Fentanyl-laced cocaine, not heroin, is now the biggest overdose threat in Massachusetts

Fentanyl-laced cocaine, not heroin, is now the biggest overdose threat in Massachusetts

https://www.masslive.com/news/2019/01/fentanyl-laced-cocaine-not-heroin-is-now-the-biggest-overdose-threat-in-massachusetts.html

Overdoses in the state from fentanyl-laced heroin may be on the decline, but the state is increasingly facing a new problem: fentanyl-laced cocaine.

According to a report issued in August by the Department of Public Health, the first three months of 2018 was the second quarter in a row that cocaine surpassed heroin in the toxicology for opioid-related deaths. Meanwhile, the rate of overdoses related to heroin has decreased from 2014 to 2018.

Alongside both of those trends has been an alarming increase in the rate of overdoses that have tested positive for fentanyl, with a staggering 90 percent of all overdose deaths in 2018 through March testing positive for the drug.

The state said the figures illustrate “the changing nature of the epidemic,” with providers concerned that overdose deaths are occurring because of fentanyl-laced cocaine.

“This quarterly report provides a new level of data revealing an unsettling correlation between high levels of synthetic fentanyl present in toxicology reports and overdose death rates,” said Governor Baker in a statement that went out with the report. “It is critically important that the commonwealth understand and study this information so we can better respond to this disease.”

The state re-issued a June clinical advisory to physicians as a result, informing providers that those needing treatment for substance use disorder may have a problem with any number of drugs, and asked providers “to educate clients and staff regarding the presence of fentanyl in cocaine, as well as other illicit substances.”

Massachusetts is following national trends in fentanyl-laced cocaine deaths over taking those of fentanyl-laced heroin. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, there was a sharp increase in the estimated number of overdose deaths involving cocaine nationally from 2016 to 2017, from approximately 10,000 deaths in 2016 to 14,556 in 2017.

In Connecticut, WBUR reported that the number of deaths involving cocaine and fentanyl together had increased 420 percent in the last three years, though heroin laced with fentanyl still killed more people in that time period.

According to Vox, the reasons could be numerous, but drug users have mixed heroin and cocaine purposefully in the past in what is known as a “speedball.” Dealers may also be purposefully mixing fentanyl with cocaine without the buyer’s knowledge, because it’s a cheap way to give a product more kick.

Workers comp doctor provides false information about injured employee

https://www.wfla.com/8-on-your-side/investigations/workers-comp-doctor-provides-false-information-about-injured-employee/1760416871

LAKELAND, Fla.(WFLA) – Documents obtained by 8 On Your Side show that a doctor hired by workers comp carrier Travelers Indemnity provided false information on an injured worker’s condition.

Neil Eckelberger suffered serious burns as well as neurological psychological and orthopedic injuries when a reactor at Natural Advantage Food Flavorings in Lakeland exploded in Sept. 2017.

Neil spent 10 days in Tampa General Hospital’s burn unit undergoing painful debridement and graft surgery.

Seventeen months after the explosion, he still suffers from concussion-like symptoms.

“Everyday I have headaches,” Neil said.

Travelers sent Neil to workers comp neurologist Dr. Thomas Newman in Tampa.

Reports written up by Newman state Neil denied having multiple symptoms, including insomnia, fatigue, depression, anxiety, light sensitivity and nausea.

“Neil is lying on the table in there, he’s complaining about the lights and his headaches and he’s not sleeping and he’s depressed and he’s angry,” Neil’s wife Robin stated.

Dr. Newman also wrote that Neil denied blurred vision, hearing loss and tinnitus.

“The ringing never stops,” Neil explained. “I lost hearing in my left ear which was later solved with the help of live performance ear plugs. Sometimes my vision will be blurry.” But according to Dr. Newman’s reports to Travelers, Neil had none of that.

“In terms of the neurologist, almost all of his revenues and patients come from workers compensation,” Neil’s attorney Michael Winer said.

Winer claims the doctor did not accurately chart complaints and provided false and misleading information to Travelers which allowed the company to deny Neil benefits.

Dr. Newman did not respond to our request for a comment regarding this report.

According to the Eckelbergers, Dr. Newman prescribed Zofran for Neil’s nausea.

Dr. Newman also prescribed Tramadol every 12 hours for pain, Lidocaine patches for lower back pain and Cyclobenzaprine for muscle spasms.

Dr. Newman recommended to Travelers in July 2018 that Neil be treated by pain management. Then he changed his mind.

He continued prescribing pain medication and in November, Dr, Newman again recommended pain management for Neil.

Travelers has yet to approve that benefit.

Other notes clearly show that Dr. Newman was aware Neil was seeing a psychiatrist for depression and anxiety.

“It doesn’t make sense,” Robin said.

“If you’re a neurologist and someone is not really complaining, why are you filling three prescription bottles every visit and continuing to see them every six weeks?”

“It’s one of two things,” Neil explained.

“Either they’re lying about me, saying I didn’t have those symptoms, or they’re fraudulently prescribing drugs to somebody that doesn’t need them.”

Travelers contends it has gone to great lengths to ensure Neil gets the proper treatment. The insurance company claims the Eckelbergers’ attorney won’t grant permission to discuss specifics of the case.

In a text, Winer said Travelers can discuss legal defenses and strategies and reasons for doing things but cannot discuss Neil’s private health information.

He added, “This is being used as a ruse to try to show that they are being muzzled when they really are not.”

If you know of something that you think should be investigated, call our 8 On Your Side Helpline at 1-800-338-0808. Contact Steve Andrews at sandrews@wfla.com.

fentanyl — a synthetic opioid — is now killing more Americans than any other drug.

DEADLY MYSTERY DRUG THAT SICKENED HUNDREDS HAS BEEN DISCOVERED

www.wcluradio.com/deadly-mystery-drug-that-sickened-hundreds-has-been-discovered/

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A deadly mystery drug sickened hundreds of people in the summer of 2016, ripping a destructive path down Interstate 71 from Cincinnati to Louisville.
Many collapsed, struggling to breathe. Doctors sprinted outside emergency rooms to cars, yanking out those left motionless and blue. They had mere minutes to prevent brain damage or death.

The culprit would soon have a name — carfentanil, an elephant tranquilizer — thanks to a team of pioneering scientists at the Drug Enforcement Administration’s secret lab in Northern Virginia. Here, chemists at the Special Testing and Research Laboratory recently granted rare access to the Courier Journal and USA TODAY Network for a behind-the-scenes look at their critical work.
They also revealed how they helped solve the mystery of carfentanil and tracked the spread of the drug, the most lethal variation of America’s No. 1 killer — fentanyl.

Carfentanil, 100 times more potent than fentanyl, was never meant for humans, so labs in Ohio didn’t have a known sample to use for comparison.

Nearly a year earlier, a lab on the Pacific Coast tested a sample from a drug seizure that didn’t match any known drug. Officials there also heard it might be carfentanil, so the DEA’s research lab wanted to get a sample that had been confirmed as the animal tranquilizer to use for comparisons. But they hit a snag.
At the time, the only lab with the drug was owned by a private company that supplied zoos.
Since carfentanil is used to tranquilize large animals and is heavily regulated, it was difficult for lab officials to get it for research purposes.

Carfentanil remains a threat nationwide.In February, more than two years since the big wave of overdoses, the elephant tranquilizer caused small rashes of overdoses in Cleveland and Columbus. This time, Ohio officials quickly identified the cause, thanks to the DEA lab’s standard.
The lab has shared samples of carfentanil and other drugs with labs across the country, which has helped communities identify emerging drug threats.
While carfentanil has been linked to overdose outbreaks,fentanyl — a synthetic opioid — is now killing more Americans than any other drug.

At the DEA lab, a team of scientists also are studying today’s crystal meth, a drug that has continued to spread across the country in the shadows of heroin and fentanyl.
“Everything we’re seeing is high purity, 96 percent or greater,” said Jaclyn Brown, a senior forensic chemist. “The majority of what we’re seeing comes from Mexico.”
Chemists from law enforcement agencies in Mexico have come to the DEA’s Northern Virginia lab to learn the best ways to test drugs and spot drug trends.

A Visitor from the Past

Health Insurance Is Not Assurance Of Healthcare

Health Insurance Is Not Assurance Of Healthcare

https://www.news-line.com/PH_news28a250_enews

Because of high out-of-pocket expenses, Ohioans who purchase subsidized health-exchange insurance often can’t afford the care they need when they need it. That is a central finding of a new study from researchers at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine.

Examining a total of nearly 43,000 Ohio adults, the researchers found that low- to middle- income individuals who received subsidies to purchase insurance through health-insurance exchanges established under the Affordable Care Act were significantly more likely to experience problems with access and affordability, such as skipping doctor’s visits and not filling prescriptions, than those insured through Medicaid expansion generated by passage of the ACA.

“High out-of-pocket costs associated with exchange health plans often mean that those who don’t qualify for Medicaid face significant barriers to accessing affordable care,” said the study’s senior author, Siran Koroukian, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences. “As a result, they delay or omit needed care; and the likely scenario is that they become sicker before they eventually qualify for Medicaid. This creates a paradox: they formally have insurance, but because they can’t afford the high deductibles and co-pays, they may be worse off medically than those without insurance or who receive Medicaid, which has nominal co-expenses.”

In the study, newly published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, the researchers compared measures of access and affordability between Medicaid recipients in Ohio (an expansion state) and low/middle-income Ohioans whose incomes were high enough to disqualify them for Medicaid but low enough to qualify them for health insurance exchange subsidies. They found that, compared to Medicaid recipients, exchange patients were:

•5 times more likely to have difficulty paying medical bills
•2 times more likely to have foregone needed medical exams or supplies
•2 times more likely to have skipped filling a prescription because of high cost
•2 times more likely to have had a harder time getting medical care than in the past
•75 times more likely to avoid needed medical care

“We know that ACA has insured more people, which was its intent, but there is work to be done in making that insurance more effective in getting care for low- and middle-income people,” said the study’s lead author, Uriel Kim, an MD/PhD student in the School of Medicine. “Typically we think of Medicaid recipients as more vulnerable than those with private insurance. But in reality, Medicaid expansion has gone well because it is meeting its goal of increasing access to affordable care for its users. At the same time, relatively high out-of-pocket expenses mean that some recipients who use exchanges are choosing to go without care, which in the long run makes them sicker – even having to turn to Medicaid to get the care they need.”

Individuals in states that expanded Medicaid eligibility under the Affordable Care Act are eligible for Medicaid if their income is less than 138 percent of the federal poverty level. Above this threshold, those with incomes up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level can receive sliding-scale subsidies to offset premium costs for insurance purchased on health exchanges. These subsidies vary by the insurance metal level and, for silver plans only, by the consumer’s income. Bronze, silver, gold, and platinum plans have actuarial values (the percentage of health care costs the plans are designed to pay) of 60%, 70%, 80%, and 90% respectively. Silver Plans additionally offer subsidies to offset patients’ out-of-pocket costs at the time of care for those with incomes up to 250% of the federal poverty level.

In Ohio, only 70% of eligible individuals take advantage of cost-sharing reductions available for silver plans; 28% enroll in bronze. By forgoing silver plans in favor of outwardly less expensive bronze plans, enrollees in this income group often unexpectedly are confronted with high out-of-pocket costs, the researchers found.

“There are two notions of affordability when it comes to purchasing health care: the cost of insurance and the out-of-pocket costs someone pays when they seek care,” said the study’s third author, Johnie Rose, MD, PhD, assistant professor of family medicine. “Policymakers should carefully evaluate whether current income-based, cost-sharing reductions for silver plans adequately remove barriers to receiving care and whether enrollees sufficiently understand cost-sharing differences across the exchange plans.”

One implication of the study’s findings is that increasing Affordable Care Act cost-sharing subsides or raising the income threshold for Medicaid eligibility would expand accessibility. “Either way, this would ultimately save taxpayers money by keeping people healthier and not forcing them into financial toxicity,” said Koroukian. “This is especially true in expensive cases such as cancer. Higher out-of-pocket expenses can result in delays in getting cancer tests, resulting in later-stage diagnoses, sicker patients, greater expenditures, and often poorer patient outcomes.”

Source:Case Western Reserve University

Photo Credit:Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine

Pictured:Statistics showing low-to-middle-income Ohioans insured through HIE vs. those insured through Medicaid expansion.

Watch John Oliver Reveal Scams of America’s $35 Billion Rehab Industry

Watch John Oliver Reveal Scams of America’s $35 Billion Rehab Industry

www.rollingstone.com/tv/tv-news/watch-john-oliver-reveal-scams-of-americas-35-billion-rehab-industry-627776/

Rehab centers are cripplingly expensive, are often unscientific – most frightening – are “dangerously unregulated,” John Oliver said on Sunday’s Last Week Tonight. The comedian exposed a frequently obscured dark side of the $35 billion industry, which encompasses over 14,500 drug treatment facilities across the United States.

While many rehab centers boast impressive success rates hovering around 80 percent, Oliver argued that these statistics are based on self-reporting from former clients who often lie about their progress out of shame. Rehab, the host said, “should never be seen as a quick fix – it’s often just the first step in a lifetime of recovery.”

Some facilities utilize controversial treatments like equine therapy, for which there is “no empirical evidence” of its efficacy. And, in general, there are surprisingly few regulatory barriers to opening facilities in several states. “In California, as long as you take private pay clients, anyone can start an outpatient rehab center,” Oliver said. “And in Florida, if you want to open a sober home, a group home where people stay often while they receive outpatient treatment, there is nothing in state law to stop you.”

The host highlighted a system of recurring relapse called the “Florida Shuffle,” wherein centers milk the patient’s insurance until the patient dies. The cornerstone of the industry, Oliver noted, is conducting urine tests, which The New York Times dubbed “liquid gold” in a 2017 report.

For those seeking help with addiction, choosing the right rehab facility is an important step. Last Week Tonight consulted with several experts who recommend starting with a board-certified doctor in addiction medicine, or exploring positive options such as Transcend Recovery Community and Sober Living. This facility offers a compassionate approach to recovery, combining expert care with a supportive community that empowers individuals to achieve lasting sobriety and personal growth. “It’s only recently become an official specialty, so there just aren’t many of them around,” Oliver noted, but those physicians are available to search online. Also, consider visiting a drug rehab new jersey for proper treatment that will help you recover from addiction. For anyone in need of luxury rehab in LA, Carrara Treatment provides an unmatched experience. Their comprehensive programs are delivered in a setting of unparalleled comfort.

“This system clearly badly needs more expertise and oversight,” the host concluded. “And until then, it may be really important for all of us to understand that, at present, the word ‘rehab’ is so broadly defined as to be close to meaningless. It is honestly barely better defined than the word ‘building.’ And if someone were to tell you, ‘I have a drug problem, but don’t worry – I’m going to ‘building’ in Florida,’ you would naturally say, ‘Hold on, what’s ‘building’? Where did you find this building? What’s happening inside it? Is it a hospital or a Hooter’s? Or both – is it a Hootspital? What’s the proof that it works, and what’s the doctor-to-horse ratio like in there?’ Does Health Insurance Cover Rehab?

“And sadly, right now, it can be way too difficult to get answers to those questions, which is crazy because so much about battling addiction is really hard,” he continued. “Getting clean is hard; staying clean is hard. But getting good, evidence-based, trustworthy help should be the easy part. And right now, it is way too easy to literally wind up pissing money up a wall.”

Opioid crisis — Since when does the government write prescriptions?

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/since-when-does-the-government-write-prescriptions

Opioid-related deaths nationwide jumped four-fold in the last two decades, and the epidemic has made major inroads in the Eastern states, according to a new study by a U.S.- Canadian research team. The team found that “the life expectancy lost at age 15 years from opioids is now greater than that lost from deaths due to firearms or motor vehicle crashes in most of the United States.”

Clearly, something must be done, but federal and state agencies are focusing on the wrong target – legitimate prescribing of opioids – and have insinuated themselves into the doctor-patient relationship as never before. Our governments are taking prescription pads out of the hands of physicians and dictating which, and how much, prescription pain medication may be prescribed for patients. This is chilling and unprecedented.

As of last October, 33 states had instituted laws that restrict opioid prescriptions in some way. Although state laws differ in stringency, they are all intrusive. For example, Florida has a three-day limit on prescribed opioids, with the possibility of a seven-day supply if strict conditions are met. Massachusetts limits first-time patients to a seven-day supply and forbids a second prescription until the first expires.

And nationwide, millions of pain patients, even those who were functioning well with long-term opioid therapy, are being forcibly tapered or having their medicines stopped outright, regardless of their wishes or those of their physicians.

Legal “solutions” to medical issues are dubious, both scientifically and with respect to policy. For example, consider surgical recovery. It is well known that not only does surgical pain vary from patient to patient, but so do patients’ responses to pain medications. Therefore, a standardized, one-size-fits-all dose of a given drug cannot meet the needs of all post-surgery patients, and it will also fail those afflicted with other kinds of pain, both acute and chronic. The principles of pharmacology tell us why.

The effect of a drug on an individual is directly related to his or her weight. All things being equal, no dose of any drug will produce the same effect in a 100-pound person as in a 300-pound one. But weight is only one variable that determines a drug’s effects, and it is not even the most important one.

The rate of metabolism of opioids can vary as much as 30-fold from one individual to the next because of genetic differences in the liver enzymes responsible for the degradation of the drugs. This means that a given dose of an opioid could be dangerously high for one person while too low to be effective for another.

If the science is bad, the legal precedent is worse. In the mad rush to address a complex problem with simplistic thinking, there has been an insidious power shift – toward state governments and federal agencies, in effect, writing prescriptions. This insidious trend has been ignored by the press, civil rights advocates, the public health community and the general public.

In a country so respectful of individuals’ rights, it is unimaginable that we would surrender the sanctity of the patient-physician relationship without a whimper.

This is not likely to end with opioids. Since our government now intrudes into determining the use of pain drugs, why not do so with other potential drugs of abuse? The death rate from sedatives such as Valium and Xanax has soared in recent years, almost always due to combination with other drugs or alcohol. Should government override a physician’s ability to prescribe sedatives to patients because others are abusing them? It would be only a small step to bring those drugs under the same umbrella as opioids.

Indeed, these seeds are already being planted. One of the so-called “addiction specialists” who played a significant role in the current opioid fiasco has now set her sights on benzodiazepine sedatives (which include Klonopin, Valium, Ativan, and Xanax) because of their addiction potential. It is ironic that people who suffer from anxiety will have ample reason to worry even more — about the very real possibility of their medicines being taken away.

And why stop there? The use of drugs such as Ritalin and Adderall for children with ADHD is highly controversial, and both are abused. Many believe that these drugs are overused or shouldn’t be used at all. Should our government instruct pediatricians when and how to use such medicines, or limit the number of pills or the dose they decide is appropriate?

At the core of this disturbing trend is the myth that restriction of certain drugs will eliminate drug abuse. It doesn’t work. It just raises the street price of highly sought-after, abusable drugs.

The decades-long “War on Drugs,” which has never succeeded in controlling abuse or addiction, is now being waged in doctors’ offices, the last place we should want government intrusion. In the name of addressing a crisis, we are sacrificing freedoms in a new, frightening way. That’s a prescription for disaster.

Josh Bloom holds a Ph.D. in organic chemistry and is the director of chemical and pharmaceutical sciences at the American Council on Science and Health.

Chris Cornell’s Widow Implores Congress to Act on Opioid Crisis: His ‘Death Was Not Inevitable’

Chris Cornell’s Widow Implores Congress to Act on Opioid Crisis: His ‘Death Was Not Inevitable’

https://people.com/music/chris-cornell-congress-opioid-crisis/

Though Chris Cornell’s death in 2017 was ruled a suicide, his wife, Vicky, has said she believes the effects of a prescription drug may have played a role in the tragedy

February 26, 2019 03:09 PM

Vicky Cornell is working to turn her tragedy into change.

The widow of late rocker Chris Cornell, who died by suicide in May 2017 at the age of 52, traveled to Capitol Hill on Monday to speak to Congress about the opioid crisis and the impact addiction has on families in the United States and around the world. Though Cornell’s death was ruled a suicide, Vicky has stated in the past that she believes that the side effects of the prescription drug Ativan — which can cause worsening depression and thoughts of self-harm in rare cases — may have impacted Cornell.

Testifying before the Bipartisan Heroin and Opioid Task Force, Vicky shared her personal story of loss, discussed the stigma surrounding addiction and advocated on behalf of the steps congress can take to integrate addiction medicine into healthcare. Additionally, she stressed the need to address the overprescribing of prescription medication, the training and education of doctors and the necessity of eliminating stigma.

“The part that hurts most is Chris’ death was not inevitable, there were no demons that took over — Chris had a brain disease and a doctor who unfortunately, like many, was not properly trained or educated on addiction,” Vicky said. “We must integrate addiction treatment into our health care system — no more false narratives about the need to hit rock bottom, no more secret societies, no more shame — we must educate health care providers on how to treat addiction and best support recovery.“

Vicky Cornell with Brett Giroir and Dr. Kelly J. Clark
Vicky Cornell with Brett Giroir and Dr. Kelly J. Clark
Jay Ruais

The discussion was led by Bipartisan Heroin and Opioid Task Force co-chairs Congresswoman Annie Kustler and Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick, and Congressman Donald Norcross and Representative Martha Roby.

Along with Vicky, other panelists included in the discussion were U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Assistant Secretary for Health Brett P. Giroir and American Society of Addiction Medicine President Dr. Kelly J. Clark.

Vicky Cornell with Congresswoman Annie Kuster
Vicky Cornell with Congresswoman Annie Kuster
Jay Ruais

A month after the Soundgarden frontman’s death in 2017, Vicky opened up to PEOPLE exclusively about her loss and husband’s addiction.

“My Chris was happy, loving, caring and warm,” she said. “This was not a depressed man — it wasn’t like I missed that. What I missed were the signs of addiction.” Vicky believes that if her husband had not relapsed on drugs that night, he would not have died.

“He didn’t want to die,” she said of Cornell, who was prescribed Ativan as a sleep aid but doubled his dose the night of his death. “If he was of sound mind, I know he wouldn’t have done this… Addiction is a disease. That disease can take over you and has full power.”

RELATED: Chris Cornell’s Children Say It Was ‘Very Difficult’ to Accept Grammy for Late Father

In November 2018, Vicky and the two children she shares with Cornell — daughter Toni, 14, and son Christopher, 13 — sued Cornell’s doctor, Robert Koblin, for allegedly “negligently and repeatedly [prescribing] mind-altering and controlled substances” starting in September 2015.

Cornell was also father to 18-year-old Lily from his previous marriage.

RELATED VIDEO: Chris Cornell’s Widow Vicky Meets with Detroit Medical Examiner Four Months After Rocker’s Death

 

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Earlier in February, Cornell was honored with a posthumous Grammy in the best rock performance category for “When Bad Does Good.” His two youngest children accepted the award on their father’s behalf.

“We miss him so much and we saw him work on this so hard — he was always working on music [because] it was his passion,” Toni told reporters backstage. “It was really sad in a way to feel like he couldn’t be there himself to accept it for something that he was so proud of and worked so hard on. Again, we’re so proud of him and it was amazing.”

The only place that his toxicology was mentioned was in the VIDEO.. and he had a (unnamed) SEDATIVE, Ativan, Decongestant, and Barbiturates (PLURAL) in his system.  The way it is listed on the video is if they were stating that Ativan was a sedative or there was one or more sedatives in the toxicology report.

His wife is making statements:  which can cause worsening depression and thoughts of self-harm in rare cases — may have impacted Cornell

RARE SIDES EFFECTS – MAY HAVE HAD AN IMPACT ???

HE HUNG HIMSELF and apparently it was well known that he had addiction tendencies

I have not seen any spouses/family members of chronic painers that has committed suicide because they had their medication reduced/stopped, testifying before a Congressional committee !

 

Never Let an Opioid Crisis Go to Waste

Never Let an Opioid Crisis Go to Waste

www.spectator.org/never-let-an-opioid-crisis-go-to-waste/#.XHoQbpuLcZw.facebook

When the Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis advised the President to declare a national emergency to deal with the overdose epidemic, HHS Secretary Tom Price wisely suggested that this step wouldn’t be particularly useful: “[T]he opioid crisis at this point can be addressed without the declaration of an emergency.” Price is, of course, a physician who understands the public health implications of opioid addiction. He is also a former congressman who knows what kind of mischief the federal government gets up to when “solving” a crisis. Price was in Congress when the “uninsured crisis” spawned Obamacare.

Sadly, President Trump listened to less sagacious counsel and declared an emergency after all. If the White House and Congress follow the other bad advice offered in the commission’s interim report, they will produce another disaster for doctors and patients while exacerbating the problem they ostensibly wish to resolve. The most pernicious recommendation offered by the commission involves what the report dubs “prescriber education.” It calls for doctors, dentists, and every other provider with a prescription pad to suffer through mandatory courses — under the watchful eye of the Drug Enforcement Administration — to learn the “proper” way to treat pain:

Mandate medical education training in opioid prescribing and risks of developing an SUD by amending the Controlled Substance Act to require all Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) registrants to take a course in proper treatment of pain. HHS should work with partners to ensure additional training opportunities.

The primary result of this ill-conceived recommendation will be far fewer prescriptions for all types of medication. But isn’t the problem caused by too many doctors writing too many prescriptions? Nope. The authors of the interim report claim, “We have an enormous problem that is often not beginning on street corners; it is starting in doctor’s offices and hospitals in every state in our nation.” In order to reach this preposterous conclusion, the commission had to studiously ignore a widely-documented decline in the number of opioid prescriptions that began at least seven years ago. In July, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported:

From 2010 to 2015, the amount of opioids prescribed in the United States decreased from 782 to 640 MME per capita.… Nationally, opioid prescribing rates leveled off from 2010 to 2012, and then decreased by 13.1% from 2012 to 2015.

Despite this decrease in opioid prescribing rates, mandatory education and increased DEA surveillance will soon render providers wary of prescribing any kind of controlled substance. Doctors will be so afraid of violating DEA rules that they will err on the side of caution. Patients with no history of, or predisposition toward, addiction will suffer needlessly because lazy politicians on a presidential commission have eschewed critical thinking and embraced hyperbole. Ironically, most controlled substances are neither narcotic nor addictive, and few patients are in any real risk of addiction. As geriatric specialist Thomas F. Kline, M.D. writes:

Out of 100 people taking pain medicine, only a very few, perhaps three or four, will develop an addiction. Restricting pain medicine in the other 97 is not good medical practice.… Deaths from narcotic overdoses usually involve multiple, non-prescribed, street drugs, not pain medicines prescribed by caring doctors.

But the report rejects dull reality in favor of sensational factoids: “The average American would likely be shocked to know that drug overdoses now kill more people than gun homicides and car crashes combined.” The average American won’t be “shocked” to learn that this is hopelessly misleading. To support their claim, the commission lumps together deaths involving all drugs, including heroin and cocaine, and fails to differentiate between overdoses and deaths resulting from the ingestion of multiple contraindicated drugs. Finally, the commission ignores the role government has played in creating the “crisis.” Which brings us to its second worst recommendation:

Grant waiver approvals for all 50 states to quickly eliminate barriers to treatment resulting from the federal Institutes for Mental Diseases (IMD) exclusion within the Medicaid program. This will immediately open treatment to thousands of Americans in existing facilities in all 50 states.

This seems innocuous enough, at first glance, but disturbing data have emerged suggesting Medicaid is no panacea for this “epidemic.” Indeed, the program may well be driving the dramatic increase in opioid overdoses. A key provision of Obamacare involved coercing states into expanding Medicaid to able-bodied adults. The Supreme Court ruled that provision unconstitutional in 2012, permitting states to opt out of expansion. Since then, 19 states have done just that. What has all this to do with opioids? It turns out that the very real spike in overdoses seen in the Medicaid expansion states is absent from those 19 states. As Jon Cassidy wrote in this space in June:

Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion and individual insurance exchanges both went into effect in 2014. In just the next year, the fatal opioid overdose rate increased by 15.6 percent, CDC found.… The increase isn’t uniform. It’s clearly happening in 30 states, most of which accepted the Medicaid expansion. But overdose deaths have remained steady in 19 other states, according to the CDC.

How the commission missed the Medicaid connection is a mystery. Even the establishment media have taken notice. A headline in the Hill, for example, drew attention to the relationship thus: “Want to end the opioid epidemic? Start by freezing Medicaid expansion.” The author of that piece, Sam Adolphsen, points out that a patient covered by the program is 6 times more likely to die of an opioid-related death than someone with decent coverage. Adolphsen also points out that the Medicaid expansion in which Ohio governor John Kasich takes such pride has his state “on track to have more overdose deaths in 2017 than the entire United States had in 1990.”

All of this is lost on the President’s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis. Chairman Chris Christie and its other members clearly believe that government meddling will end the “epidemic.” The rest of their recommendations all involve increased federal surveillance of doctors and patients, throwing taxpayer money at failed programs, and adding to the regulatory morass that is already killing our health care system. Before President Trump and Congress take further action based on the commission’s advice, they would do well to remember Ronald Reagan’s admonition about the nine most terrifying words in the English language.

The kind of “help” offered by Governor Christie and his accomplices on the commission is exactly what Reagan found terrifying. It will give government more power over patients and doctors while making the “crisis” worse. Here’s a novel idea: How about getting together a few actual physicians, people who actually treat actual patients, and see what they suggest? We have had a lot of government help during the last eight or so years. Do we really want MORE?

For nearly FIFTY YEARS the DEA/bureaucracy has claimed that EDUCATION would solve the substance abuse problem.. we have had D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) and the JUST SAY NO program and visual aids of a egg frying in a hot skillet representing your “brain on drugs” .. they keep trying and keep failing…

Now they believe that EDUCATION OF PRESCRIBERS is the “magic answer”.  with opiate prescriptions being at a FIFTEEN YEAR LOW and OD’s being at a FIFTEEN YEAR HIGH… and more and more people at least within healthcare understanding that addiction is a MENTAL HEALTH ISSUE… and reducing the number of controlled prescription being written or making “education material” forced down our throats thru various media will not change one thing.

Nearly FIFTY YEARS of “magic answers” and FIFTY YEARS of FAILED IDEAS ?

It is reported that someone who purchases $20,000 of an illegal Fentanyl analog to make “tablets” to sell on the street will have a value of TWENTY MILLION.  That is like taking  ONE DOLLAR and turning it into ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS.  Illegal Fentanyl analogs have become more popular is because it is made by a CHEMICAL REACTION.. until Heroin that has to be GROWN, cultivated, harvested and processed. Supply is limited to available land to grow the poppy and how many harvests can be done in a single year.

Jury delivers $25.5 million ‘statement’ to Aetna to change its ways

Jury delivers $25.5 million ‘statement’ to Aetna to change its ways

https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/01/health/anthem-insurance-payments-patients-eprise/index.html

A woman received nearly $375,000 from her insurance company over several months for treatment she received at a California rehabilitation facility. A man received more than $130,000 after he sent his fiancée’s daughter for substance abuse treatment.

Those allegations are part of a lawsuit winding its way through federal court that accuses Anthem and its Blue Cross entities of paying patients directly in an effort to put pressure on health care providers to join their network and to accept lower payments.
The insurance giant is accused of sending more than $1.3 million in payments to patients — money, the suit claims, that is owed to the facilities that treated people with addiction and mental health problems.
The suit by Sovereign Health highlights part of an ongoing war between insurance companies and providers over payment and billing issues, one that puts the patient right in the middle of the fighting by sending payments straight to patients after they seek out-of-network care. Patients are supposed to send the money on to providers. Many times, they do; other times, they don’t.
Critics say it’s a revenge tactic against doctors, hospitals, treatment facilities and other medical providers that don’t agree to insurance companies’ demands to be “in-network,” by making them chase down money. The insurance industry disputes any such characterization.
Regardless of who and what is to blame, Arthur Caplan, the director of medical ethics for New York University’s School of Medicine, called the idea of insurers sending money to patients “insane.”
“My overall, moral reaction is: Are you kidding me?” he said of the notion of paying patients.”It’s almost like winning the lottery, it seems to me. So, I’m not surprised that there are misuses — and I’m enormously surprised that anyone would think this is a doable approach.
“Only in our crazy, market-driven, bureaucratic mess of a system,” Caplan added, “would we think about this kind of a solution.”
Lisa Kantor, one of the lead attorneys representing five Sovereign Health corporate entities and seven treatment facilities at the heart of the federal case, said she had major concerns over the issue, especially since Sovereign treated such a vulnerable population.
“One of the things we have to worry about is that kind of money getting into the hands of someone who has an addiction problem,” Kantor said.
Instead of paying the facilities, she said, Anthem sent checks directly to patients, some while they were still in rehab. It’s a strategy that put the providers in the tricky and tenuous position of trying to collect money — in some cases, very large sums — from the very people they were trying to help, Kantor said.
“They were trying to get better,” she said, “and Anthem was giving them every opportunity not to.”
When a patient sees an out-of-network provider, she explained, patients sign an “assignment of benefits” contract that instructs their benefit plan or its administrator to pay the provider for services rendered to the patient.
But some insurance plans have “anti-assignment” clauses that allow for payments to patients, not providers.
Anthem, the parent company of Blue Cross health plans, declined comment for this story, citing the pending litigation.
In court filings, Anthem doesn’t dispute that checks are made out to patients for various out-of-network care. But the insurance giant argued that the treatment centers don’t have legal standing to make a case in federal court under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, known as ERISA, because patients “do not transfer any of their ERISA rights to the provider.”
“For this reason alone,” Anthem said in the filings, “each claim alleged by Plaintiffs fails as a matter of law and should be dismissed with prejudice.”
ERISA is the federal law that establishes minimum standards for most voluntarily established retirement and health plans, covering an estimated 141 million workers and beneficiaries.
Anthem also said in court filings that previous court decisions determined that “anti-assignment” provisions are legal and that the insurer is doing nothing wrong: “Indeed, courts in many other jurisdictions have held that anti-assignment clauses in ERISA plans are valid and enforceable.”

Patient: Family member got $240,000 from Anthem

Health care providers, medical professionals and attorneys familiar with this insurance practice told CNN that patients who receive money from insurers typically cannot be held criminally responsible if they never turn the cash over to their provider. But the patients can be held financially responsible.
Though many patients send the money on to the providers, they said, others might realize they’re onto a bonanza, pocketing the money and ducking and dodging every time a doctor or medical office reaches out.
Many are simply confused as to why they’re receiving money.
Candyce Ayn, a Georgia resident who recently underwent surgery with an out-of-network doctor, said she received more than $3,500 from Anthem, but she said that amount paled in comparison to the more than $240,000 sent to a family member by Anthem after a surgery a few years ago.
“The large check was surprising,” she wrote in an email. “It was more than we had paid for our house!”
Checks are still arriving for her recent surgery, she said; adding to the confusion, the checks were made out to her spouse, the main policy holder. She also said Anthem didn’t make clear or explain why the money was sent.
“Checks arrived for partial amounts, some were for amounts different than expected, and I received more checks than I had anticipated,” she said.
She paid her providers, she said, and she believes that most patients are probably like her. “Maybe there is a small percentage who think ‘Vegas, here I come!’ but I believe it is mostly confusion on the patient’s part and not at all malfeasance. Especially if there are many checks involved and they have not had the experience of going ‘out of network’ before.”
She’s thankful to have insurance, but “putting the checks in the patient’s name introduces an opportunity for things to go wrong.”
Insurance companies also make it hard for doctors, hospitals and other providers to know whether a check has been issued to a patient, refusing to disclose the information, according those familiar with the insurance practice. One Blue Cross letter, shared with CNN, told a provider that the insurer doesn’t have the “authority to disclose the financial information” and that “we are only able to instruct the provider to contact their patient.”
Sometimes, it pushes health care professionals to file suit against patients.
“I can tell you categorically that a health care provider never wants to be in a position of having to sue one of his patients for money that should’ve been paid by the patient’s insurance company,” said David King, a Nashville attorney who regularly represents providers in disputes with insurance companies. “This insurance company practice unnecessarily brings its own member into the dispute — and forces the provider to pursue the patient for the money.”
Cathryn Donaldson, a spokeswoman for the insurance advocacy group America’s Health Insurance Plans, defended the practice of insurers sending checks to patients, saying it’s because insurance companies don’t have “a contractual relationship in place with the hospital, physician or care provider.” She also took issue with the term “paying patients,” saying that “reimburses” is more appropriate.
“In the case of out-of-network care, I want to be clear that the term ‘revenge tactic’ is inaccurate and not reflective of how health insurance providers handle out-of-network costs,” Donaldson said.
She added that insurance companies are protecting patients, because out-of-network doctors, hospitals and specialists “charge whatever rates they like,” resulting in millions of patients receiving “surprise, unexpected medical bills that can often break the bank.”
NYU’s Caplan found the idea of sending money to patients ludicrous. “You’re going to be giving out these sums of money that a lot of people never see in a year and tell them their duty is to shift it over to the out-of-network service provider?” he said. “You can’t be serious.”
In a country where the vast majority of people live paycheck to paycheck, Caplan said, such policies would put most anyone in a moral and ethical bind, because “it’s ridden with almost irresistible temptations.”
“There’s a temptation, I suspect, to take the money and run,” Caplan said. “I can certainly empathize with the temptation to not play ball. … I just think that’s a ludicrous burden to put on the individual.”
Barbara L. McAneny, president of the American Medical Association, blasted what she called insurance “bully tactics” that seek to force physicians to go “in-network” — tactics that she said have become more widespread as insurance companies have grown in size and power.
“Physicians want the ability to negotiate fairly with larger health insurers without fear of strong-arm tactics that antagonize patients,” McAneny said in a written statement to CNN.
She said many health insurers ignore “assignment of benefits” agreements between patients and physicians, deciding to send payments straight to patients.
“The reality is that insurers refuse to recognize these agreements to create a market advantage for themselves against physicians who do not participate in the insurer’s network,” McAneny said.
Kantor put it this way: “How can you run a business and stay in it if you can’t get paid?”
Kantor is representing Sovereign Health, which closed last year amid financial woes and a federal probe and after being accused of fraud by another insurance company — allegations it has disputed in a countersuit.
The case against Anthem and its Blue Cross entities has been tied up in litigation for years. Kantor recently joined the case on behalf of provider Sovereign Health, streamlined it and began focusing on the payments she said went directly to patients.
She filed a motion in late January targeting the $1.3 million she says went to patients from 2012 to 2015. She said they are waiting for a hearing on the amended complaint.
In one case, a woman from Washington state received nearly $375,000, Kantor said, and the treating facility tried for more than a year to recover the money from the patient. She said a Blue Cross entity sent more than 50 checks to the woman between August 2014 and May 2015 after she sought treatment over five months in 2014.
“We don’t know what happened to the money in this case,” Kantor said. “We just know that Sovereign, our client, didn’t get any of it.”
It’s also not clear what became of the woman, she said.
In another case, a man in New York sent his fiancée’s daughter for two months of treatment at an out-of-network facility in San Diego in late 2014, Kantor said. The man is alleged to have received more than $130,000, including one check worth $79,700.
“I don’t know about you, but seeing a check for $80,000, I think, would ring alarm bells in my head,” said Tim Rozelle, an attorney working with Kantor.

Attorney: Do employees view cash as a ‘bonus’?

Anthem lost an “anti-assignment” case in federal court last year. A Los Angeles-area hospital sued the insurance company, accusing it of “an act of retaliation” for not agreeing to the insurer’s “unreasonably low contract rates.”
The Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital accused the insurance giant of engaging “in this practice knowing that in many instances the patients will not forward the checks to their healthcare providers or otherwise use those funds to pay for their healthcare services.”
The hospital documented three patients from the same place of work who sought emergency care, complaining of chest pains and other ailments dozens of times. The insurance company paid those three individuals a total of about $250,000, the suit said.
During one deposition, Eric Chan, the attorney for the hospital, pressed the human resources director who helped administer the health plan for the three workers about the plan’s intent.
“The intention of the plan isn’t to enrich the employees, to give them bonuses, in addition to receiving medical care, is it?” Chan asked.
“No, it’s not,” the HR director said.
But she acknowledged that she had no idea Anthem sent money directly to employees until the lawsuit arose.
Anthem’s director of group contracts and compliance said under oath that patients get “paid directly” by Anthem if they go out-of-network “because the benefit is theirs.” By contrast, the in-network providers get reimbursed directly, the Anthem representative said in her deposition.
In a ruling against Anthem, US District Judge Otis Wright described the predicament the hospital was put in: “Plaintiff realized that these individuals had no intention of paying their hospital bills and were instead profiting from Anthem’s practice of sending checks directly to patients.
“However, Plaintiff could not turn these patients away because under both state and federal law Plaintiff is obligated to treat every individual who presents to its emergency room in good faith.”
The judge entered a final judgment in December, ordering Anthem and the other defendants to pay the hospital more than $400,000. Anthem has appealed the decision.
Last year, the hospital agreed to go in-network with Anthem — a sign, critics said, that the insurance giant’s overall strategy worked.

Threatened with arrest, patient sends money to provider

Sam Fenderson, a surgical assistant in the Atlanta area, said Anthem’s tactics have very real consequences for providers like him.
He said that about $147,000 owed for his services over the past three years was sent to patients, and it’s been draining trying to recover the funds. “That was really frustrating, because the payment was there,” he said. “It was just a matter of the patient sending the payment on to me.”
He said he’s had to go to the extraordinary measure of suing 17 patients to try to get the money. He said four people declared bankruptcy, meaning he couldn’t try to recoup that money. Some of the other cases are still in small-claims court.
While most counties view the issue as a civil matter, Fenderson said, he’s found one county in Georgia that considers it a crime when patients keep the cash. Newton County considers it “theft by conversion” felony for amounts over $1,000; prosecutors said they’ve charged two people in the county.
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When his patient in that county was threatened with arrest, Fenderson said, the money was turned over rather quickly.
Suing a patient to get money, he said, is a last resort and “not the way we want to operate.” The tactic even creates tension among surgical staff: Some surgeons get angry if you sue patients, Fenderson said, because they still need to see the patients for followups.
But if you don’t act, he said, “you’re working for free, essentially.”
He said the issue seems to be more common now than just a few years ago. “This is not something that’s just happening to me,” he said. “Hundreds of people I work with are going through the same thing.”
Kantor said she hopes her case shakes up the system.
“We’re going to have to change what Anthem does,” she said.