which is what Stark did.

The Register has published stories about other local chronic pain patients. In June, the Register published an article about a cancer patient, Tina Bango, who was refused medication at a Rite Aid on Perkins Avenue. The local pharmacy and the Rite Aid company both refused to comment for the article.

“That’s the one that ticked me off. I started crying with that one,” Awna Stark said. “That was the same week I had the first issue dealing with all of this.”

Stark’s doctor, Bauer, said Stark stands out because she is trying to fight back after being denied medication. Many are busy dealing with their illness or don’t know what to do, Bauer said.

Bauer said he’s frustrated pain patients who are denied medication aren’t getting more attention. Bauer recently launched a petition at Change.org to speak up for chronic pain patients.

“For some reason, the country’s more interested in Epstein than they are these people,” Bauer said.

Coming in Tuesday’s Register: Do doctors in Ohio face sanctions if they refuse to treat pain patients?

What a bunch of BOGUS EXCUSES …   Walgreens spokeswoman Molly Sheehan responded, “We support our pharmacists in exercising their professional judgment while also trying to balance patient access to medication.”

AND 

Ali Simon, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Board of Pharmacy, said she cannot comment on cases being investigated by the board.

Simon said a pharmacist is not required to fill every prescription that comes in.

“Based upon information obtained during a prospective drug utilization review, a pharmacist shall use professional judgment when making a determination about the legitimacy of a prescription. A pharmacist is not required to dispense a prescription of doubtful, questionable, or suspicious origin,” Simon said.

If the pt had been taking the same medications for EIGHT YEARS written by the same doctor and filled at the same WALGREENS… the pharmacist’s judgement is more likely based on some personal phobia or biases…

Stark said the pharmacist who cut her off refused to talk to her.

My money is on the fact that the Pharmacist refused to talk to her because she could not come up with a VALID REASON for the denial of filling her prescriptions… and didn’t/couldn’t justify her actions.   With the trio of opiates that Stark was taking, she was going to be thrown into some very serious – possible life threatened – cold turkey withdrawal… not to mention the elevated pain.. From the description of the onset of the cause of her pain… she may be suffering from RSD … and that disease on the McGill pain scale is near the top of the list of severity and often referred to as a “suicide disease” because the intensity of pain is claimed to be more intense than child birth… except it is 24/7 situation.

 

Judge Richard Leon and CVS on Aetna acquisition

http://pharmacistactivist.com/2019/AUGUST_2019.shtml

EDITORIAL:
Judge Richard Leon and CVS
The Department of Justice approved the acquisition of Aetna by CVS-Caremark and many view this as “a done deal,” and the companies have portrayed it as such. However, this action requires the review and action of District Court Judge Richard Leon. To his credit, Judge Leon astutely recognized that there were implications and important concerns with respect to this proposed acquisition that warranted further investigation and evaluation (please see my letters of December 5, 2018 and January 24, 2019 to Judge Leon in the February issue of The Pharmacist Activist).

In addition to Judge Leon’s own thorough study of this situation, he held two days of hearings in June, at which the involved companies, and organizations that were opposing the acquisition, presented testimony and responded to questions. Following the hearing the Department of Justice asked to call more witnesses. The Judge denied the request, saying it was “phantasmagorical.” I had to consult my dictionary and, for the benefit of the one or two readers who also do not know the meaning of this word, it is defined as “a rapid, bewildering sequence of fantastic images, as seen in fever or dreams.” That characterization had previously escaped my awareness, but it can also be applied to CVS.

Judge Leon conducted a final hearing on this matter on July 19 following which he noted that he would announce his ruling in the not-distant future. I very much hope that his ruling blocks the acquisition. However, whatever the outcome, I highly commend him for recognizing and investigating the concerns, problems, and risks that are so well known to pharmacists.

In anticipation of the hearing scheduled for July 19, I wrote to Judge Leon on July 8 and this letter is provided below. In addition to the responses I received from pharmacists and that were included in the May and June issues of The Pharmacist Activist, I provided to him some additional responses I received. These responses, as well as responses I have received after I wrote to the Judge on July 8, are provided in this issue following my letter.

July 8, 2019
The Honorable Richard J. Leon
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
333 Constitution Avenue N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20001

Dear Judge Leon:

I commend your continuing investigation of the potential consequences of the proposed CVS-Aetna acquisition/merger. I have previously communicated my strong concerns, with supporting information, about this proposed merger in my letters to you of December 5, 2018 and January 24, 2019. I have included copies of these letters.

During the last several months, I have been made aware of even more ways in which CVS-Caremark manipulates, disrupts, and fragments the pharmacy marketplace for its own benefit and profits, and at increasing risk of errors and harm for consumers. I have included many of the communications I have received in the May and June, 2019 issues of my newsletter, The Pharmacist Activist, copies of which I have included. The title of the editorial of the May issue is a quote of a current CVS pharmacist, “I believe I am a danger to the public working at CVS.” The editorial in the June issue includes communications from current and former CVS pharmacists and is titled, “They Must be Anonymous, But They Will Not be Silent.”

I continue to receive numerous communications from pharmacists, some of which will be included in the August issue of my newsletter. I have included a preliminary draft of much of the content of this issue. In addition to the strong concerns voiced by CVS pharmacists, I would call attention to the commentary on pages 4 and 5 from an employee pharmacist in an independent pharmacy. This commentary identifies what I consider to be anticompetitive and unfair practices and actions of CVS-Caremark, that may also be violations of HIPAA. These concerns do not even address the abysmal compensation that CVS-Caremark provides to other pharmacies for dispensing prescriptions in Caremark-administered prescription plans, and that has been an important factor in the closure of many independent pharmacies.

These situations describe the situation that presently exists. If CVS is permitted to acquire Aetna, the resultant power and domination of these already huge corporations will become even more anticompetitive, and the consequences will be even worse than they are now.

I urge you to take action to prevent the acquisition of Aetna by CVS. I also urge you to initiate action that will require CVS to divest Caremark.

Thank you for the concern you have already demonstrated and for your consideration of this additional information.

Sincerely,
Daniel A. Hussar, Ph.D.
Dean Emeritus and Remington Professor Emeritus
Philadelphia College of Pharmacy
University of the Sciences
danandsue3@verizon.net

Pharmacist comments
From current CVS pharmacists

“Mistakes are occurring. People are dying!”

(excerpts from a letter to a Board of Pharmacy): “I am writing to beg you to act in the interests of the patients of CVS, Walgreens, and other chain drug stores in _______. I am employed by CVS, so this letter will consist mainly of my concerns with CVS practices, but I am told that other chains, specifically Walgreens, have similar policies and practices.

I believe that the pursuit of profits within CVS pharmacy has reached a critical point, where the lives and health of their patients are being put in danger regularly. CVS corporate has kept their pharmacies operating on a skeleton crew for several years now, and while prescription volume and responsibilities have gradually increased over the years, staffing hours have only been cut. The Board’s decision to allow more technicians per pharmacist several years ago, which I’m sure was enacted in the interest of safety, was actually used by CVS to stop ALL pharmacist overlap within this district. This means that no CVS pharmacies within this district, regardless of prescription volume, have more than one pharmacist on duty at any time. What this means is that pharmacists do not eat, have rare bathroom breaks, and are standing continuously for up to 14 hours. While CVS says they ‘allow’ their pharmacists to take breaks, the system they have in place does not allow this to happen. Because of a constant staffing shortage (which is actually enforced by corporate), pharmacists are responsible for all aspects of running the pharmacy. We are responsible not just for verifying prescriptions and counseling patients–in order to keep the pharmacy functioning, we must be cashiers (in the drive-thru and at the pharmacy counter), we must enter prescription information, count prescriptions, take out trash, answer constantly ringing phones, make ENDLESS unnecessary phone calls (which amount to high-pressure sales calls), and complete hours of required training modules. We are fully aware of our legal obligation to provide counseling for each new prescription, and are reminded regularly that we can be terminated or lose our license if we do not provide this counseling, but our employer makes no effort AT ALL to make it possible for us to provide this counseling. It is laughable to believe that CVS pharmacists have the time to counsel on each new prescription when they have endless metrics that they are expected to meet throughout the day, most of which have a 15-minute time limit before they “go red” and are considered late. But who do we complain to? If we go to upper management, we are told that we are underperforming and are made to feel incompetent–unreachable metrics goals are used to make ALL of the CVS pharmacists feel as if their jobs are in jeopardy at all times. If we complain to the board, we are exposing ourselves to legal action against our license and our livelihood. If unsafe practices are exposed at CVS, the response of corporate will be to place more extreme burdens and expectations on their already laden pharmacists, with no additional help for easing these burdens.

I would like to suggest an answer for how the Board of Pharmacy could ensure the safety of CVS (and other retail chains) patients without allowing drug store corporations to transfer that burden directly onto the shoulders of their pharmacists. Cold calls to doctors’ offices by pharmacists should STOP unless specifically requested by a patient. As it is now, if a patient has enrolled one of their Rxs in the Readyfill service, when it is close to being out of refills, THREE electronic requests are sent to the doctor by CVS. If there is no response to these 3 requests, the Rx becomes the responsibility of the pharmacist, it becomes part of our ‘Doctor request queue,’ meaning we must make an actual phone call (which is timed–it must last at least 30 seconds or we don’t get ‘credit’). Either the doctor agrees to supplying more refills (which is considered a ‘successful’ call), or he will fail to respond or deny more refills (an ‘unsuccessful’ call). What this means is that we are overwhelming doctors’ office staff with constant calls, and patients are often kept on medications that are unneeded for extended period of time. I have many patients who see many doctors and take many medications. They frequently do not know the names of their medications or what they are taking them for. They often agree to sign up for the Readyfill not understanding what this service means. Many come and pick up bags of unneeded medicine on a monthly basis because CVS harasses their numerous doctors into giving refills, then proceeds to harass the customer into coming and picking up these refills (also the responsibility of the pharmacist). I encourage the Board to interview doctors’ office staff and pharmacy staff and see if they feel that these calls are serving patients in any way. Stopping unrequested doctor calls would be in the best interest of not just pharmacists and doctors, but more importantly, it would be in the best interest of patients.

Secondly, staffing minimums MUST be put in place based on prescription volume, keeping in mind that at CVS and other chains, pharmacists are not just responsible for verifying and counseling, they are also responsible for numerous tasks and responsibilities that would be handled by other staff at a more responsible company. Overlapping pharmacists should be a requirement at some of the busier stores, so the work burden can be eased on the pharmacist, and so they have a reasonable opportunity to take necessary breaks. Pharmacies filling a certain volume should be required to have not just a technician, but also a cashier. At all CVS pharmacies, the technicians are expected to also ring up the customers at the registers, which means that at many of the stores, the lone technician is stuck at the register helping a steady stream of customers when the pharmacist is left to count the Rxs, verify, counsel, answer the constantly-ringing phone, and make the ever present doctor and patient calls. In deciding the staffing minimums, prescription volume should be the primary concern, but also what other duties are expected of the staff. If cashiering, housekeeping, and numerous metrics are part of the job description, then adequate staffing should be provided so that the primary duty, PATIENT CARE, is not neglected.

CVS has recently put into place a much-needed 2-step verification process. Most other chains have had this in place for years. It would work tremendously well for a well-staffed pharmacy. What it means for the CVS pharmacist is that one more metric has been put into place. There is one more queue to watch and another opportunity to ‘go red.’ It is inhumane. I have been at CVS for many years and I am currently looking for another job, as are most of my colleagues. If we leave CVS, there will be an abundance of inexperienced pharmacy school graduates to take our place for less compensation, so CVS will not suffer the consequences of their actions at all. The occasional lawsuit from customers harmed by their practices will be settled quietly out of court for a sum of money that will be less than what it would require to staff their pharmacies adequately to begin with, so they are not being harmed financially by their unsafe practices. I have only retail experience and have found that most of the larger chains have made note of the ‘success’ of CVS and are following suit in their practices. I am discouraged and fearful not just for my career and profession, but most importantly, for the millions of chain pharmacy customers. I am begging the State Board to make a difference in this state. Protect the patients in our state by demanding that their professional pharmacists are treated with the minimum amount of dignity to do their jobs well. Please. Thank you so much for your consideration. From a terrified, exhausted CVS pharmacist.”

“I have practiced pharmacy for many years. I work at CVS currently and can attest to the conditions (that other CVS pharmacists have described that are included in your newsletter). For the first time in my career I actually dread and fear a shift at work. The staff morale is at a burnout level. I hope to assist you in making these issues known and acted upon. I agree completely that public safety is compromised and errors are increasing at an alarming rate.

My Board of Pharmacy recently conducted a survey regarding working conditions. I have inquired about the results but have not received a response.

I would like to add one more fact to the points addressed in the letters to the state boards (included in the May issue of The Pharmacist Activist). The fact is there is no possible way that a pharmacist in these conditions can meet the legal requirement of mandatory counseling on new prescriptions. I feel that this may be the position we must take to force action. The fact is CVS is in violation of law. CVS will not staff pharmacies adequately to meet this legal requirement. CVS is aware of this violation and continues to cut staff.

I challenge CVS to prove that mathematically a pharmacist can fill over 300 Rxs and counsel on 200 new ones in a 12 hour shift with one technician. This is in addition to ringing up every transaction on the register and answering every phone call. No call center staff and no cashiers. This is the current situation at my CVS location. Every CVS that I am aware of also works a skeleton crew. An industrial engineer could calculate the time required for each task and I guarantee that the results will show we are being put in an impossible situation. I’m good at what I do but I will say this – I cannot deny the laws of time and space!”

(Editor’s note: I responded to this pharmacist and provided some suggestions, and also cautioned about the importance of remaining anonymous. The pharmacist quickly responded with the following additional comments.)

“You are free to use any ideas I share without using my name. I have no doubt that there would be instant retaliation when corporate would identify me as a ‘whistleblower.’ One important point in quantifying staffing levels is script count measurement. This is manipulated falsely by CVS when determining staffing and bonuses. In my opinion, for true representation of work being done, it is crucial to include all prescriptions processed in any calculations used to determine allowable technician hours. This is not the case. One trick that is used by CVS in determining volume of a location is that they only count the sold prescriptions in the weekly tally. The ‘return to stock’ prescriptions are subtracted from the total. I realize that unless the script is sold the store doesn’t get paid but it is still work we did to fill it. This maneuver effectively reduces the volume by approximately 20%. For example, if I print my daily log I see the number for scripts filled that day. Usually 300 or so for a weekday and 150 or so for a weekend day. So one would think I am getting ‘credit’ for filling approximately 1800 per week which is what I am actually doing. When corporate weekly reports come out I am listed as a ‘low volume’ store of under 1500 per week. This is because the data is manipulated by removing the return to stock prescriptions from the total filled. Every store has many ‘return to stocks’ daily. Many factors are in play here. I think e-prescribing of entire med lists and superfluous refill requests for automatic fills are the biggest culprits. The return to stock process is also time consuming in itself. Also, for fair comparison, whether a location has cashiers, self check-outs, or call center assistance should be taken into account. CVS has eliminated the cashier position in my pharmacy and our techs must also ring up every sale.”

“Metrics are the top priority for the district managers. My particular district manager is not a pharmacist. Recently he was at our location for his ‘visit.’ The current focus is immunizations. The gist of the ‘conversation’ (i.e., ‘instructions’) was to test bill insurances for payment of pneumonia vaccine. That, I assume is his way of assessing appropriateness of such. He went on to tell me that he knew (from a drug rep) that infants get several doses during their first year so it must be safeâ€|although he didn’t even know the name of the vaccine. We barely have time to administer vaccines in a safe manner, let alone screen for appropriateness.

We are also being ‘encouraged’ to do off-site flu clinics on our day off. We will be paid; however, this is without tech help. We are to go alone and are responsible for picking up supplies, transporting, returning, paperwork, etc. I question cold supply chain, etc. Of course, the front of the store is on board and has suggestions of where we can travel to. All of this is verbal. . . too smart than to incriminate themselves in writing.

We all fear for our jobs if we have low numbers, etc. I always think that they can’t possibly ask us to do one more thing, but then they add to the workload and take away tech support.

I have to say pharmacy schools shoulder some of the blame for this in that they cranked up enrollment and programs for extra tuition dollars. Supply and demand. . . provided entirely too much supply to make it easy for the chains to take full advantage. You may use any of the information that I provided but please keep me anonymous. I’m trying to hang in there as long as I can.”

From former CVS pharmacists

“I have another position with flexible hours but worked part-time for CVS for more than 20 years. I would travel wherever they needed me, taking emergency calls nobody else would take, filling in double shifts on holidays nobody else would work. I got behind one day because of trying to fix insurance issues, customer questions, doctor calls, and a technician that called in sick. I was reported by the store manager for being too slow. I got a call from the new district manager and was berated and yelled at for being behind. During the next few weeks the relief shifts disappeared. I was told that the hours of some full-time pharmacists had been cut and that they were being given the shifts I had been asked to fill. I had no shifts at all for quite awhile. I vividly remember getting my mail one day and seeing a letter from CVS. The letter read: ‘Dear 0000000 (employee number) – You have been terminated for not working a shift in 90 days.’ After all those years, all I am is a number. No phone call, no thank you, nothing!”

“I worked in a number of CVS stores and saw and heard lots of things that bothered me enough to write things down. I filed numerous ethics complaints and at times I contacted the Board of Pharmacy and DEA. I needed to take a leave of absence because of a very painful medical issue and CVS fired me at the start of the leave of absence. I am pursuing legal action.”

“There are hundreds of cites and fines in our state regarding CVS.”

(Following recollections of earlier mostly positive experiences): “Next came the bean counters that were in charge of pharmacy operations. Why have pharmacists involved? So now all of a sudden we had too many pharmacy personnel and the bottom line was not being met. Five years of pharmacy school to ring the register. Never mind trying to find time to counsel a patient. Our profession has regressed to being questioned, ‘Why can’t you do your job faster and with a minimum number, or less, of staffing you really need?’ After 50 years of seeing things go from fun, to bad, to stupid, I gave up my license.”

From an employee pharmacist in an independent pharmacy

“The same games occur over and over again with CVS-Caremark and PBMs in general. Frankly, I am tired of these games and they wear on me as a community pharmacist. The following are things I experience on a daily basis, most often with CVS-Caremark:

Prescription stealing directly from physician offices—CVS has taken it upon themselves to contact physicians’ offices and take all brand new prescriptions without patients knowing it. I have seen an uptick in patients calling the pharmacy saying CVS is sending automatic messages either from a local CVS or a CVS mail order facility saying their prescription is filled and ready. These patients have been customers of ours and have NEVER filled a single prescription with CVS. They are very confused and want to know why this is happening. Who is contacting the doctor to say it is ok for CVS to take that prescription and all future new prescriptions?

Mandatory use of CVS after 2 fills—this seems to get worse from year to year. Most notably, CVS-Caremark allows the first 2 fills of a prescription at the patient’s pharmacy of choice. Then it becomes mandatory to use CVS-Caremark’s mail-order pharmacy or a local CVS store.

Medication therapy management (MTM)—MTM in theory sounds great as it can help in identifying noncompliance and resolving disease and therapy issues. HOWEVER, I would estimate that 95% of the MTM cases I complete for patients in CVS-Caremark benefit plans involve asking a prescriber to switch patients from a 30-day to 90-day supply of medication. In return, they may pay you a little bit more for completing the MTM case. A 90-day supply sounds great for compliance and cost savings. However, when mandatory use of CVS-Caremark kicks in, wave goodbye to all your patients.

MTM performance scores—CVS-Caremark provides points for disease state management, compliance, and enrolling patients for 90-day supplies (which are eventually lost to CVS). So the slow bleed of losing customers begins. Many patients are also contacted by CVS representatives handling MTM cases calling OUR patients. How does it make sense to conduct MTM on a patient without a profile who does not fill their prescriptions at CVS? Eventually when CVS-Caremark steals the patient, why would they need you to conduct MTM for the patients they stole from your pharmacy? It seems like they control the whole MTM process anyway, and their games seem like HIPAA violations.”

From a Walgreens pharmacist “Several years ago Walgreens tried to take a stand against Express Scripts’ low reimbursement. For a year, Walgreens did not have a contract. Walgreens developed an entire strategy and hoped that the service might be able to get people to talk to their employers and change away from Express Scripts. This did not work and, unfortunately, all the other pharmacies jumped on the opportunity and advertised that they took Express Scripts. Prescriptions were transferred out left and right. A year or so later, Walgreens got back in the Express Scripts network.

Nowadays, CVS-Caremark and its acquisition of Aetna have hurt tremendously. There are many groups in the CVS-Caremark that Walgreens is not contracted with. Other groups allow members to fill a few months at the retail pharmacy before being forced to switch to either CVS or their mail order. Most of the Aetna plans have significantly cheaper copays for people to go to CVS. All of this greatly hurts the ability to obtain prescriptions elsewhere. I know in my area we saw tremendous losses of prescriptions due to this. Last year Walgreens nationwide saw bonuses cut in half due to not meeting expectations set the previous year. Meanwhile, I have friends at CVS who said they received their largest bonuses ever.

PBMs make it difficult for even a large chain like Walgreens to be profitable. My store has seen massive cuts in help. Our reimbursements are down so, even though in June we had a 3% increase in prescriptions compared to June 2018 (despite further loss of Caremark and Aetna prescriptions), our revenue was actually slightly down. This resulted in a 10% decrease in tech help compared to the same month last year. Increases in prescription count and expectations with a decrease in hours is a recipe for problems in patient safety and increased workloads and stress for the pharmacy staff.”
Solutions for some
“After being fired by both CVS and later Walgreens for practicing pharmacy the way I was taught and the way I believe Pharmacy should be practiced, I bought a compounding pharmacy. Now I have hired enough technicians that I am free to practice pharmacy the way it should be practiced. When I counsel a patient, I have the time I need to speak with them. I interact with my patients all the time and they love it. They like that they can come to my pharmacy and not have to wait more than a minute or two to speak with a pharmacist. Plus, I get to use my education. In compounding, you really get to use your education. Even though we have some sophisticated equipment, I still use a mortar and pestle which I find is the best for making oral suspensions for humans and pets. My advice for unhappy big chain pharmacists is to buy or start your own pharmacy. Join NCPA and take advantage of its Ownership Academy program. Banks will work with you to lend money to buy or start an independent pharmacy.”

“In North Dakota we have an unbelievable pharmacy ownership law that I hope will never go away. However, the health insurance companies and PBM prescription plans are beating pharmacies down. My independent pharmacy had been dispensing 300 prescriptions a day, but I was hating the direction we were going in so I opted out of a major plan due to a 40% drop in reimbursement, as well as some other plans. My volume fell very quickly to 200 prescriptions a day, and along with the backlog of payment from Medicare part D, I almost had a nervous breakdown. I rolled the dice and could not have been happier for what we did as a pharmacy and for our patients, as well as for my sanity. I really wanted to focus on patient care, compounding, and nutrition because those were my passions. Early this year, we drew another line in the sand and walked away from one of the remaining health plans in which we were participating. The financials were looking grim so I developed my ‘pharmacy rescue plan.’ We had to make some cuts but, six months in, we are doing well but are not out of the woods. We have USP 800 and the expense to deal with, but we continue to grow the profitable areas of our practice, compounding and nutrition, which now account for about 75% of our profit. Most importantly, we have time to visit with our patients and we are doing more and more cash consultations because other pharmacies don’t have the time to visit with their patients.”

The responses above that I have received from pharmacists are but a small fraction of the number I have received. However, they reflect the specific areas of risk and concern, as well as the frustration and emotion that exist. I wish I could publically give credit to the individuals who have provided this information but, for reasons that are clear, they must remain anonymous. I highly commend them and express appreciation for the time they have taken to share this information and their concerns for the purpose of increasing awareness of the problems and risks that exist.

Daniel A. Hussar
danandsue3@verizon.net

New York state started levying an excise tax on opioids, pharmacies bear the burden some pharmacists have stopped filling the prescriptions

Community pharmacies struggle to stay open

https://www.recordonline.com/news/20190817/community-pharmacies-struggle-to-stay-open

When Baxter’s Pharmacy in Goshen closed in late June, it left more than an empty storefront.

The closure left customers with a choice: Find another local, family-owned independent drugstore and travel a little farther, or switch to a big nationally owned chain.

“The whole time we’ve lived here, 20-plus years, we’ve used Baxter’s,” said Michele Meek, who works at Linda’s Office Supplies, just a couple of doors down Main Street from the former Baxter’s. “I’m trying to make my choice now: Am I going to go to CVS, or am I going to go to the one in Florida?”

The Florida Pharmacy is a bit out of the way for Meek, who lives in the Village of Goshen, but she likes to shop at small businesses. And when she called CVS with a question, she said, she got an automated system. When she called the Florida Pharmacy, she got a friendly, helpful person.

John Nemeth, who owned Baxter’s, declined to comment for this story.

Baxter’s was the second independent community pharmacy in Orange County to close in the past several months, said Al Squitieri, who owns NeighboRx Pharmacy in Slate Hill. The other was Montgomery Village Pharmacy, he said.

“Pharmacies today are experiencing such low reimbursements, it’s forcing some pharmacies to close,” Squitieri said.

Covering the spread

There are two issues straining independent community pharmacies, both driven by pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), pharmacy advocates say: the low reimbursement rates, and the tendency of PBMs to try to steer customers toward their affiliated pharmacies.

What’s happening here is happening elsewhere, said Monique Whitney, executive director of Pharmacists United for Truth and Transparency, an advocacy group for independent pharmacists.

“It’s become an epidemic,” she said. “It’s become too difficult as an independent pharmacy to work within the PBM framework.”

PBMs were created to be middlemen among health insurers, drug manufacturers and pharmacies, the idea being that PBMs would make prescription drugs more affordable and accessible to consumers. PBMs manage formularies, process claims, negotiate drug prices with manufacturers and set reimbursement rates for pharmacies.

“Now, they’re dictating the rules of the game,” Squitieri said.

The Pharmaceutical Care Management Association, which advocates for PBMs, says the entities advocate “on behalf of patients and payers to reduce prescription drug costs.” “PBMs are an integral part of solving America’s prescription drug pricing and affordability challenge,” reads a statement by PCMA President and CEO JC Scott on the organization’s website.

PCMA says PBMs encourage competition among drug makers and pharmacies and give customers incentives to “take the most cost-effective, clinically appropriate medications.”

PBMs negotiate price concessions – rebates – with drug makers, to lower the cost for consumers, PCMA says.

Three corporations control more than 80 percent of prescriptions in the U.S.: CVS Caremark, Express Scripts and OptumRx. Together, they manage prescription benefits for 266 million Americans. Each of the three owns and operates its own mail-order pharmacy service, a “vertically integrated” structure that gives the PBMs even more control over the drugs dispensed under the plans they administer.

PBMs profit by what’s known as spread pricing. The PBM has a contract setting a discount to the manufacturer’s average wholesale price of a drug for the buyer, or plan sponsor; and another contract setting the maximum allowable cost, plus a small dispensing fee, for the pharmacy. Any positive margin ends up in the PBM’s coffers.

“They operate in an arena that’s not transparent,” said Steve Moore, president of the Pharmacists Society of the State of New York and a pharmacy owner from Plattsburgh.

“Take a self-insured employer, like a municipality,” he said. “A PBM will say ‘You’ll save money if you use our mail-order pharmacy.’ They never tell the municipality ‘You’ll pay $100, but we’ll pay the pharmacy $30 of that.’ They’ll tell the city ‘it costs $100, but we’ll charge you $80.’”

In Ohio, spurred by a series of investigative reports by the Columbus Dispatch newspaper, the state Auditor found that PBMs may have overcharged that state’s Medicaid program by $224.8 million in spread fees from April 2017 through March 2018.

On Jan. 17, the PSSNY released an analysis estimating that PBM spreads led to at least $300 million in overcharges to New York Medicaid managed care programs from Jan. 1, 2016 through March 31, 2018. For perspective, New York’s Medicaid managed care programs paid nearly $1.3 billion total for generics in 2017.

A report published May 31 by the New York State Senate’s Committee on Investigations and Government Operations, led by committee Chairman Sen. James Skoufis (D-Woodbury) and Health Committee Chairman Sen. Gustavo Rivera, made similar findings to the PSSNY analysis and called for legislation to remedy the issues.

In response, the New York Legislature passed a bill that would, among other things, subject PBMs to licensing and regulation by the state Health and Financial Services departments, prohibit conflicts of interest and anti-competitive practices by PBMs, mandate that PBMs operate primarily in the best interests of the insured person, health plan or provider, and that they disclose terms of contracts, including pharmacy dispensing fees and to account to payers for rebates, fees, chargebacks and pharmacy reimbursements.

The law is awaiting Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s signature.

“We’ve been calling for this reform for years,” Moore said. “We’ve been calling for an end to spread pricing for 20 years.”

The federal Affordable Care Act tried to rein in PBMs and insurance companies by mandating the Medical Loss Ratio, requiring insurers to spend 80 percent of their money on care and keep just 20 percent to pay administrative costs and expenses.

“All that did was give them incentives to raise their prices,” Moore said.

Opioid tax backfire

As of July 1, New York state started levying an excise tax on opioids, imposed at the first sale in the state, with the first tax payments due on Jan. 1.

Some drug manufacturers and distributors decided they wouldn’t sell in New York, Moore said, creating shortages that could eventually drive up the drug prices. Some decided to absorb the tax, and others passed it along to pharmacies. The result, in many cases, is that it costs the pharmacists money to fill the prescriptions.

“I don’t think it was the intent of the law for pharmacies to bear the burden,” Moore said.

As a result, pharmacist Joe Giangiacomo said, some pharmacists have stopped filling the prescriptions.

“It’s created such a chaotic environment for so many patients,” said Giangiacomo, who owns Rock Hill Pharmacy. “They legitimately need these for pain management, and they’re being turned into seekers.”

Squitieri said he’s been talking to Skoufis and Assemblyman Colin Schmitt about their work on this and other pharmacy-related issues.

The local touch

Giangiacomo bought Rock Hill Pharmacy about three months ago. He graduated from pharmacy school in 2002, and worked retail pharmacy at chain stores for a while.

He said he saw a more hands-on approach as the future of pharmacy: things such as administering immunizations and checking blood pressure, and so he went back to school and earned his doctorate.

“It makes it so much harder when you have all these other things pulling away from what pharmacy is supposed to be,” he said.

According to the National Community Pharmacists Association, a trade group representing independent pharmacists, it’s not just independent shops being closed. From 2011-2016, a total of 3,622 pharmacies closed across the U.S., with independents making up 42 percent of those. Walgreens closed 70 of the Rite Aid stores after its acquisition, including the Fulton Street store in Middletown. Kmart store closures also shuttered their pharmacies; and several regional chains sold to CVS, which shut down stores.

Bob Newhard Jr. is a second-generation pharmacist at Akin’s Pharmacy in Warwick. His father bought the store in 1962, and Newhard and his sister bought the pharmacy from him in 1988. The business is getting harder and harder, he said.

“The pharmacists take the brunt of everything,” he said. “We have to deal with the customers, insurance, the wholesalers, et cetera.”

Sometimes that happens even with the PBMs’ customers, Squitieri said, pointing to a recent major recall of a blood-pressure medication.

“The answer the mail-order pharmacies had,” he said, “was ‘go to your local pharmacy.’”

“If push comes to shove,” Squitieri said, “if they take us out of the community, there’s going to be a big loss.”

Mail-order services can fall behind changes in dosage or medication, and they don’t provide the counseling local pharmacists can, Squitieri said.

“They don’t give the personal touches an independent pharmacist can give,” he said. “We do it because we get to know people.”