When DEA NUMBERS… don’t always “reflect reality”

The rear of the D&L Pharmacy in Gilbertown, Choctaw County. The pharmacy distributed 1.3 million opioid pills between 2006 and 2012.Small-town America does have an opioid problem, but not in this Alabama town

https://www.al.com/news/2019/07/small-town-america-does-have-an-opioid-problem-but-not-in-this-alabama-town.html

Gilbertown welcomes you.

That’s the simple message greeting visitors to this picturesque town of about 200 people, delicately placed inside less than one square mile of southern Choctaw County and seemingly designed to make you feel as nostalgic as possible.

It’s that version of small-town America we all hope to find when we take a random right turn on the interstate. Gilbertown is like apple pie and white picket fences. The sort of place where you expect to see a lemonade stand in every neighborhood. It’s kids playing in streets against a backdrop of beautifully manicured lawns and American flags fluttering in the wind.

And of course, everyone’s doors are unlocked, so they say.

Gilbertown has, for now at least, retained a unique charm that cannot be said for so many similar sized towns across the country, apparent victims to the unique demands of 21st century life. When jobs leave, so do the people.

But this snippet of traditional southern life, nestled quietly on either side of state road 17 about eight miles from the Mississippi line, has managed to keep its mom-and-pop stores open against national trends. It still has a newspaper, if you can believe that. Hunting camps dominate the vast forests in the area, while a nearby paper mill provides jobs to a large number of locals.

Despite what it does have going for it, Gilbertown is unfortunately not immune to another increasingly familiar aspect of small-town American life: its recently reported relationship with opioids.

Over a seven-year span starting in 2006, a single pharmacy dispensed 1.3 million pain pills to patients, placing it retrospectively at the heart of the opioid crisis in Alabama, according to recently released federal data obtained by the Washington Post. The D&L pharmacy, which has been closed for about six years and is now an insurance business, later sold its dispensary business to the Hometown Pharmacy, located about 200 feet away.

While the overall figure of opioids dispensed does appear alarming, the current owner of the Hometown Pharmacy told AL.com that the initial calculations made, apportioning as many as 928 pills to each of the 200 residents over the seven years, is misleading.

“The simple issue is that the pharmacy wasn’t just used by people who live in this town,” said Cole Floyd. “During that time the pharmacy was the only one in southern Choctaw County. While it’s hard to make accurate calculations, each of the three pharmacies in the county probably had as many as 4,500 people using them.

“That drastically changes the number of people per person receiving pills,” he added.

Based on Floyd’s rough number, each person using the pharmacy received about 41 pills a year over seven years. He admitted that some of those people could have had issues, but insisted that the volumes dispensed were not unusually high.

But Floyd also said that had the number of opioids dispensed been over any legal limit, the Drug Enforcement Agency would have likely visited D&L. “At the end of each day, our computer uploads data regarding the number of controlled drugs bought and sold by us in any given day. That includes opioids and other controlled drugs. If that number is above [a certain] percent of all controlled drugs [dispensed], not just opioids, then we would expect a visit from DEA.”

Floyd also said that the wholesale drug companies also had to report sales to the DEA and that his store policy was to not dispense drugs for people who are from outside of Choctaw County. Along with a database for each patient, the strict dispensary controls help his team prevent addicts who are “doctor shopping,’ which is when people visit multiple doctors to maximize the amount drugs they can obtain.

The former owners of the D&L Pharmacy continue to operate drug stores in Birmingham, according to Floyd.

While Floyd had read The Washington Post story, not everyone in Gilbertown was aware of the town’s top rank in state. Indeed, Gilbertown was the only town in south Alabama to make the top 10 list for opioid pills per capita. Most of the heaviest pain pill use in state occurred in the hills of north Alabama, especially in Walker County and other neighboring counties northwest of Birmingham.

In Gilbertown on Monday, Summer Turner, who was working a shift at Magnolia Traditions clothing store, said she had never heard of people abusing any kind of drug in the town. “I’ve been here for 20 years and I don’t remember any trouble like that here,” she said, adding that she doesn’t often lock her door.

Fifty feet away at the Heavenly Creations book store, which also sold flowers, gifts, rental tuxedos, and doubled as a small church, Minister Shirley Pearson said she was also not aware. “I’ve never felt like this is a place where that happens or where people feel fear,” she said. “I suppose I am upset that outsiders are suggesting we have a problem here. We have a lot of spirituality and people sometimes pull over while on road trips to come pray. We turn no one away.”

A stone’s thrown from Pearson’s church is a monument to one of Gilbertown’s past glories and a reasons tourists still visit the town. It was the first place in Alabama to successfully drill for oil all the way back in Jan 1944 and the reason the state started its oil and gas board. At the base of a tall drilling rig monument, which no longer works and was moved about a mile from where the original drilling began, two fresh faced teens diligently worked at a snow cone hut.

“What’s an opioid?” said Hudson Abston,18, while standing next to his colleague and fellow Southern Choctaw High School graduate Emily Phillips, 17. “We don’t get a whole lot of trouble around here. There was a couple of robberies about two years ago,” he added excitedly.

At the rear of the snow cone hut, next to a restored caboose and memorial fountain, and not far from the spotless public bathroom, you’ll find the mayor and police chief’s office. The police chief has two officers working under him and a third part-time officer due to start Tuesday, said Mayor Billy C. May, currently in his first term as mayor after being elected three years ago.

“The new cop isn’t being hired because of the drugs,” joked Mayor May. “I know that this country has problems with these drugs, but that’s not an issue in this town.

“We are a rural town, but we serve as a hub and a destination for thousands of people who live in other rural areas here in Choctaw County. We have people coming from as far as Philadelphia [Mississippi] to use our two medical facilities.”

May said that the downtown medical facility, Franklin Primary Health Center, receives about 25 to 50 patients a day. “They are packed five days a week and sometimes open on Saturdays,” he said, suggesting that the perceived high level of opioid dispensed in the town was due to the large numbers of people coming from out-of-state and other areas of the county.

“People like this town and we’re doing well. We’re growing,” said Mayor May. “We have a county museum, the old oil well, and we have a picture of a dinosaur that was dug up here years ago. It’s in the Smithsonian now. It was a fish dinosaur I think, about 85 feet long.”

But the excitement doesn’t end there.

“We have a Verizon tower coming soon,” he added.

 

Overzealous use of the CDC’s opioid prescribing guideline is harming pain patients

www.statnews.com/2018/12/06/overzealous-use-cdc-opioid-prescribing-guideline/#comments

During the recent Interim Meeting of the American Medical Association, the organization’s president, Dr. Barbara McAneny, told the story of a patient of hers whose pharmacist refused to fill his prescription for an opioid medication. She had prescribed the medication to ease her patient’s severe pain from prostate cancer, which had spread to his bones. Feeling ashamed after the pharmacist called him a “drug seeker,” he went home, hoping to endure his pain. Three days later, he tried to kill himself. Fortunately, McAneny’s patient was discovered by family members and survived.

This story has become all too familiar to patients who legitimately use opioid medication for pain.

Since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published its guideline for prescribing opioids for chronic pain in March 2016, pain patients have experienced increasing difficulty getting needed opioid medication due to denials by pharmacists and insurance providers.

More troubling are recent press reports, blog posts, and journal articles that describe patients being refused necessary medication or those dismissed by their treating physicians, who practice in fear of regulatory reprisal. At the interim meeting, the AMA responded to these developments, passing several resolutions against the rash of laws and mandatory policies that limit or prevent patient access to opioid painkillers.

The CDC designed its guideline as non-mandatory guidance for primary care physicians. But legislators, pharmacy chains, insurers, and others have seized on certain parts of its dosage and supply recommendations and translated them into blanket limits in law and mandatory policy. Today, in more than half of U.S. states, patients in acute pain from surgery or an injury may not by law fill an opioid prescription for more than three to seven days, regardless of the severity of their surgery or injury.

Although many of these laws exempt patients with chronic or cancer pain, in practice they often affect those with long-term pain, like McAneny’s patient. Some insurance companies and major pharmacy chains, like Walmart, Express Scripts, and CVS, also have mandatory restrictions on the opioid prescriptions they will fill. In addition to imposing supply limits, insurers and pharmacies are increasingly using the CDC’s dosage guidance (the equivalent of 50 to 90 milligrams of morphine a day) as the basis for delaying or denying refills for long-term pain patients, even though the CDC guidance is intended to apply only to patients who have not taken opioids before.

The Drug Enforcement Administration and some state medical boards are also using this dosage guidance in ways that were never intended, such as a proxy or red flag to identify physician “over-prescribers” without considering the medical conditions or needs of these physicians’ patients. As a result, some physicians who specialize in pain management are leaving their practices, while others are tapering their patients off of opioids, solely out of fear of losing their licenses or criminal charges.

The laudable goal of these laws and policies is to stem the tide of unprecedented overdose deaths and addiction in the U.S. But here are three interesting facts: Opioid prescribing is currently at an 18-year low. The rate of prescribing opioids has dropped every year since 2011. Yet drug overdose deaths have skyrocketed since then.

Recent data from the CDC suggests that illegally manufactured fentanyl, its analogs, and heroin are responsible for well over half of all overdose deaths. Stimulants like cocaine and methamphetamines are responsible for another third. Deaths related to prescription opioids come next in line, although many of those who died were not the intended recipient of the prescribed medication. In addition, most deaths involve multiple substances that are used in combination, often including alcohol.

The vast majority of people who report misusing prescription opioids did not get them from a doctor under medical supervision, and as many as 70 percent reported prior use of substances like cocaine and methamphetamines.

Conflating the misuse of opioids with their legitimate medical use, and treating all opioids — illegal or prescription — alike is stigmatizing patients for whom opioid painkillers are necessary and medically appropriate.

There’s no question that taking opioid medications carries risks: The CDC places the risk of addiction with the long-term use of opioids at 0.07-6 percent. The risk of addiction justifies judicious prescribing, trying other forms of treatment before prescribing opioids, and carefully screening patients for a history of addiction and mental health issues when opioids are being considered.

But most patients who use opioid medication for pain do not become addicted, although they may develop physical dependence. Addiction is the compulsive use of a substance despite adverse consequences. Appropriate medical use is just the opposite, use on a set schedule as prescribed with benefits to health and function.

Nearly 18 million Americans currently take opioids long-term to manage pain; many of them have complex medical conditions. When appropriately prescribed opioids are denied, patients whose pain has been well-managed by them may experience medical decline, lose the ability to work and function, and resort to suicide. Denying opioids to patients who have relied on them — sometimes for years — may cause some to turn to street drugs, thereby increasing their risk of overdose.

Dr. Terri Lewis, a researcher and rehabilitation specialist, recently conducted a nationwide survey of 3,000 pain patients. More than half of those surveyed (56 percent) reported disruptions in care or outright abandonment by their physicians. Among those reporting disruption or abandonment, many experienced adverse health consequences (55 percent) as well as hopelessness or thinking about suicide (62 percent) as a result. In other surveys, physicians said that they were prescribing fewer opioids or ceasing treatment of pain patients altogether because of regulatory scrutiny, even in cases where they believed that doing so would harm their patients.

The CDC guideline and its progeny of laws and policies have created chaos and confusion in the medical community. Some physicians are telling their patients that changes in the law are the reason they are tapering them to a preset dosage of opioids or off of opioids altogether. Yet the specific dosage thresholds in the CDC guideline were never intended to apply to patients currently taking opioids. Indeed, nothing in the current legal or regulatory environment justifies forcibly tapering a patient off of opioids who is doing well, and there is no solid evidence to support such a practice.

Some physicians are also using the CDC’s dosage thresholds, or simply their patients’ use of opioids, as a reason for abandoning them. Abandoning pain patients out of fear of regulatory reprisal may violate a physician’s ethical duty to place a patient’s welfare above his or her own self-interest. If serious harm results from abandoning a patient’s care, it may also serve as a basis for discipline or malpractice claims. In addition, physicians and pharmacies have responsibilities under the Americans with Disabilities Act not to discriminate on the basis of a patient’s condition, including chronic pain, or a perceived condition, as when a person with pain is erroneously regarded as a person with opioid use disorder or addiction when there is no clinical basis for that perception.

CHRONIC ILLNESS & RELATIONSHIPS

CHRONIC ILLNESS & RELATIONSHIPS

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYXEJN_ozM8&feature=youtu.be

Having HEALTH INSURANCE is NO GUARANTEE of actually getting HEALTHCARE SERVICES

Study: 40% of Doctors Refuse New Chronic Pain Patients Using Opioids

 

 

.

 

Many/most of the people who are running in the Democratic primary claim that healthcare is a RIGHT…. They are promoting “Medicare for all” but what they are describing is “Medicaid for all” because they are talking about services covered from “first dollar” which describes MEDICAID and no one is mentioning monthly premiums, deductibles and co-pays to be paid by the pt which is the norm for Medicare.

Shouldn’t these potential Presidential candidates be pressed to answer if they will make the DEA do their job of stopping illegal drug traffic because the illegal drugs (illegal Fentanyl, meth, cocaine) is what is causing the majority of the OD’s. They should also go after the diverters conning prescribers and does “healthcare for all” include that all substance abusers are entitled to treatment ?  What they are promising – in generalities – has a lot of components that should be inclusive.  Should those who are making these promises … should their feet be held to the fire to expand the details of what their version of “Medicare for all” really means ?

Study: 40% of Doctors Refuse New Chronic Pain Patients Using Opioids

Study: 40% of Doctors Refuse New Chronic Pain Patients Using Opioids

https://www.usnews.com/news/healthiest-communities/articles/2019-07-12/study-40-of-doctors-refuse-new-chronic-pain-patients-using-opioids

“Insurance status and whether the clinic provided for treatment of (opioid use disorder) were not associated with willingness to accept the new patient taking opioids,” according to the study, published in the online Journal of the American Medical Association.

In the national fight against opioid abuse, policymakers and politicians have deployed a range of strategies, including curbing access to the powerful prescription drugs. The logic: Stop addiction before it starts by restricting the amount of painkillers a patient can take.

But a new paper published Friday presents strong evidence that opioid users who take the drug for chronic pain — but show no signs of addiction — are suffering harmful, potentially deadly consequences of the crackdown, and are at risk of becoming “opioid refugees.”

Slightly more than 4 in 10 doctors’ offices refused to take on new patients who need opioids to control pain, according to the analysis, published in the online Journal of the American Medical Association.

That reluctance, the paper argues, could lead patients who use the drug responsibly as well as those who are addicted to seek out other ways to manage their condition — including illegal potentially dangerous substances like heroin — and increases their risk of suicide.

The results “are concerning not only because they demonstrate how difficult it may be for a patient with chronic pain to find a new primary care physician, but it also raises questions about what happens next,” says Dr. Pooja A. Lagisetty, an internist and researcher at the University of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation. Lagisetty was the lead author of the paper, “Access to Primary Care Clinics for Patients With Chronic Pain Receiving Opioids.”

“Where will these patients find relief for their pain? Will they turn to more dangerous illicit opioids?” says Lagisetty. If those patients can’t get a primary care doctor, she adds, “who will manage their other medical problems such as their diabetes and hypertension?”

The situation is likely due to “a combination of factors,” Lagisetty says, including “new regulations (on opioid prescriptions) that are time-consuming (for doctors) to comply with” as well as medical liability, and “stigma against patients with chronic pain.”

Looking to examine whether medical practitioners were willing to take on patients who use opioids — and continue writing prescriptions for them — researchers contacted more than 190 doctor’s offices and clinics in Michigan between June and October of last year.

Following a script, the callers told the medical-care provider that they were the child of a woman who needed a primary-care physician, but “before we get too far, is it OK if my mother takes opioids for pain?”

Of 194 clinics, “40.7% stated that their practitioners were not willing to provide care for new patients taking opioids,” compared to 41% who were willing to schedule an initial appointment, according to the study. Seventeen percent of the clinics wanted more information before deciding whether to accept the patient, but after receiving the information only one agreed to treat her.

“Insurance status and whether the clinic provided for treatment of (opioid use disorder) were not associated with willingness to accept the new patient taking opioids,” according to the study. “However, larger clinics with more practitioners and community health centers were more than willing” to take on an opioid-using patient.

The results could reflect “practitioners’ discomfort with managing opioid therapy for chronic pain or treating patients with OUD as a result of pressures to decrease overall opioid prescribing,” the study says. Further, “our study found that a low number of clinics provided any medications for treatment of” opioid addiction, “and a large number of front-desk staff at clinics … did not know whether their clinic offered OUD treatment.”

Lagisetty found the results surprising “because I expected it to be around 25%” of clinics who wouldn’t take on opioid-using patients. “Forty percent was much higher than I thought it would be.”

For patients, “I think that is still really problematic,” she says. “It’s hard to build a trusting relationship with your doctor to treat your other medical conditions if you feel like your doctor is not willing to address your pain.”

“As a primary care physician, I will often see new patients who say that their previous doctor just stopped prescribing opioids for them,” Lagisetty says. “When I ask why, many will say that the doctor said it was a new ‘policy.’ We see stories about abandoned patients all over the news, and I also think we talk a lot about stigma against patients with addiction, but there is also stigma against patients with pain.”

FDA warning: non-aspirin nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) increase the chance of a heart attack or stroke

FDA Drug Safety Communication: FDA strengthens warning that non-aspirin nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) can cause heart attacks or strokes

https://www.fda.gov/drugs/drug-safety-and-availability/fda-drug-safety-communication-fda-strengthens-warning-non-aspirin-nonsteroidal-anti-inflammatory

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is strengthening an existing label warning that non-aspirin nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) increase the chance of a heart attack or stroke. Based on our comprehensive review of new safety information, we are requiring updates to the drug labels of all prescription NSAIDs. As is the case with current prescription NSAID labels, the Drug Facts labels of over-the-counter (OTC) non-aspirin NSAIDs already contain information on heart attack and stroke risk. We will also request updates to the OTC non-aspirin NSAID Drug Facts labels.

Patients taking NSAIDs should seek medical attention immediately if they experience symptoms such as chest pain, shortness of breath or trouble breathing, weakness in one part or side of their body, or slurred speech.

NSAIDs are widely used to treat pain and fever from many different long- and short-term medical conditions such as arthritis, menstrual cramps, headaches, colds, and the flu. NSAIDs are available by prescription and OTC. Examples of NSAIDs include ibuprofen, naproxen, diclofenac, and celecoxib (see Table 1 for a list of NSAIDs).

The risk of heart attack and stroke with NSAIDs, either of which can lead to death, was first described in 2005 in the Boxed Warning and Warnings and Precautions sections of the prescription drug labels. Since then, we have reviewed a variety of new safety information on prescription and OTC NSAIDs, including observational studies,1 a large combined analysis of clinical trials,2 and other scientific publications.1 These studies were also discussed at a joint meeting of the Arthritis Advisory Committee and Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee held on February 10-11, 2014External Link Disclaimer.

Based on our review and the advisory committees’ recommendations, the prescription NSAID labels will be revised to reflect the following information:

  • The risk of heart attack or stroke can occur as early as the first weeks of using an NSAID. The risk may increase with longer use of the NSAID.
  • The risk appears greater at higher doses.
  • It was previously thought that all NSAIDs may have a similar risk. Newer information makes it less clear that the risk for heart attack or stroke is similar for all NSAIDs; however, this newer information is not sufficient for us to determine that the risk of any particular NSAID is definitely higher or lower than that of any other particular NSAID.
  • NSAIDs can increase the risk of heart attack or stroke in patients with or without heart disease or risk factors for heart disease. A large number of studies support this finding, with varying estimates of how much the risk is increased, depending on the drugs and the doses studied.
  • In general, patients with heart disease or risk factors for it have a greater likelihood of heart attack or stroke following NSAID use than patients without these risk factors because they have a higher risk at baseline.
  • Patients treated with NSAIDs following a first heart attack were more likely to die in the first year after the heart attack compared to patients who were not treated with NSAIDs after their first heart attack.
  • There is an increased risk of heart failure with NSAID use.

We will request similar updates to the existing heart attack and stroke risk information in the Drug Facts labels of OTC non-aspirin NSAIDs.

In addition, the format and language contained throughout the labels of prescription NSAIDs will be updated to reflect the newest information available about the NSAID class.

Patients and health care professionals should remain alert for heart-related side effects the entire time that NSAIDs are being taken. We urge you to report side effects involving NSAIDs to the FDA MedWatch program, using the information in the “Contact FDA” box at the bottom of the page.

en Español

Drug Safety Communication (PDF- 84KB)

Calling all civil rights and personal injury attorneys

This office practice seems to be making a public statement that they are going to segregate the care that all pts with chronic health issues are dealing with.. EXCEPT those who are dealing with chronic pain.

So are the prescribers in this practice … when dealing with a pt that has a health issue where chronic pain is part of the disease… think Lupus, MS, RA and other serious.. even life threatening diseases and these health issues are NOT CURABLE… at best .. they can only be managed and part of that management should be the pain associated with those health issues. Whеn a person hаѕ experienced аn injury duе tо thе negligence оf аnоthеr party іt іѕ a vеrу good decision tо speak wіth a lawyer whо specializes іn personal injury. Personal injury lawyers like the ones at personal injury law firm Schaumburg аrе available tо assist thеіr clients whо hаvе bееn injured аѕ a result оf carelessness оf аnоthеr person оr business. For professional and experience attorney visit to Brasure law firm. Edinburg personal injury lawyer is best for your case.

Thеѕе claims оftеn include car accidents, slip аnd falls, medical malpractice, workplace injuries, аnd assault. Thеу саn аlѕо bе filed whеn a consumer product іѕ defective аnd causes physical injury. In a personal injury claim, a person саn seek monetary damages based оn thе extent оf thе injury, whеthеr іt bе physical, emotional оr bоth. Personal injury claims аlѕо cover оthеr items ѕuсh аѕ loss оf wages оr loss оf work duе tо thе injury. Mаnу people hаvе experienced аn injury caused bу ѕоmеоnе bеіng reckless оr careless. Whеn thіѕ happens, thеу аrе inclined tо file a lawsuit. Bеfоrе doing ѕо, іt іѕ important tо speak wіth a lawyer. Barrix Law Firm in Western Michigan gives expert advice and service for such cases. Personal injury lawyers аrе thеrе tо help clients thаt hаvе bееn severely injured duе tо thе negligence оf аnоthеr individual оr business. You can visit the website for more information.

Mаnу different types оf personal injury claims аrе filed еасh year. Thеѕе claims include medical malpractice, workplace injuries, slip аnd falls, аnd car accidents. A growing number оf personal injury claims аrе bеіng filed аgаіnѕt businesses whо аrе supplying defective products thаt саuѕе injury. Thе reason bеhіnd filing a personal injury claim іѕ tо seek financial compensation duе tо thе injuries thаt hаvе bееn received. Thіѕ аmоunt оf compensation іѕ based оn thе extent оf thе injury аnd lost wages оr loss оf work. West Palm Beach personal injury attorney helps you to fight against the personal injury cases.

Whеn searching fоr a lawyer, kеер іn mind thаt nоt аll lawyers specialize іn person injury litigation. It іѕ important tо fіnd a lawyer whо does. Thе lawyer ѕhоuld аlѕо specialize іn a specific type оf injury аѕ wеll. It іѕ guaranteed thаt thе insurance companies wіll hаvе a heap оf lawyers whо аrе experienced іn personal injury law аnd know іt wеll. Thаt іѕ whу уоu need a McKiggan Herbert – Halifax Personal Injury Attorney they are knowledgeable аnd experienced.

Yоu wіll need tо fіnd a lawyer whо hаѕ a number оf medical experts аt thеіr disposal whо wіll strengthen уоur case. Thе lawyer wіll need tо hаvе knowledge tо cases thаt аrе similar tо уоurѕ аѕ wеll. A lot оf tіmе wіll bе spent preparing fоr a personal injury case. Lawyers ѕhоuld bе able tо relieve уоur stress bу filing motions whеn needed, gathering witness statements, аnd handle discovery. Tampa personal injury lawyer gives you the best attorney for your case.

Whoever came up with this policy did not consult any attorney  – or consulted an attorney that has little/no knowledge about the Americans with Disability Act or the attorney advised the practice that no pt would file a complaint or file a lawsuit… as if the pts are NOT THAT SMART ?

I hope that the pts that patronize this practice that the practice is fairly large or owned by a large hospital corporation… because both of those entities are likely to have DEEP POCKETS .. and that is what attorneys look for… DEEP FINANCIAL POCKETS.

Not all criminals are alike – some carry BADGES

DEA Agents Sold Opioids, Stole Cash, and Falsely Identified Drug Suspects, Say Feds

Seize the drugs. Sell the drugs. Arrest the buyers. Repeat.

www.reason.com/2017/10/04/dea-agents-sold-opioids-stole-cash/

Four former Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) operatives face federal corruption and conspiracy charges after allegedly engaging in all sorts of shady behavior, from selling drugs themselves to lying under oath, falsifying records, falsely identifying drug suspects, accepting bribes, and stealing cash and other property from the people they arrested. In at least one instance, their behavior led to someone being wrongly imprisoned for more than two years.

The dirty drug warriors—special agent Chad Scott, with the DEA since 1997, and former task force officers Rodney Gemar, Karl Newman, and Johnny Domingue—worked with the DEA’s New Orelans Division. Gemar and Newman also work for local law enforcement agencies.

In an indictment unsealed this week, Scott, Newman, and Gemar—a Hammond Police Department officer since 2004 and DEA Task Force Officer since 2009—are accused of seizing money and other property from those they arrested and then keeping it for themselves. (Notably, the feds do not frame this as theft from the suspects but as embezzling funds from the DEA.) This went on for at least seven years.

Scott is also accused of accepting $10,000 from a defendent in a federal criminal case in exchange for recommending that prosecutors seek a reduced sentence and, in another case, tampering with witness testimony.

Scott allegedly coerced Frederick Brown (a defendent in his own drug case) “to falsely testify that Jorge Perralta was present during drug transactions between Edwin Martinez and [Brown], when in fact Frederick Brown had never seen Jorge Perralta during his drug transactions with Edwin Martinez.” Scott reportedly offered his own false testimony in the case as well.

The DEA agent claimed that it was Brown who initially brought up Perralta when talking about people who were around during deals and might be Martinez’s supplier, referring to Perralta not by name but as “the little Mexican guy.” Scott said that he showed Brown a photograph of Perralta on his phone, and that Brown confirmed this was the dude he had seen during drug deals.

An arrest warrant was issued, and Scott went to Houston to help police there arrest Perralta for conspiracy to distribute heroin and cocaine. Perralta’s phone was seized, he was taken into custody, and—without even being allowed to contact his parents or girlfriend—he was whisked away to Louisiana. That was in March 2015.

After nearly two and a half years behnd bars, Perralta was released in August 2017 and all charges against him were dismissed.

Brown had never brought up Perralta on his own, say prosecutors in their indictment against Scott. And when shown a picture of Perralta, Brown said that he had never seen him.

Both Scott and Gemar were arrested on October 1 and released on bond the next day.

Newman and Domingue were arrested in 2016. According to federal prosecutors, Newman seized and sold thousands of dollars worth of cocaine and oxycodone. Some of these drugs he seized from a woman identified as R.G. “by means of actual and threatened force, violence, and fear of injury…to R.G.’s person and the persons of her family.”

Domingue is accused only of falsifying records related to this illegal drug seizure. His trial is set February 2018.

Newman has agreed to plead guilty to one count of “conspiracy to convert property” and one count of using a gun in furtherance of a crime of violence, in exchange for prosecutors dropping the other charges against him. He faces fines of up to $500,000 and possible life in prison, with a mandatory minimum sentence of at least five years.

 

What TWO DRUGS have killed 12 million people since 1996 – answer at end of post

Internal drug company emails show indifference to opioid epidemic

https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/internal-drug-company-emails-show-indifference-to-opioid-epidemic-ship-ship-ship/2019/07/19/003d58f6-a993-11e9-a3a6-ab670962db05_story.html

In May 2008, as the opioid epidemic was raging in America, a representative of the nation’s largest manufacturer of opioid pain pills sent an email to a client at a wholesale drug distributor in Ohio.

Victor Borelli, a national account manager for Mallinckrodt, told Steve Cochrane, the vice president of sales for KeySource Medical, to check his inventories and “[i]f you are low, order more. If you are okay, order a little more, Capesce?”

Then Borelli joked, “destroy this email. . .Is that really possible? Oh Well. . .”

Previously, Borelli used the phrase “ship, ship, ship” to describe his job.

Those email excerpts are quoted in a 144-page plaintiffs’ filing along with thousands of pages of documents unsealed by a judge’s order Friday in a landmark case in Cleveland against many of the largest companies in the drug industry. A Drug Enforcement Administration database released earlier in the week revealed that the companies had inundated the nation with 76 billion oxycodone and hydrocodone pills from 2006 through 2012. Nearly 2,000 cities, counties and towns are alleging that the companies knowingly flooded their communities with opioids, fueling an epidemic that has killed more than 200,000 since 1996.

The filing by plaintiffs depict some drug company employees as driven by profits and undeterred by the knowledge that their products were wreaking havoc across the country. The defendants’ response to the motion is due July 31.

In January 2009, Borelli told Cochrane in another email that 1,200 bottles of oxycodone 30 mg tablets had been shipped.

“Keep ’em comin’!” Cochrane responded. “Flyin’ out of there. It’s like people are addicted to these things or something. Oh, wait, people are. . .”

Borelli responded: “Just like Doritos keep eating. We’ll make more.”

Borelli and Cochrane did not return calls for comment Friday night.

In a statement Friday night, a spokesman for Mallinckrodt sought to distance the company from Borelli’s email: “This is an outrageously callous email from an individual who has not been employed by the company for many years. It is antithetical to everything that Mallinckrodt stands for and has done to combat opioid abuse and misuse.”

The Controlled Substances Act requires drug companies to control against diversion, and to design and operate systems to identify “suspicious orders,” defined as “orders of unusual size, orders deviating substantially from a normal pattern, and orders of unusual frequency.” The companies are supposed to report such orders to the DEA and refrain from shipping them unless they can determine the drugs are unlikely to be diverted to the black market. The plaintiffs, in the filing, allege that the companies ignored red flags and failed at every level.

[76 billion opioid pills: An epidemic unmasked]

At Cardinal Health, one of the nation’s largest drug distributors, then-CEO Kerry Clark in January 2008 wrote in an email to Cardinal senior officials that the company’s “results-oriented culture” was perhaps “leading to ill-advised or shortsighted decisions,” the filing contends.

In the previous 18 months, Cardinal had been hit with nearly $1 billion in “fines, settlements, and lost business as a result of multiple regulatory actions,” the filing alleges, including the suspension of licenses at some of its distribution centers for failing to maintain effective controls against opioid diversion.

Cardinal Health did not immediately return a request for comment Friday night.

On Aug. 31, 2011, McKesson Corp.’s then-director of regulatory affairs, David B. Gustin, told his colleagues he was concerned about the “number of accounts we have that have large gaps between the amount of Oxy or Hydro they are allowed to buy (their threshold) and the amount they really need,” according to the filing, which cites Gustin’s statements. “This increases the ‘opportunity’ for diversion by exposing more product for introduction into the pipeline than may be being used for legitimate purposes.”

According to the filing, he had earlier noted to his colleagues that they “need to get out visiting more customers and away from our laptops or the company is going to end up paying the price . . . big time.”

Another McKesson regulatory affairs director responded: “I am overwhelmed. I feel that I am going down a river without a paddle and fighting the rapids. Sooner or later, hopefully later I feel we will be burned by a customer that did not get enough due diligence,” according to the filing.

McKesson is the largest drug distributor in the United States. It distributed 14.1 billion oxycodone and hydrocodone pills from 2006 to 2012, about 18 percent of the market, according to the DEA database.

The Post had made public a significant portion of a government database that records the flood of prescription opioid pain pills distributed across the U.S. View Graphic

The Post had made public a significant portion of a government database that records the flood of prescription opioid pain pills distributed across the U.S.

McKesson said that the DEA was responsible for setting the annual production quota of pills.

“For decades, McKesson has consistently reported opioid transactions to the DEA,” McKesson spokeswoman Kristin Chasen said in a statement. “We have also invested heavily in further strengthening our anti-diversion program.”

Until Friday, the documents had been sealed under a protective order issued by U.S. District Judge Dan Polster. The order was lifted a year after The Washington Post and HD Media, which publishes the Charleston Gazette-Mail in West Virginia, filed a lawsuit for access to the documents and a DEA database tracking opioid sales, known as the Automation of Reports and Consolidated Orders System, or ARCOS.

The drug companies and the DEA strenuously opposed the release of the data and the documents, and Polster agreed with them. But a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit in Ohio ordered that some of the information should be released with reasonable redactions and the database should be made public.

By consolidating cases from around the nation, the Cleveland case, for the first time, provides specific information about how and in what quantity the drugs flowed around the country, from manufacturers and distributors to pharmacies. The case also brings to light internal documents and deliberations by the companies as they sought to promote their products and contend with enforcement efforts by the DEA.

The local and state government plaintiffs in the case argue that the actions of some of America’s biggest and best-known companies — including Mallinckrodt, Cardinal Health, McKesson, Walgreens, CVS, Walmart and Purdue Pharma — amounted to a civil racketeering enterprise that had a devastating effect on the plaintiffs’ communities.

[How have opioids affected your community? Share your story.]

The case is a civil action under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, making use of a law originally developed to attack organized crime.

In statements to The Post on Tuesday in response to the release of the DEA database, the drug companies issued broad defenses of their actions during the opioid epidemic. They have said previously that they were trying to sell legal painkillers to legitimate pain patients who had prescriptions. They have blamed the epidemic on overprescribing by physicians and also on corrupt doctors and pharmacists who worked in “pill mills” that handed out drugs with few questions asked. The companies also said they should not be held responsible for the actions of people who abused the drugs.

The companies said that they were diligent about reporting their sales to the DEA and that the agency should have worked with them to do more to fight the epidemic, a point former DEA agents dispute. The companies also note that the DEA set the quotas for opioid production.

“We report those suspicious orders to state boards of pharmacy and to the DEA but we do not know what those government entities do with those reports, if anything,” Cardinal Health said in a statement.

The companies issued statements rejecting the plaintiffs’ allegations.

McKesson said in its statement: “The allegations made by the plaintiffs are just that — allegations. They are unproven, untrue and greatly oversimplify the evolution of this health crisis as well as the roles and responsibilities of the many players in the pharmaceutical supply chain.”

Mallinckrodt said the company “has for years been at the forefront of preventing prescription drug diversion and abuse, and has invested millions of dollars in a multipronged program to address opioid abuse.”

Drug Enforcement Administration agents raid a pain management clinic in Delray Beach, Fla., in February 2011. A DEA database released this week revealed that drug companies had inundated the nation with 76 billion oxycodone and hydrocodone pills from 2006 through 2012. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun-Sentinel/AP)

‘Kingpin within the drug cartel’

One of the biggest points of contention in the lawsuit is whether the nation’s largest drug companies did enough to identify suspicious orders of opioids. What exactly constitutes a suspicious order is at the heart of the case.

The DEA has long said there should be no confusion because the agency has given frequent guidance and briefings to the industry, and repeatedly defined what constitutes a suspicious order.

The plaintiffs argue that the companies failed to “design serious suspicious order monitoring systems that would identify suspicious orders to the DEA” and shipped the drugs anyway.

[As lawyers zero in on drug companies, a reckoning may be coming]

“Their failure to identify suspicious orders was their business model: they turned a blind eye and called themselves mere ‘deliverymen’ with no responsibility for what they delivered or to whom,” according to the plaintiffs’ filing.

Between 1996 and 2018, the plaintiffs alleged in the filing, drug companies shipped hundreds of millions of opioid pills into Summit and Cuyahoga counties in Ohio, filling orders that were suspicious and “should never have been shipped.”

“They made no effort actually to identify suspicious orders, failed to flag orders that, under any reasonable algorithm, represented between one-quarter and 90 percent of their business, and kept the flow of drugs coming into Summit and Cuyahoga Counties,” the plaintiffs’ lawyers wrote.

In 2007, the DEA told Mallinckrodt that the numeric formula it used to monitor suspicious orders was insufficient, the filing contended. It alleges the company’s suspicious order monitoring program from 2008 through 2009 consisted of solely verifying that the customer had a valid DEA registration and that the order was accurately logged into the DEA’s tracking database.

From 2003 to 2011, Mallinckrodt shipped a total of 53 million orders, flagged 37,817 as suspicious but stopped only 33 orders, the plaintiffs’ filing states.

A Mallinckrodt employee said in a deposition that the DEA had described the company as the “kingpin within the drug cartel” in a meeting with the agency in July 2010, according to a footnote in the filing.

In 2011, the filing cites a Justice Department document in which the DEA alleged that Mallinckrodt “sold excessive amounts of the most highly abused forms of oxycodone, 30 mg and 15 mg tablets, placing them into a stream of commerce that would result in diversion.”

According to the DEA, the filing states, “even though Mallinckrodt knew of the pattern of excessive sales of its oxycodone feeding massive diversion, it continued to incentivize and supply these suspicious sales,” and never notified the DEA of the suspicious orders.

In a settlement with the DEA, Mallinckrodt agreed that from Jan. 1, 2008, through Jan. 1, 2012, “certain aspects of Mallinckrodt’s system to monitor and detect suspicious orders did not meet the standards” outlined in letters from the DEA deputy administrator for diversion control.

Mallinckrodt was the nation’s leading manufacturer of oxycodone and hydrocodone, with 28.8 billion pills from 2006 to 2012, 37.7 percent of the market, according to the DEA database. It has since created a subsidiary for its generic opioids called SpecGx.

The Post reported in 2017 that federal prosecutors said 500 million of the company’s 30 mg oxycodone pills wound up in Florida between 2008 and 2012 — 66 percent of all oxycodone sold in the state. Pills at that dosage are among the most widely abused.

Prosecutors said the company failed to report suspicious orders, and Mallinckrodt that year settled the case by paying a $35 million fine.

“Mallinckrodt’s actions and omissions formed a link in the chain of supply that resulted in millions of oxycodone pills being sold on the street,” then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions said at the time.

McKesson Corp., the nation’s largest opioid distributor, doled out 14.1 billion oxycodone and hydrocodone pills from 2006 to 2012, about 18 percent of the market, according to the newly released DEA database. (Kris Tripplaar/Sipa USA)

‘Business as usual’

The same year that Mallinckrodt paid its fine, McKesson, the nation’s largest drug distributor, was fined a record $150 million by the Justice Department.

According to allegations in the new court filing, McKesson frequently increased the amount of opioid pills it sent to its pharmacy customers.

“McKesson has a long history of absolute deference to retail national account customers when it comes to [opioid] threshold increases,” the plaintiffs argue in their filing, citing a deposition of McKesson’s senior director of distribution operations.

McKesson had set limits on the amount of opioids its customers could order, the filing contends, but those limits were often lifted.

“In August 2014, DOJ noted that McKesson appeared to be willing to approve threshold increases for opioids for the flimsiest of reasons,” the filing contends.

For shipments to pharmacies in Summit and Cuyahoga counties, McKesson did not report a single suspicious order between May 2008 and July 2013, the filing says. During that time, McKesson filled 366,000 opioid orders in those two counties.

McKesson reached its settlement with the government in January 2017 for allegations of failing to report suspicious orders. It was the second time the company was fined over suspicious orders. Nine years earlier, it paid $13 million.

The government said in 2017 that McKesson “failed to design and implement an effective system to detect and report ‘suspicious orders.’ ” The company shipped more than 1.6 million orders of opioid pills between 2008 and 2013 but reported just 16 as suspicious, according to the Justice Department.

However, “before the ink of the settlement agreement was even dry,” the new filing argues , McKesson was already reassuring customers who were concerned that the flow of opioids would be curtailed that it would remain “business as usual” at the company. McKesson sent more than 68 million doses of oxycodone and hydrocodone to those counties between 2006 and 2012, according to DEA tracking data analyzed by The Post.

Gustin, McKesson’s former director of regulatory affairs, was recently indicted in federal court in Kentucky on a charge of illegally distributing opioids. His attorney wrote in a court filing that the allegations against his client stem from his job at McKesson and “seem to focus on the manner by which he performed his former position as Director of Regulatory Affairs.”

Gustin’s lawyer and the prosecutor in the case did not return calls for comment.

The southwest Virginia city of Norton, with a population of about 4,000, saw millions of prescription opioids arrive in seven years, with the city’s CVS pharmacy receiving 1.3 million opioids from 2006 through 2012, according to the DEA database. (Charles Mostoller for The Washington Post)

Pickers and packers

The plaintiffs in the Cleveland case alleged that CVS, the nation’s largest pharmacy chain, did not implement required controls to identify suspicious orders from 2006 until early to mid-2009.

The CVS compliance coordinator said that her title “was only for reference and not her real job position and that the only thing she ever did related to suspicious order monitoring was to update the [Standard Operating Procedures Manual],” the plaintiffs allege.

A system that CVS used to monitor suspicious orders was known as “Pickers and Packers,” according to the filing.

The pickers and packers were workers in the distribution centers who would pick and pack opioid orders. A CVS official testified that the company did not have any written policies, guidance or training programs to teach the pickers and packers how to detect suspicious orders, according to the filing.

“Instead, the Pickers and Packers would identify orders based on a gut feeling or a crude rule of thumb that essentially can be summarized that they believed the order was simply too large,” the filing states. “One of the Pickers and Packers . . . testified that she was trained by another Picker and Packer in 1996 and that as a rule a Picker and Packer should not send out more than 12 of the small bottles, six of the larger bottles and two or three of the largest bottles. She used this rule of thumb for her entire career.”

CVS’s system flagged few orders, the filing contends : A CVS distribution center in Indianapolis flagged two orders per year from 2006 through 2014.

CVS rejected the plaintiffs’ arguments.

“As part of our response in this case, we will be presenting the expert opinion of a former high-ranking DEA official who concluded independently that our systems were compliant and that the plaintiffs’ analysis is unfounded,” CVS spokesman Mike DeAngelis said.

‘Obvious signs of diversion’

Walgreens used a formula to identify thousands of pharmacy orders as suspicious but shipped them anyway, the filing alleges. The orders were reported to the DEA after they had been shipped, according to agency documents quoted in the filing.

“Suspicious orders are to be reported as discovered, not in a collection of monthly completed transactions,” the DEA wrote in an immediate suspension order issued against Walgreens in 2012. “Notwithstanding the ample guidance available, Walgreens has failed to maintain an adequate suspicious order reporting system and as a result, has ignored readily identifiable orders and ordering patterns that, based on the information available throughout the Walgreens Corporation, should have been obvious signs of diversion.”

In one case, Walgreens’s suspicious order report to the DEA was 1,712 pages long and contained six months’ worth of orders, including reports on 836 pharmacies in more than a dozen states and Puerto Rico, the filing alleges.

The filing also alleges that Walgreens stores could “place ad hoc ‘PDQ’ (“pretty darn quick”) orders to controlled substances outside of their normal order days and outside of the [suspicious order monitoring] analysis and limits.”

The Post has previously reported that Kristine Atwell, who managed distribution of controlled substances for the company’s warehouse in Jupiter, Fla., sent an email on Jan. 10, 2011, to corporate headquarters urging that some of the stores be required to justify their large quantity of orders.

“I ran a query to see how many bottles we have sent to store #3836 and we have shipped them 3271 bottles between 12/1/10 and 1/10/11,” Atwell wrote. “I don’t know how they can even house this many bottle[s] to be honest. How do we go about checking the validity of these orders?”

A bottle sent by a wholesaler generally contains 100 pills.

Walgreens never checked, the DEA said. Between April 2010 and February 2012, the Jupiter distribution center sent 13.7 million oxycodone doses to six Florida stores, records show, many times the norm, the DEA said.

Walgreens ranked second among distributors in the nation, with 13 billion pills and 16.5 percent of the market for oxycodone and hydrocodone from 2006 through 2012, the DEA database shows. It stopped distributing opioids to its stores in 2014, but continues to dispense controlled substances.

As part of a settlement with the DEA in June 2013, Walgreens said that its “suspicious order reporting for distribution to certain pharmacies did not meet the standards identified by DEA.” The company paid an $80 million fine to the government.

In a statement to The Post earlier in the week, Walgreens defended its operations, saying, “Walgreens has been an industry leader in combating this crisis in the communities where our pharmacists live and work.”

Aaron C. Davis, Jenn Abelson, Amy Brittain, Robert O’Harrow Jr., Shawn Boburg, Jennifer Jenkins, Andrew Ba Tran, Aaron Williams and Katie Zezima contributed to this report.

Since 1996, the two drugs: Nicotine & Alcohol have killed abt 12 million people – SIXTY TIMES OPIATES

 

I Will Not Be Shamed for Using Opioids to Manage My Cancer Pain

I Will Not Be Shamed for Using Opioids to Manage My Cancer Pain

I Will Not Be Shamed for Using Opioids to Manage My Cancer Pain

https://www.healthywomen.org/content/article/i-will-not-be-shamed-using-opioids-manage-my-cancer-pain

by April Doyle

The pain starts in my sit bones, radiates into my pelvic area and moves up and down my spine. When I’m having a good day, my pain is a 5 or 6 out of 10 on the pain scale. Some days, my pain escalates to an 8 or 9 and I can’t function. But when I take my opioids, the pain decreases. I can move again. I can breathe again. I can handle my full-time job. I can go to the park with my 8 year old son. I can manage my pain.

So when I went to the pharmacist in my hometown in California and the pharmacist again refused to fill my opioid prescription, I was frustrated and angry. Not only did he say that he couldn’t fill my prescription, but he made me feel like I was doing something wrong by trying to get my pain pills. I was made to feel less than human.

In order to stay alive, in order to function, I need to take 20 pills a day, four of which are opioids. It’s my only option. I have stage 4 metastatic breast cancer that is in my spine, my hips and my lungs. I don’t even take as much as is prescribed to me. But when you have metastatic cancer in your bones, the pain is so severe that you can’t even function. If you need breast augmentation surgeon then check out the post right here.

It all started in 2009 at the age of 31 when I found a lump in my breast. Everyone kept saying to me, “I’m sure it’s fine.” But I instinctually knew something wasn’t right. After nothing showed up on the mammogram, I decided to go in for a lumpectomy and have it biopsied. All the doctors were surprised when it came back as breast cancer, stage 1B. I had a bilateral mastectomy with reconstruction, 4 months of chemotherapy and then I was declared cancer free!

Fast forward 5 years: I had some back pain, which I thought was sciatica. I wasn’t too concerned because otherwise, I felt great. I went into my oncologist for my 5-year check-up and he said, “Congrats! You are doing great!” But two days later, the nurse from the cancer center called and left me a voicemail saying, “Oops. We spoke too soon.” I was now told I was stage 4 and the cancer had metastasized to my bones and lungs. I had terminal cancer.

Pain management is now a major facet of my cancer treatment. I have had steady treatment for the past 5 years and am now on my 5th line of treatment. I have exhausted all my anti-hormonal treatments and am currently getting chemotherapy intravenously. I’ve also had two different rounds of radiation to help with the pain. Along with antidepressants, anti-nausea drugs, nerve blockers, supplements, and over-the-counter pain relief pills, I now take an opioid thanks to my home care that offers cancer care services with the best caregivers that manage my health.

My oncologist prescribes the opioid and the insurance company covers it without any issue. But I’ve had numerous negative experiences with this particular pharmacist. They have told me they don’t have enough pills and they’ve told me to come back another day.

When my anger and frustration took over, I posted a video explaining what had happened. I had no idea that the video would strike such a nerve with a bigger population. But it did. Thousands of people reached out to me to share their experiences having trouble getting their prescriptions filled for much needed pain medications.

Watch the video here.

The anti-opioid movement has created difficulty for those of us who need opioids for pain relief. This is a problem that affects all sorts of people with many different chronic diseases. Although the pharmacy issued an apology to me, I have decided to go to a different pharmacy in my hometown and no longer give the other one my business. People with chronic pain want to be able to function, to sleep, to work, and to be able to have quality time with their families without hurting all the time. We have valid reasons for needing opioids and our stories need to be heard.