An Elderly Couple Who Died In A Murder-Suicide Said They Could No Longer Afford Health Care

An Elderly Couple Who Died In A Murder-Suicide Said They Could No Longer Afford Health Care

https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/skbaer/elderly-couple-murder-suicide-health-care-costs

An elderly couple who officials believe died by murder-suicide left notes expressing concerns that they could not afford to pay for their medical expenses.

Whatcom County Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to a home in Ferndale, Washington, on Wednesday morning after a 77-year-old man called 911 and told the dispatcher he was going to kill himself.

The couple were identified as Brian Jones and Patricia Whitney-Jones, 76, by the Whatcom County Medical Examiner. Jones told the dispatcher that he had prepared a note for law enforcement with information and instructions.

“The dispatcher attempted to keep the caller on the line without success,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement. “The man disconnected the call after saying ‘We will be in the front bedroom.'”

When deputies arrived, a crisis negotiator attempted to contact the couple by phone and with a megaphone for about an hour to no avail. Deputies then deployed a robot mounted camera and found Brian Jones lying next to Patricia Whitney-Jones. Both were dead from apparent gunshot wounds.

The sheriff’s office said several notes were left at the home citing Patricia Whitney-Jones’ severe ongoing medical problems, as well as concerns that the couple could not afford to pay for health care.

Information for their next of kin was also left in a note, officials said. Two dogs who were found at the home were turned over to the Humane Society.

The sheriff’s office is investigating the deaths as a likely murder-suicide.

“It is very tragic that one of our senior citizens would find himself in such desperate circumstances where he felt murder and suicide were the only option,” Sheriff Bill Elfo said in a statement. “Help is always available with a call to 9-1-1.” To avoid such unfortunate circumstances, it is advised to consult elder care attorneys for hire who can help you to plan for retirement and long-term care plans.

Spending on health care for the elderly in the US has been increasing for decades. In 2014, seniors accounted for nearly 15% of the population but approximately 34% of all health care expenditures, according to the US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Personal health care spending for people ages 65 and older was nearly $20,000 per person in 2014, more than five times higher than spending per child — $3,749 — and nearly three times as much as adults ages 19 to 64.

Out-of-pocket spending for people ages 65 and older was also higher than other age groups at $2,925 per person in 2014 with people ages 85 and older paying $5,925 per person, according to the health care agency.

 

FDA Director: This whole debate about absence of evidence abt opiates – has gone “off the rails”

Roy Green: Chronic pain patient’s secretly recorded phone plea for help

Roy Green: Chronic pain patient’s secretly recorded phone plea for help

Roy Green: Chronic pain patient’s secretly recorded phone plea for help

Beth was born with spinal cancer. She has undergone numerous surgeries and the Ontario woman suffers from horrifically debilitating pain.

Recently Beth, a Canadian who should be benefiting from our highly touted and “free” healthcare, heard her doctor declare that his medical licence is more important than Beth’s right to have her intractable pain put under control.

READ MORE: Quebec government unveils action plan to fight opioid overdoses, addiction

In fact, Beth’s doctor assured her that she has no right to a medical maximum effort to minimize her agony. The doctor intends to reduce Beth’s long-standing and prescribed opioid strength to one which will assuredly fail to drive away Beth’s thoughts of suicide.

Gruesome!

Beth turned to the bully in the piece. The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Repeatedly, CPSO has denied that it threatens opioid-prescribing doctors with sanctions, including a loss of medical licence.

CPSO has assured me doctors are under no such pressure. Doctors have assured me they are.

So Beth and her mother placed a call to the college and were connected with a CPSO representative whose responsibility it is to hear out terrified chronic agony patients.

Then Beth’s mother pressed “record.”

READ MORE: Chronic pain patients who take opioids are stigmatized, study shows

Listen to my program podcast from last weekend, and you will hear what took place.  You will hear a desperate Beth pleading with a bored-sounding CPSO representative for understanding, for caring, for respect.

LISTEN: No answers for a patient shut out of treatment:

You will hear Beth explaining to the CPSO rep that suicide is on her mind.

The response? Indifferent acknowledgment that Beth had done everything which might reasonably be expected of someone driven to desperation by intractable agony.

Help? None. What might Beth do additionally to help her cause? The CPSO representative was clearly stumped by the question.

Beth’s being driven to suicide by her pain? Silence. Not even the perfunctory issuing of a phone number to a suicide prevention hotline.

Silence.

This weekend, Beth will rejoin me as she desperately and literally fights for her life.

READ MORE: Opioid deaths continue to drop in B.C., but more than 100 people died in June

Meanwhile, media are issued numbers of opioid overdose statistics. For the most part, these stats likely deal with drug addicts, not chronic pain patients.

Our compassionate Canadian health care system has a suggestion for addicts.

Addicts should be provided with the best available pain control medications. Which is exactly what the compassionate Canadian health care system is denying Beth and millions of intractable pain sufferers.

I’m not indifferent to the plight of drug addicts, but they don’t need my support. The health and political systems brigands are tripping over themselves to provide street addicts with safe injection sites and whatever else they may require.

Beth, though, is expendable. She and all other chronic, intractable agony patients are collateral damage. Listen to her story on my program this Sunday.

Roy Green is the host of the Roy Green Show on the Global News Radio network.

With opioid abuse surging, expert panel recommends drug screening for all U.S. adults

With opioid abuse surging, expert panel recommends drug screening for all U.S. adults

https://www.latimes.com/science/story/2019-08-13/experts-recommend-drug-screening-for-all-adults-opioids

It’s time for doctors to start asking every patient, every time: Have you engaged in any illicit drug use?

That’s the new advice from a panel of public health experts who examined whether a primary care physician’s time is well spent — and whether patients’ interests are served — by routine screening for drug abuse.

A draft report issued Tuesday by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends that all U.S. adults be screened for illicit drug use as long as their doctors can do so accurately and, when abuse is detected, offer their patients effective treatment or refer them to someone who can.

Questions about drug use should not only cover the possibility that a patient is taking illegal street drugs like cocaine or heroin, the task force said. They should also explore whether a patient might be sneaking pills from a family member’s pain medication or getting a boost from stimulants prescribed for a child with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

An acknowledgment of drug use should prompt a physician to warn patients about the dangers they are courting, offer medication-assisted therapy for addiction if appropriate, and refer patients to counseling and further treatment.

The task force has long advised doctors to query American adults — and in some cases adolescents — about their drinking and smoking habits. If the new recommendation is adopted, drug abuse would join the list of risky behaviors to be diagnosed and often treated by primary care doctors.

At a time when addiction has become a leading cause of disability in the U.S. and drug poisonings have become the No. 1 cause of injury-related deaths, some say the panel’s advice is long overdue.

“We’ve been doing this for almost a decade in my office,” said Dr. Gary LeRoy , a staff physician at the East Dayton Health Clinic in Dayton, Ohio, and president-elect of the American Academy of Family Physicians .

The draft recommendation leaves no doubt about the extent of drug abuse in America, he said. A nationwide survey conducted in 2017 by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration found that 30.5 million people — roughly 11.5% of American adults — said they had used illicit drugs in the past month.

“All of us should be keenly aware that on average, one in 10 of our patients are doing drugs — whether we ask them or not — and we’re not going to cause someone to use illicit drugs because we ask the question,” LeRoy said. “When you create an atmosphere of trust where you have safe conversations, they appreciate that you ask.”

The task force, a group of experts who advise the federal government on disease prevention, did not extend its recommendation to adolescents ages 12 to 17. Panel members said they could not find enough credible scientific evidence to offer guidance for this age group, and they called for more research on teen drug abuse and treatment. (The American Academy of Pediatrics currently recommends screening all adolescent for substance use .)

It’s been more than a decade since the task force last deliberated on the wisdom of population-wide screening for illicit drug use.

In 2008, a year in which 36,450 Americans died of drug overdoses, the panel did not see a compelling case for population-wide screening. This year, the death toll from drug abuse could wind up being more than twice as high as it was in 2008.

In 2017, the most recent year for which definitive statistics are available, drug overdoses claimed 70,237 lives in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As opioid addiction burgeons and more users are exposed to the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl, overdose deaths are widely expected to climb even higher in 2018 and 2019.

That context “of course matters,” said behavioral medicine specialist Karina Davidson, who co-chaired the task force’s panel on illicit drug-use screening. But she said the recommendation was prompted by other circumstances as well.

Since 2008, for instance, drug-abuse specialists have devised brief screening mechanisms that help identify illicit drug use and those at risk for it, Davidson said. In addition, she added, a growing stack of research studies has shown that treatments for drug-use disorder and addiction — including behavioral interventions and pharmacological therapies — are effective in helping patients quit or cut back.

That evidence of effectiveness is a key change from earlier years, said Dr. Carol Mangione , a UCLA internal medicine specialist who co-chaired the task force committee that drafted the new recommendation.

“We don’t want to screen for something unless we know there’s an effective treatment,” she said. “If you don’t have a treatment that’s effective for people who screen positive, you haven’t really helped.”

Still, effective treatments remain woefully underused, experts say.

The drug regimens that are most useful for combating addiction — a list that includes naltrexone, methadone and buprenorphine — are rarely offered by primary care physicians, who must contend with a gauntlet of paperwork and training to prescribe them. And many addiction specialists, insurers and state legislatures are suspicious of treatments that use prescription opiates to wean people off illicit opioids.

The new recommendation could help change that, Davidson said.

If doctors know they will be expected to ask about and address their patients’ illicit drug use, more of them will probably do the work necessary to prescribe anti-addiction drugs, and more of them will develop relationships with other care providers to whom they can refer patients for treatment, she said.

That process seems to be underway already, Mangione said. At a recent meeting of the Society for General Internal Medicine, she said, a workshop on medication-assisted treatment for addiction was standing-room only.

“We’re very motivated to use these treatments and to pair them up with individual and group therapy,” she said.

LeRoy acknowledged that some doctors are wary of raising the subject. But when they start to ask the question, and to help patients who acknowledge illicit drug use, they quickly see that many of their long-term patients have been struggling, he said.

“They say, ‘Oh, I had no idea I already had these people in my practice,’” LeRoy said. “ ‘When I started asking these questions and providing the service, they came out of the woodwork.’”

Patients, too, could feel less stigma about drug use, and that might make them more likely to acknowledge they might need help, Davidson said. For some patients with problematic drug use, that earlier catch could head off addiction or even death.

“If everyone is asked, we can get to some people who are at a less-severe stage in their drug use, not all the way into addiction,” she said.

The draft recommendation statement is posted on the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force website, along with a review of the research on which the recommendation is based. The public is invited to submit comments until Sept. 9; after those are considered, the advice may be modified and finalized.

Meth surging in Northeast Ohio, law enforcement blames Mexican cartels

Meth surging in Northeast Ohio, law enforcement blames Mexican cartels

https://www.news5cleveland.com/news/local-news/cleveland-metro/meth-surging-in-northeast-ohio-law-enforcement-blames-mexican-cartels

CLEVELAND — Methamphetamine is back with a vengeance in some communities. Although, it never completely disappeared from the streets of Northeast Ohio, it is back in record numbers.

“Those are border type seizures being seized in Northeast Ohio,” said Keith Martin, Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the Cleveland DEA.

Last year, what is believed to be the largest meth bust in the state’s history happened in Boston Heights. The Drug Enforcement Agency confiscated 142 pounds of the drug. Now, within just the last few months, two more seizures found a combined 150 pounds of meth were confiscated by DEA Agents.

There is an increase in the drug and a decrease in meth labs, Martin said.

Martin said Mexican cartels are to blame for the surge of the potent drug.

“When we are seizing those qualities, it impacts the cartel and their ability to operate when they are losing that much product,” said Martin.

In 2014, statistics put Ohio in the top ten states for meth labs.

“Summit county was basically the top in the state of Ohio,” said Inspector Bill Holland with the Summit County Sheriff’s Department.

“We’re seeing a resurgence of this drug, but we’re not seeing the labs,” he said.

According to the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation, in 2016,the bureau was part of cleaning up 286 meth labs, last year, just 28.

 

FREEDOM: Reflection By An Incarcerated Innocent

FREEDOM: Reflection By An Incarcerated Innocent

www.doctorsofcourage.org/freedom-reflection-by-an-incarcerated-innocent/

The day is picturesque for July… White fluffy clouds in the sky, the sun shining bright and beautiful, the warmth can be felt through the tiny window to his room. His room, a man sits alone in a cell reflecting on his 20+ year career of giving his time and talents to the betterment of humanity, its health and well- being. He’s been at the beside when a newborn baby has been brought into this world, taken its first breath, and shared in the joy and celebration of the family as they fulfilled the Great Command to “Go forth and multiply…”; but also held the hand of the dying as they passed from this life into the next, taken their final breath, and shared in the sorrow and grief of the family as they lament the fact that “Life is but a vapor….”. He sits in a cell reflecting on those moments and every memorable life-changing moment in between. A man who has been prolific enough in his own career, yet lucky enough to have impacted the careers of many of his peers through an extensive resume of teaching, research, and consulting. He is sitting in a cell in K Block after being accused, yes accused and not convicted of what is a political argument. Not for breaking a law or a scientific fact, but a political judgement of his medical opinion.

No, this story in not taking place in Russia or China, but it is unfolding right here, right now on the 4th of July in the United States of America. Independence Day, the day we celebrate “FREEDOM” and everything that supposedly separates us from the afore-mentioned countries and every other country on this planet we, as the human race, calls home.

The guy in the cell is me, Jeffrey W. Young, Jr MSN FNP APN-BC, and I’m not alone…. not truly alone.   I am surrounded by many, many other men (detainees) on the BLOCK in a Federal holding facility in the State of Tennessee.

FREEDOM: a concept we think or at least I thought I had or understood, until it was taken away. Now in the fourth decade of my life, sadly, I have come to realize that we do not live in a FREE country and that you are truly GUILTY until proven innocent. This contradicts everything I believed in and was ever taught.

The average American citizen today is busy with picnic plans, family activities, beer, hotdogs, and apple pie; and are completely unaware of the blatant abuse of power currently going on by certain branches of government. Recently the American people have been horrified and outraged by the images of “immigrant detainees” and their plight unfolding on TV right in front of them. Here is a rude awakening, they are “federal detainees” as are myself and all of my new “friends”.

“POWER CORRUPTS…ABSOLUTE POWER CORRUPTS ABSOLUTELY” — Charles Colton

We as Americans have been so afraid of losing our FREEDOM to a foreign power that we have silently consented to our FREEDOM being taken away, as Premier Khrushchev predicted at the United Nations in the 1960’s, by powers from within “without firing a shot”. You might say… “This couldn’t happen to me, and you are just being dramatic”. Yes, I too used to be an idealistic American. In fact, I raised money for, promoted, befriended, and voted for the very Congressman that became a Federal judge that subsequently signed the warrant for the Gestapo style raid on my office and home. RAID, yes a raid, with machine guns drawn and battering rams in hand. Came into my office with machine guns at the ready, putting patients and their families on the floor, children on the floor with machine guns to their heads, raiders screaming “GET DOWN and STAY DOWN!!!!”. Again, this is not a scene from a World War II movie, there wasn’t SS or Swastika arm bands on the soldiers; this took place in a rural God fearing town in West Tennessee in the United States of America, and not in the 1940’s, but 2017.

For the last 2 plus years, I have been reinventing myself and my practice trying hard not to abandon my passion and calling, attempting to meet the needs of my patients; yet conscious of the climate change and the systematic removal of what has been instilled into us over centuries of medicine, but especially in the last 19 years, known as the Patient’s Bill of Rights and the Right of every patient to be pain free. We were taught that pain was the fifth vital sign and instructed to take it as seriously as we took heart rate, blood pressure, temperature, and respiratory rate (oxygen status). However, we were never given an objective tool to quantify this subjective measure. We were told, “pain is what the patient says it is” and given the 1-10 pain scale and “the faces board” ranging from happy to sad. And with these tools in hand asked to treat patients and penalized and threatened with lawsuits if we did not comply. Fast forward nearly two decades later and now Health Care professionals are being prosecuted and being jailed and imprisoned for doing exactly what we were trained to do.

I have not written a single opioid pain pill over a two and a half year period of time, yet on April 17th, 2019; after spending the evening with my son for his 15th birthday, I was arrested in my home in front of my son with agents jokingly asking me “how was the concert last night”. Apparently we had been followed. Yes, in the United States of America.

Since that day I have unfortunately learned about the “unrule of law”. How that the law is NOT a line engraved in marble, immoveable and unchangeable; but rather, the law is like the string of an electric guitar, it is fixed at both ends and can be bent and manipulated to play a certain tune. A tune the powers that be would like for you to hear.   The lawyers being the modern day “axe men” or virtuosos. The lawyer that plays the best tune wins.   The Federal government and its unlimited resources enjoy a certain “style of music” and if you don’t play their “tune” you lose. Song as old as time.

So here I am, on this Independence (FREEDOM) Day, yet another holiday “locked-up on the Block” away from my son and other family and friends; awaiting my chance to prove my innocence of something that isn’t even a crime, but the government’s misinterpretation of the Controlled Substance Act (CSA) to further a political agenda. Unable, by nature of being incarcerated, of mounting a defense I would be able to coordinate if I were on the “outside”.   This “stacking of the deck” in the government’s favor assures them to maintain their 98% conviction rate (actually a plea deal rate…. all men long to be FREE).   2% of the population have to fortitude to play the game out.   Yes, we are still talking about The United States.

“The bar for criminality is high, a

Convicted Nurse Practitioner

nd for criminality to exist there must be knowledge of, and willful intent to commit a crime.”

–Robert Mueller (The Mueller Report)

I pray for the fortitude and strength to see this through to its JUST conclusion….

God Bless America,

Jeffrey W. Young, Jr., MSN FNP APN-BC.

Sanjay Kumar, MD Convicted

New post on Doctors of Courage
Sanjay Kumar, MD Convicted
by Linda Cheek, MD

Kumar, MD, 53, a PM&R and Sports Medicine physician in New Bern, NC, was convicted this week of five counts of unlawful distribution of oxycodone outside the scope of professional practice and not for a legitimate medical purpose, five counts of money laundering by concealment, and three counts of attempt to evade and defeat tax.
This trial is an example of insanity: repeating the same action over and over, expecting a different result. Doctors across the country should take notice, but they don’t. So any one of you could be the next neck on the chopping block.
Let’s evaluate this case as to what insured the doctor’s next residence as a prison cell.
First, the doctor thought he would be safe from government attack if he didn’t take insurance. But now you are damned if you do, and damned if you don’t. In this case, he was attacked for running a “cash only” practice. The government now has propagandized that as criminal, with comments like “He was in it for the money” and the jury eats it up.
Second, he was criminalized for conducting little or no medical examination. But any doctor in practice knows that pain is subjective. It does not change the diagnosis or treatment to take someone’s blood pressure or listen to their lungs in a PM&R clinic monthly. You get a verbal VAS scale (1-10) level of pain, and quality of life, and you are good to go.
Now here is the interesting part in this case. His trial hung on legitimate prescriptions for legitimate patients. But back in 2016, the DOJ smeared the doctor in the media for “trafficking in opium” and “stalking”. Today, whatever works to denigrate a doctor’s reputation and name is fair game to the rogue government agency. Is “opium” the next key word like “pill mill” to propagandize legitimate doctors?
Nowhere in any federal indictment was the substance “opium” identified as an actual product for evidence. No, hydromorphone, oxycodone, and alprazolam were instead the drugs identified. So this is basically slander and libel working against the doctor through DOJ/media collaboration.
Dr. Kumar’s home was searched by the local Craven County Sheriff’s Office, which, by the way, gets part of the forfeiture of the doctor’s assets. That’s an incentive to make sure that the doctor has no chance in court. Supposedly in the search, “trafficking levels of controlled substances” were found. These were identified as opioid pills “commonly sold illegally” as the media stated. So what that means is that if a doctor or family member has a prescription bottle of opioids in their home, they are automatically “trafficking” for the purposes of media propaganda. And that’s all it takes to be a trafficker—your own prescribed pills. Richard Paey was even sentenced to 25 years for having the empty pill bottles in his home from past years of legitimate prescriptions.
It is also very common for doctors to be charged with “Possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime.” This happens when any firearm is found in the home or office of the victim, regardless of the use of the firearm—from skeet shooting to defense. The courts use this to increase the sentence of the defendant, and to take away many freedoms while incarcerated, as he is therefore listed as a “violent offender”. It would appear that this charge didn’t hold water for the jury, however. I guess the media didn’t propagandize that enough.
31 indictments were levied against Dr. Kumar:
• Conspiracy to unlawfully dispense and distribute Oxycodone, Oxymorphone, Hydromorphone and Alprazolam.
• Distribution of Oxycodone and Alprazolam.
• Possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime.”
• Engaging in monetary transactions in property derived from specified unlawful activity.
• Laundering of monetary instruments.
He was convicted of 13 of the charges.
Now what should Dr. Kumar have done?
First, he should have gone to www.doctorsofcourage.org and see how repeating the usual defense that white collar lawyers do would get him convicted.
Second, he should have consulted us for how to de-propagandize the jury with the truth.
Third, he, his family, and his friends should have joined DoctorsofCourage, as getting the truth to the public is the only way to stop the rogue DOJ and government.
Fourth, now that the damage has been done and he is on the way to prison, again, his family, friends, patients, and all parties with a dog in the fight for legitimate pain treatment should get on board the Cor-“wreck”ting train on DoctorsofCourage.
Join the Fight
Linda Cheek, MD | August 13, 2019 at 3:03 pm | Tags: North Carolina, physiatrist, PM&R, Sanjay Kumar MD | URL: https://wp.me/p7lNfE-2ry

The March Toward a Pre-Modern Approach to the Treatment of Pain Continues, Undeterred by Science

The March Toward a Pre-Modern Approach to the Treatment of Pain Continues, Undeterred by Science

https://www.cato.org/blog/march-toward-pre-modern-approach-treatment-pain-continues-undeterred-science

It seems that no amount of data-driven information can get policymakers to reconsider the hysteria-driven pain prescription policies they continue to put in place.

I can understand lay politicians and members of the press misconstruing addiction and dependency, but there is no excuse when doctors make that error. Yet National Public Radio reports that surgeons in 18 Upstate New York hospitals have agreed on an initiative to limit the amount of pain medicine they will prescribe to postoperative patients discharged from the hospital. The reporter says that researchers “now know” that patients prescribed opioids for postoperative pain “can become addicted” and that “the new prescription guidelines can prevent this particular gateway to abuse.” 

But what does the research show? One recent study published in the BMJ of more than 568,000 “opioid naïve” postsurgical patients followed for 8 years found a total “misuse” rate of 0.6 percent. (“Misuse” includes a range of non-prescribed drug use, from self-medicating with leftover pills to treat an ankle sprain on one extreme to addiction on the other.) Broken down further, the researchers found the misuse rate was 0.15 percent in patients given just one prescription postoperatively and was 0.29 percent in patients who got a second prescription as a refill. 

Multiple highly-respected Cochrane systematic analyses, the most rigorous reviews in the medical science literature, found the addiction rate in chronic noncancer pain patients on long-term opioid therapy to be around 1 percent.

Addiction and dependency/tolerance are two separate entities, but policymakers and many in the media equate the two. But the doctors in Upstate New York should know better. Physical dependence refers to the physiological adaptation to the drug such that abrupt cessation or tapering off too rapidly can precipitate a withdrawal syndrome, which in some cases can be life-threatening. Tolerance is an aspect of physiological adaptation, in which increasing dose of a medication become necessary to achieve the desired effect. Once a patient is properly tapered off of the drug on which they have become physically dependent, they do not feel a craving or compulsion to return to the drug. Dependence and tolerance are seen with numerous types of drugs, from anti-depressants and anti-epileptics to beta-blockers (used to treat hypertension and other cardiovascular conditions).

Addiction, on the other hand, is defined by the American Society of Addiction Medicine as a “chronic disease of brain reward, motivation, memory and related circuitry…characterized by the inability to consistently abstain, impairment in behavioral control, craving” that continues despite resulting destruction of relationships, economic conditions, and health. Addiction has a biopsychosocial basis with a genetic predisposition and involves neurotransmitters and interactions within reward centers of the brain. Some experts believe addiction is a learning disorder in which behavioral patterns are automatized as mechanisms for coping with stress or trauma. A major feature of addiction is compulsiveness. This compulsiveness is why alcoholics or other drug addicts will return to their substance of abuse even after they have been “detoxed” and despite the fact that they know it will further damage their lives. 

Writing in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2016, Drs. Nora Volkow and Thomas McLellan of the National Institute on Drug Abuse explained, “Unlike tolerance and physical dependence, addiction is not a predictable result of opioid prescribing. Addiction occurs in only a small percentage of persons who are exposed to opioids — even among those with preexisting vulnerabilities.”

In 2016 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published guidelines regarding opioid prescribing for pain. Many scholars and clinicians specializing in pain management and addiction treatment criticized the guide as lacking a basis in evidence. Despite the fact that the CDC stated its guidelines were meant to be “voluntary rather than prescriptive standards, “ and that much of the guidelines were based on “Type 4 evidence” (defined as “based upon clinical experience and observations, observational studies with important limitations, or randomized clinical trials with several major limitations”), policymakers on the federal and state level have been quick to adopt many of these guidelines as statutory limitations on opioid prescribing. The guidelines recognized that “clinical decision making should be based on a relationship between the clinician and patient, and an understanding of the patient’s clinical situation, functioning, and life context.” But one-size-fits all limitations on prescription dosages and amounts implemented by policymakers are incompatible with that statement.

An outcry from chronic pain patients experiencing the rapid tapering or termination of their chronic opioid treatment that followed in the wake of statutory enactments of the CDC guidelines led former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb to order a meeting on “Patient-Focused Drug Development for Chronic Pain” on July 9, 2018, stating in the meeting announcement: “In short, having sound, evidence-based information to inform prescribing can help ensure that patients aren’t over prescribed these drugs; while at the same time also making sure that patients with appropriated needs for short and, in some cases, longer-term use of these medicines are not denied access to necessary treatments. We will take the first steps toward developing this framework in the coming months, with the goal of providing standards that could inform the development of evidence based guidelines (emphasis added).” Thus, the Commissioner implied his sympathy with criticisms raised by academic and clinical physicians and their patients regarding the misinterpretation and misapplication of guidelines that lacked a solid basis on the evidence.

Complaints by academiciansclinicians, and the American Medical Association(Resolution 235) finally caused the CDC to issue a clarification in April 2019, noting, “Some policies, practices attributed to the Guideline are inconsistent with its recommendations.” Among the misapplications of the guidelines it noted were those that result in “hard limits or ‘cutting off’ opioids,” stating the “Guideline does not support abrupt tapering or sudden discontinuation of opioids.” 

Yet the statutory and regulatory restrictions remain unchanged. To date 18 states have laws limiting the amount of opioids that can be prescribed for acute and chronic pain. Many have limits on the morphine milligram equivalent daily dose (MEDD) that may be prescribed, despite evidence in the peer-review science literature that MEDD is an inaccurate and inappropriate metric. And it appears that even many actively practicing physicians, such as the surgeons in the 18 upstate New York hospitals, ignore the science as well as pleas from patients. 

So the march continues, undeterred by the facts, toward a pre-modern approach to the understanding and treatment of pain, and a pre-modern understanding of the risks and benefits of opioids, and the subtleties that differentiate dependency from addiction.

Join the Fight to help pain pts

https://www.change.org/p/join-the-fight-to-get-ohio-legislators-to-help-pain-patients-and-stop-baseless-refusals-of-valid-prescriptions?recruiter=508148837&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=psf_combo_share_abi&utm_term=psf_combo_share_initial&recruited_by_id=c4abb7b0-ea41-11e5-9fad-df74939b2408&share_bandit_exp=abi-17015546-en-US&share_bandit_var=v0&utm_content=fht-17015546-en-us%3Av6

Chronic pain is the number-one cause of long term disability in the United States and affects over 100 million Americans, more than diabetes, heart disease, and cancer combined. 

Restricting, punishing, and prohibiting the prescribing of opioids in response to the opioid epidemic has worsened the under treatment of pain and caused morbidity and mortality in pain patients.

Pharmaceutical manufacturers, distributors, pharmacies (corporate and local), pharmacists, insurance companies, physicians, and patients all share fault in the current opioid epidemic and must cooperate in the ethical, humane and appropriate treatment of the diseases of addiction and pain.

Despite the Center for Disease Control advising against the misapplication of their guidelines for the prescribing of opioids for chronic pain, pharmacies and insurance companies are refusing valid opioid prescriptions for pain from licensed and certified prescribers without just cause or due process.

The proposed solution is a certification process linking all responsible parties in the treatment of pain and addiction along with regulations to end the baseless restrictions on prescriptions for chronic pain management.

Utah woman died after pharmacy gave her wrong medication, lawsuit states

Utah woman died after pharmacy gave her wrong medication, lawsuit states

https://www.14news.com/2019/08/12/utah-woman-died-after-pharmacy-gave-her-wrong-medication-lawsuit-states/

AMERICAN FORK, Utah (KSTU/CNN) – The family of a Utah woman has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against a local pharmacy and her assisted living facility, alleging they gave her the wrong medication that led to her painful death in July 2018.

Just a few weeks after 75-year-old Gloria Dunn chose to live at the Bel Aire Assisted Living Facility in Utah County, Utah, her health began to deteriorate at an alarming rate. Previously, she had only had trouble with her kidneys, her family says.

“The doctor looked at Mom and said, ‘Gloria, you need to go to the emergency room right now. You look like death,’” said Joshua Dunn, one of Gloria Dunn’s six children.

When Gloria Dunn arrived at the emergency room, doctors asked her son if she had cancer. It turned out the cancer-free 75-year-old had been getting large doses of methotrexate, a dangerous chemotherapy drug.

“The problems she was having were all related to that medication,” Joshua Dunn said.

According to a lawsuit filed Wednesday, Gloria Dunn had been prescribed metolazone, a common diuretic, but Select Pharmacy in Midvale, Utah, allegedly sent back the wrong drug. The staff at the assisted living facility then administered that drug to the 75-year-old.

It took more than a week for doctors to check her medications and realize the mistake, the lawsuit states.

“She hurt. She was really suffering. She had sores in her mouth that were just terrible. So, even when she was trying to communicate, she couldn’t talk at all,” said Tani Griffin, Gloria Dunn’s daughter. “We all came to realize and understand it was too late.”

Gloria Dunn’s family says the woman would have wanted answers for what happened to her. Now, more than a year after the 75-year-old’s untimely death, her family is determined to get them.

“She wanted to understand why. She didn’t understand either, and when we knew, it was really powerful to be able to say to her, ‘This is what happened. It wasn’t your fault, and we’re so sorry,’” Griffin said. “The suffering that she endured through a mistake should never happen to anyone else, and that’s what we care about.”