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New York investigative journalists looking for NY pain pt & docs to speak about opiates and pain
Opioid Crisis: The lawsuits that could bankrupt manufacturers and distributors & disrupt the entire med distribution system
Opioid Crisis: The lawsuits that could bankrupt manufacturers and distributors
Mike Moore says he’s, “just a country lawyer from Mississippi.” But this country lawyer has engineered two of the most lucrative legal settlements in American history. As Mississippi’s attorney general, he engineered the historic 1998 settlement under which Big Tobacco paid billions to address smoking-related health issues. In 2015, he convinced BP to settle multibillion-dollar lawsuits over its huge oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Now Mike Moore has taken aim at the manufacturers and distributors of opioid painkillers, claiming they should pay for the epidemic of addiction and death that has swept this nation. As you’ll hear in a moment, he has powerful new evidence that he says proves that states like Ohio, among the hardest-hit by the opioid epidemic, should collect billions from all the companies he’s suing.
Mike Moore: If we try the Ohio case, if we win a verdict against these manufacturers and distributors there, it could bankrupt them. It’d put them outta business.In such cases, you could approach lawyers for chapter 13 bankruptcy to protect your assets.
Bill Whitaker: Truly? These are huge, profitable–
Mike Moore: Huge.
Bill Whitaker: –wealthy companies.
Mike Moore: Well, you know– they can be as profitable as they want to. But– Ohio is losing $4 billion or $5 billion a year from the opioid epidemic. And they’re losing 5,000 or 6,000 people a year from overdose deaths. So when a jury hears the evidence in this case, they’re not gonna award just a couple hundred million dollars. It may be $100 billion. And whoever amongst these companies thinks they can stand up to that? Good luck.
Attorney General Mike DeWine: We are hurting now in Ohio. We need help now in Ohio.
Ohio’s Republican attorney general Mike DeWine, who will be sworn in next month as governor, hired Mike Moore as soon as he decided to file suit against opioid manufacturers and distributors.
Attorney General Mike DeWine: They flooded the State of Ohio with these opioid pills that they knew would kill people.
Bill Whitaker: They knew would kill people.
Attorney General Mike DeWine: If they didn’t know it the first couple years, they clearly would’ve seen it after that. You can’t miss it. When one year we had close to a billion– a billion pain meds prescribed in the state of Ohio, you know, 69 per man, woman, and child in the state. And that lies at the feet of the drug companies. They’re the ones who did that.
Ohio is one of four states Mike Moore formally represents, but he’s coordinating with 30-plus states that have filed suit, and with many of the local governments, nearly 1,500 cities and counties that also are suing. He is the unofficial commanding officer of the army that’s attacking the opioid industry.
Bill Whitaker: This is where your war room is located?
Mike Moore: That’s right.
The unlikely “command center” for Moore’s legal war is the sleepy town of Grayton Beach on Florida’s panhandle.
Mike Moore: You know, in a place like this, you’re not limited with a bunch of tall buildings, and coats and ties, and that kinda thing. You can think outside the box a little bit. So.
When we were in Grayton Beach, about a dozen lawyers from all around the country, some working on state cases, others on local lawsuits, had gathered for all-day strategy sessions, focused on an audacious goal.
Mike Moore: Success for me would be that we would find funding to provide treatment for all the 2.5 million opioid-dependent people in this country.
That would take many billions of dollars, of course, but remember, Mike Moore has done it before.
Mike Moore: Look, when I filed this tobacco case in 1994 there was nobody that thought that we had a chance to win. We showed up for our first hearing, and in our first hearing, so there was three of us there. On the courtroom on the other side they had 68 lawyers.
Despite that early mismatch, within four years Moore had all 50 states lined up against Big Tobacco. He did it partly by going to court, but mostly by going public.
Mike Moore: A case in court is a case in court, and that’s fine. But there’s also the court of public opinion. And the court of public opinion is sometime the most powerful court.
60 Minutes played an important and controversial role in the public case against Big Tobacco. Moore was interviewed for a segment that at first, CBS corporate lawyers refused to allow on the air.
Mike Moore: We’re thinking to ourself, “Look, if 60 Minutes seems to be afraid of these guys for whatever reason, then what about us?” (LAUGH)
60 Minutes finally aired the segment in early 1996 after The Wall Street Journal ran a story featuring the same tobacco industry whistleblower.
Bill Whitaker: You said this in that 60 Minutes story, “This industry,” talking about this– the tobacco industry, “in my opinion is an industry…
Mike Moore in 1996: …who has perpetrated the biggest fraud on the American public in history. They have lied to the American public for years and years, they’ve killed millions and millions of people and made a profit on it.”
Bill Whitaker: Those are pretty strong words.
Mike Moore: Well, it– they were true. Those words were true.
Bill Whitaker: And you finally got big tobacco to cry uncle.
Mike Moore: That’s right.
Bill Whitaker: They ended up paying, what, over $200 billion?
Mike Moore: $250 billion, yeah.
Bill Whitaker: So when you look back on what you did what has been the impact?
Mike Moore: We reduced smoking rates to a place that nobody ever thought was possible. So the number one cause of death in America has been reduced dramatically. That’s pretty powerful.
“The distributors are saying things like, ‘We’re just truck drivers. We didn’t know where the pills went.’ Of course, they did”
Now, going after the opioid industry, Mike Moore is using the same playbook he used against tobacco and more recently against BP for the Gulf Oil Spill: build legal and public pressure until the companies see no choice but to settle, and fork over billions.
Mike Moore: Here’s the deal. There’s a huge pill spill in this country. It’s huge.
Bill Whitaker: Pill spill?
Mike Moore: Pill spill. Huge pill spill. It never should’ve occurred. Everybody’s got some fault. But we have 72,000 people dying every year. Let’s figure out a way to resolve this thing. You guys made billions of dollars off of this. Take some of that money and apply it to the problem that you helped cause.
He’s a long way from convincing the drug industry to do that, of course, that’s why all the lawsuits. The first targets are opioid manufacturers like Purdue Pharma, which makes oxycontin, the pill that fueled the opioid epidemic.
Mike Moore: Purdue Pharma created an environment so that opioid use was okay. So if you prescribe your patients this drug, there’s less than 1 percent chance they’ll get addicted. That was a lie, a big lie.
Bill Whitaker: Can you prove that in court?
Mike Moore: Absolutely.
Purdue Pharma declined our request for an interview, but said in a statement that when the FDA approved oxycontin in 1995 it authorized the company to state on the label that “addiction to opioids legitimately used is very rare.” But as evidence of abuse mounted, the company admitted in federal court in 2007 that it had misled doctors and consumers about just how addictive oxycontin can be.
Mike Moore: The Purdue Pharma case is an easy case. I hate to say it, but it’s an easy case to prove. You can prove that they told the lies that they told.
It has been considered tougher to build a case against Mike Moore’s other targets, the huge drug distributors who’ve made billions delivering opioids from manufacturers to pharmacies.
Mike Moore: The distributors are saying things like, “We’re just truck drivers. We didn’t know where the pills went.” Of course, they did. There’s a Controlled Substance Act. Controlled Substance Act. You’re supposed to control these pills. And when you don’t, you have a responsibility for it. It– it’s real simple.
“The stories that you’ve heard from some of the DEA investigative agents concerning the large volumes of pills going into certain parts of our country are absolutely true.”
It’s also simple why Moore is going after the biggest players in drug distribution: because they have much deeper pockets than the manufacturers. Purdue Pharma, for example, had less than $2 billion in revenue last year. Distributor McKesson, by contrast, had $208 billion in revenue.
Mike Moore: McKesson, you’re the sixth largest company in this country. You’re telling the American public you didn’t have systems in place to adhere to the Controlled Substance Act? Seriously?
Mike Moore and his allies now have what they characterize as devastating evidence proving that distributors knew what they were doing. A huge confidential DEA database called ARCOS tracks all transactions involving controlled substances. This spring, a federal judge in Cleveland who is hearing many of the local lawsuits ordered all that data to be handed over to the plaintiffs’ lawyers.
Burton LeBlanc: And I can actually tell you which distributor distributed to which particular pharmacy, by year, by volume, and where the pills came from.
Burton LeBlanc is a Louisiana lawyer who regularly huddles with Mike Moore in Grayton Beach. His firm represents hundreds of cities and counties in their opioid lawsuits, and his team has taken the lead in analyzing the ARCOS data.
Burton LeBlanc: In terms of the wholesale distributor’s duty to report suspicious orders, we can immediately look at volume and detect patterns with the data that we currently have.
Bill Whitaker: So, you can see that for every pharmacy in the– in the country?
Burton LeBlanc: I have it for every transaction in the United States.
Bill Whitaker: What’s the most important thing that it has shown you?
Burton LeBlanc: That the stories that you’ve heard from some of the DEA investigative agents concerning the large volumes of pills going into certain parts of our country are absolutely true.
One of those stories concerned Kermit, West Virginia, a town of just 400 people, where nine million opioid pills were delivered in just two years to a single pharmacy.
Bill Whitaker: Did the companies have access to this information?
Burton LeBlanc: It was their data.
That data has now been shared with state attorneys general, including Ohio’s Mike DeWine.
Attorney General Mike DeWine: I’m not allowed to talk about the specifics. But I will simply tell you it’s shocking. Anyone who was looking at those numbers, as those middlemen were, as these distributors were, clearly, clearly should’ve seen that something was dramatically wrong.
“If they cared enough, maybe we would not have lost 500,000 lives from this problem.”
Like Purdue, drug distributors declined our request for an interview, but in a statement from their trade association, said, “it defies common sense to single out distributors for the opioid crisis… distributors deliver medicines prescribed by a licensed physician and ordered by a licensed pharmacy.” But Mike Moore insists that does not let the companies off the legal hook.
Mike Moore: If you’ve got walking around sense and you care, you’re gonna check before you send nine million pills to a little, bitty county in West Virginia or Mississippi or Louisiana or Ohio. You’re gonna check if you care.
Bill Whitaker: You think they don’t care?
Mike Moore: I don’t think they cared enough. And if they cared enough, maybe we would not have lost 500,000 lives from this problem. It’s– it just– it appalls me.
Trial dates have been set for next year in a few of the state and local cases. But rather than go to trial, and just as he did with tobacco, Mike Moore hopes to force a mega-settlement to fund drug treatment, prevention, and education.
Bill Whitaker: You had to have thought about how much money you would need to do the projects that you foresee?
Mike Moore: Oh, I’ve seen all the models. To be effective, we need at least $100 billion to start off with.
Bill Whitaker: And I know you’ve heard the criticism, that with all these lawyers involved, that this is just a bunch of trial lawyers looking for a great, big payday.
Mike Moore: Right. I don’t care one whit about any money in this case. Not one whit whatsoever about it.
Bill Whitaker: Nobody’s gonna believe that the attorneys are not going to make any money.
Mike Moore: No, no, no. No, no, and I’m not saying that. I was talking about– all I can speak for is me.
Bill Whitaker: You made money off tobacco.
Mike Moore: Nope, not a penny.
That’s because for all the years of the tobacco litigation, and many years after, Moore was working for a modest state salary as Mississippi attorney general.
Bill Whitaker: You made money off of BP spill.
Mike Moore: I made some money on helping resolve the case, yeah.
Moore has made enough money to be comfortable. At age 66, this may be his last big case, and he believes the ARCOS data gives him the ammunition he needs to demolish the opioid industry’s argument that it should not be blamed.
Mike Moore: Nobody in the world’s gonna believe that. And– and don’t go try to tell that to 12 jurors in Mississippi or Ohio who’ve lost people from this. You know what– (LAUGH) you know what those jurors are gonna do? They’re gonna go in the back room, they’re gonna spend about 30 minutes thinking about it, gonna come back out and bam.
vide treatment to 2.5 million substance abusers/addicts – who does not – may not – even want treatment or to become “clean”
Mike Moore doesn’t seem to care if he bankrupts a untold number of manufacturers or wholesalers..
The lawsuits that could bankrupt manufacturers and distributors
Most of these pharmas produce other life saving meds that treats many chronic diseases and there are THREE WHOLESALERS that controls about 80%+ of the entire wholesale market… so how many pts are going to be harmed if the pharma/wholesaler channels in this country are PUT OUT OF BUSINESS over the goal to try and make 2.5 million substance abusers/addicts get clean ?
The DEA had the opiate sales data in their system ARCOS and while Mike Moore is stating that the wholesalers/pharmas should have known from those data points what was going on.. but the DEA had the SAME DATA RIGHT UNDER THEIR NOSE and DID NOTHING… isn’t their primary charge to prevent diversion ?
Mike Moore states that we have 72,000 dying every year – opiates implied – but that number represents the deaths FROM ALL DRUG OVERDOSE OR MISUSE… in that number it is estimated that 15,000 are from the use/abuse of NSAIDS – most of them OTC meds.
Mike DeWine claims that in Ohio there was 69 opiate doses for every man, woman and child… was that 69 doses of 5 mg Oxycodone or Hydrocodone/APAP or 80 mg Oxycontin or Zohydro 50mg/Hydrocodone ?
Of course, a intractable chronic pain pt – if provided adequate pain management – would take 3 long acting and 3 to 6 short acting opiates – EVERY DAY.. So those 69 doses could last a intractable chronic pain pt would last them abt ONE WEEK…
The population of Ohio is 11.66 million and if one presumes that 10% of the population would be suffering from intractable chronic pain… requiring 9 opiate doses a day to properly manage their pain that would take 3.8 BILLION doses per year. So if you take the 69 doses/person and multiply by 11.66 million and you come up with 804 million doses/yr.. which would only provide 20% of the opiate doses needed for the 10% of Ohio population that is estimated to be dealing with intractable chronic pain.
Where does the opiates come from to treat the other 2.3 million that suffers from at least intermittent or activity induced pain that would require opiate to manage.. and then where does the opiates comes from to treat all of the pain caused by accidents and surgically induced pain.
So if opiates were properly prescribed to treat all the legit pain issues in the population of Ohio … it would – most likely – take more than 69 doses for every man, woman and child in the state.
So when all you have is attorneys LOOKING AT NUMBERS…. and no medical education or experience… they can BEND THE NUMBERS to make them sound like they are MEANINGFUL
Mike Moore: We reduced smoking rates to a place that nobody ever thought was possible... and yet use/abuse of Tobacco/Nicotine kills 450,000/yr – that is a victory ?
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Sinaloa Cartel Fentanyl Lab Busted in Mexican City Hall Building – why we need a WALL !
Sinaloa Cartel Fentanyl Lab Busted in Mexican City Hall Building
Mexican federal investigators discovered an active fentanyl lab belonging to the Sinaloa Cartel in Mexico City.
The discovery was the result of an investigation by the Attorney General’s Office of Mexico, according to local media. Authorities executed a search warrant inside a building housing the city hall for the Azcapotzalco municipal government, located in the northwest section of Mexico City. The raid took place on the weekend of December 8, but information was not released to the public until days later. One person who oversaw and managed the lab was arrested, according to the Attorney General’s office.
Federal investigators found various chemical substances, numerous bags containing blue fentanyl pills, approximately 50 cans of a liquid, and a pill presser. All were believed to be used for fentanyl manufacturing. Officials also announced the seizure of several vehicles, communication equipment, and ammunition of various calibers. The seizure was believed bound for the U.S. markets.
Fentanyl, often referred to as “synthetic heroin,” is blamed in part for the opioid overdose crisis in the United States. The Attorney General’s office handed over custody of the case to the Office of the Special Prosecutor’s Office for Organized Crime Investigation (SEIDO).
Approximately two months ago, investigative elements of the same agency located a house belonging to the Sinaloa Cartel near the Benito Juárez City Hall. Federal authorities found weapons, drugs, and nearly one million dollars and detained a male identified as Adolfo Jesús Coronel Beltrán, believed to be a cousin of Sandra Aviña Beltrán, better known as the Queen of the Pacific, according to the BBC. Aviña Beltrán was a Mexican drug cartel leader who was extradited to the United States. She was later released and deported back to Mexico. Aviña Beltrán was considered a key link between the Sinaloa Cartel and Colombian drug lords.
The Sinaloa Cartel is stepping up its production and trafficking of fentanyl to the U.S. markets. Many recent seizures are linked to the same organization. These include a 26-pound bust in November in northern Mexico and a 44-pound find in Maryland.
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How many “fake facts” can one person present in a 5 minute interview ?
https://video.foxnews.com/v/5980017213001/
Sec Azar apparently is keeping with promoting the “benefits” of the Trump administration that are really a “nothing burger” …
While fox is having a three part investigative series on the adverse affect on the health care system and pts with the arbitrary reduction in opiate Rxs and the resulting SUICIDES… Judge Jeanine has this “mouth piece” for the Trump administration regurgitating how changes are financially benefiting people.
GAG CLAUSE: Pharmacist has always been able to tell a pt that the cash price was less than their copay – but the pt had to ask the question.. now that the GAG CLAUSE has been removed.. the Pharmacist can initiate the conversation about if the cash price is cheaper.
FORCED 30% REDUCTION IN PRESCRIPTION PRICES… Here the administration is comparing apples to oranges… those other countries with single payer or national health insurance… doesn’t have a boat load of for-profit middlemen each with a cost infrastructure and goal to generate a profit.
Our VA hospital system is a good example.. it is a “closed system” … they purchase meds and they dispense meds.. there is no billing to a third party (PBM), there is no PA or other bureaucratic infrastructure , there is no kickback/rebate/discount to a middleman.. and they purchase their meds for about 30%+ less than the pharmas sell to anyone else.
Before Trump came to office, we had a 85%-90% generic utilization on prescriptions. 28 billion in savings… we fill abt 4 billion Rxs/yr… that would equate to about a $6-$7/Rx savings.. I have not seen any such savings in our prescriptions and I doubt if any Pharmacist can point out such price reductions in acquisition costs at the wholesale level.
While OD’s may have plateau, but they have done so at a 18 yr high, while opiate Rxs are at a 18 yr low. So we have to reduce opiate Rxs by 28% to get the OD’s to plateau. You notice that there is no ONE WORD about the legit use of opiates and/or the pts that have a legit need for opiates on a long term/chronic basis.
Other countries have more than TWO VALID POLITICAL PARTIES – why have we been stuck with a two party system since Lincoln was President ? Something to think about ???
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Dog in Illinois requires pain pills for horrific mange infection, rescue center says
Dog in Illinois requires pain pills for horrific mange infection, rescue center says
A rescue center in Monmouth, Illinois, claims a dog with a severe case of mange requires pain pills to manage the agonizing skin infection.
The dog, named Mickey, and his companion, Missy, are two recent additions to Wair Rescue. Both were found covered in mange, which is caused by parasitic mites.
But for Mickey, “it’s the worst we’ve ever seen, and the worst the vet has ever seen,” Dan Porter, president of Wair Rescue, told Fox 6.
“He’s literally bleeding from his skin,” he added.
Porter claims the dog requires a pain pill prescription to manage the infection.
On Facebook, the group wrote Mickey “barely has a spot you can pet him that he doesn’t hurt.”
“These dogs would not have survived at the county animal control,” Porter said of Mickey and Missy, possibly red heelers. “It’s not that they don’t care, they just don’t have the around the clock support that we do.”
That said, Mickey is expected to recover in full after a couple of months of medical treatment.
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DNA tests help Denver man, his pharmacist choose best medication
https://kdvr.com/2018/12/11/dna-tests-help-denver-man-doctors-choose-best-medication/
DENVER — This holiday season, many people are buying genetic testing kits as gifts. But there is a kind of DNA test that tells you how you may respond to different medications and how they are metabolized.
There are many different companies offering this kind of pharmacogenomic tests. Most require a medical provider to order it for you, but the FDA just recently approved 23andMe to start offering it directly to consumers.
Steve Judy, from Denver, had a good experience using a test from OneOme that cost $350. The website says it analyzes your DNA to predict which medications and dosages may work best for you.
For 18 years, Steve had battled anxiety and low-level depression, taking a number of different medications while trying to find one that worked well without side effects.
“On the previous medicine, my energy just dipped,” he said.
So, he did a cheek swab and got the pharmacogenomic test. Alison Quinn, a pharmacist who specializes in genetics with Kaiser Permanente, interpreted the results. She found that Steve should not take a certain type of cholesterol medication and that the anti-depressant he had taken for five years was not recommended for him.
“So for him, having been on a number of different medications, and really struggling a lot, we were able to use this test to try to help him get on a better medication,” Quinn said.
The difference with another anti-depressant has been noticeable.
“My wife notices my mood, you know, much less anxious, much less nervous,” Judy said.
Additionally, his energy is back, and Steve is glad his change in medication was based on science rather than a lengthy trial-and-error process.
“This really accelerated the process and got me on the right track for the right medicine for me,” Judy said.
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The overdose problem – and a rise in suicides, another byproduct of the drug epidemic — is so pervasive it’s being blamed for a drop in U.S. life expectancy
This is the third of a three-part series on the nation’s struggle to address its crippling opioid crisis, and the unintended victims left in its wake. Read Part 2 here: Doctors caught between struggling opioid patients and crackdown on prescriptions
Many Americans today will attend several funerals before they get their first gray hair.
That’s in large part because of drug overdoses, now the leading cause of death among Americans aged 50 and younger. More than 70,000 people in the U.S. last year died from overdoses, most of which involved illegal opioids.
The overdose problem – and a rise in suicides, another byproduct of the drug epidemic — is so pervasive it’s being blamed for a drop in U.S. life expectancy.
The crisis has led to a rush of public health and law enforcement initiatives at all levels of government. The federal government has vowed to cut prescription opioids by a third. More than 30 states have passed some type of legislation aimed at attacking the opioid epidemic.
“Defeating this epidemic will require the commitment of every state, local, and federal agency,” President Donald Trump said in a March speech in New Hampshire. “Failure is not an option. Addiction is not our future. We will liberate our country from this crisis.”
We’re targeting the most vulnerable and sickest people who have been on opioids a long time.
The government response to the epidemic has many medical professionals, patients and their families welcoming the long overdue debate about the risks vs. benefits of opioid use. But it has also set off alarm bells for many of the millions of Americans with chronic pain who legally take opioids, under their doctor’s supervision, and are suffering a range of unintended consequences that have left them undertreated, ignored, and desperate for alternatives.
The root of the problem, according to dozens of pain patients, doctors, scholars, and others who spoke to Fox News for this story, are the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines for opioid prescribing that were issued in 2016. While the guidelines are credited with focusing attention on prescribing practices, critics say they’ve been adopted by too many as hard and fast rules that must be enforced across the board, rather than serve their intended advisory purposes.
“We’re targeting the most vulnerable and sickest people who have been on opioids a long time,” said Dr. Stefan Kertesz, an addiction specialist and professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine.
TOUGH NEW OPIOID POLICIES LEAVE SOME CANCER AND POST-SURGERY PATIENTS WITHOUT PAINKILLERS
Striking the right balance between getting control of the overdose epidemic and protecting access to treatment that brings relief to pain sufferers is a public health imperative.
The failure to do so threatens to exact a heavy price on the tens of millions of Americans whose pain is severe and disabling, and who are not driving the drug overdose epidemic.
Neglect of this large population of patients has the potential to prompt many to seek illegal opioids, or to become another statistic in the crisis of the rising U.S. suicide rate. Some have told Fox News that they have traveled, or plan to go to another country to obtain prescription opioids from doctors or pharmacies — a risky move for manifold reasons.
So what’s the solution? Medical professionals, patients and others familiar with the opioid crisis and the fallout from the government crackdown have offered a variety of ideas.
RESETTING CDC GUIDELINES
Many believe the most urgent need is to address misunderstandings about the CDC guidelines. Clinicians and health experts say the CDC needs to make clear, in a high-profile way, what the guidelines were – and were not – meant to address. A letter signed by more than 300 health professionals, including former drug czars in the Clinton, Nixon and Obama administrations, calls on the CDC to examine the impact of the guidelines and publicly clarify them.
“Many doctors and regulators incorrectly believed that the CDC established a threshold of 90 MME as a de facto daily dose limit,” the letter said. “Soon, clinicians prescribing higher doses, pharmacists dispensing them, and patients taking them came under suspicion.”
The letter said that because the guidelines do not offer alternative pain care options, “patients have endured not only unnecessary suffering, but some have turned to suicide or illicit substance use. Others have experienced preventable hospitalizations or medical deterioration.”
The letter added: “We urge the CDC to issue a bold clarification…particularly on the matters of opioid taper and discontinuation.”
Richard A. Lawhern, a prominent advocate on behalf of chronic pain patients and co-founder of the Alliance for the Treatment of Intractable Pain, goes even further, suggesting the CDC should scrap its guidelines, and write new ones.
“The resulting document is fatally flawed,” Lawhern said, “and needs to be withdrawn for a major revision in an open public process by qualified experts in community practice for chronic pain treatment, assisted by representatives or advocates from chronic pain communities.”
CLARITY ON LEGAL PAINKILLERS
Many have acknowledged the need for better data about opioid use, on everything from the precise role that legal vs. illicit drugs have played in the national overdose crisis to more accurate information on the effect of dosage changes.
Over the summer, a U.S. Health and Human Services special task force on pain management formulated a draft report of recommendations for the guidelines and noted muddled data on deaths involving illegal opioids vs. prescribed drugs.
“The national crisis of illicit drug use along with overdose deaths are confused with the appropriate therapy of patients who are being treated for pain,” the draft report said. “This confusion has created a stigma that contributes to barriers to proper access to care.”
Federal data on overdose deaths generally do not offer specific statistics on how many involved patients who were prescribed opioids, though other data – such those compiled by states – indicate they account for a small minority.
AS DOCTORS TAPER OR END OPIOID PRESCRIPTIONS, MANY PATIENTS DRIVEN TO DESPAIR, SUICIDE
In November, a data and software company serving emergency medical services, fire departments and hospitals, released national opioid overdose data based on approximately 15,000 records collected between January and October of this year, and found that 94 percent of opioid overdoses involved illicit drugs, with only 4 percent being prescribed.
But that hasn’t stopped political leaders from developing policies and initiatives around cutting prescriptions as well as the supply of opioids. Trump vowed to cut opioid prescriptions by 30 percent over three years.
And many state and government officials are boasting about opioid prescription reductions, giving a misleading impression, Kertesz said, that progress is taking place in the drug overdose epidemic.
The [CDC opioid guideline] document is fatally flawed and needs to be withdrawn for a major revision in an open public process by qualified experts in community practice for chronic pain treatment, assisted by representatives or advocates from chronic pain communities.
Many medical groups and health researchers also are calling for the CDC to address the fallout – such as reports of pain patients suffering withdrawals — from misguided implementation of its guidelines.
Kertesz, a lead author of the letter to the CDC, said that the many anecdotal reports of suicides and suicidal plans coming from pain patients who are being undertreated or cut off by doctors must be studied by the agency.
“It’s a large number of anecdotes,” he said, adding that if forcibly tapering or cutting off patients from opioids is leading to suicidal thoughts, “who will stand up to defend that policy, would we be ethically comfortable with that?”
The American Medical Association (AMA) recently released a resolution critical of the CDC guidelines that said: “We urge the CDC to follow through with its commitment to evaluate the impact by consulting directly with a wide range of patients and caregivers, and by engaging epidemiologic experts to investigate reported suicides, increases in illicit opioid use and, to the extent possible, expressions of suicidal ideation following involuntary opioid taper or discontinuation.”
In an interview with Fox News in 2017, Richard Baum, then-acting director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, said the dialogue about the opioid epidemic has been misleading.
“This is framed as an opioid epidemic. But when you look under the hood at the report of people who overdose on fentanyl and heroin, they often have other drugs on board – cocaine, methamphetamine, other pharmaceuticals,” Baum said. “So we have a multi-drug threat that’s complicated. It means people often aren’t using [just] heroin, fentanyl, they’re also using cocaine.”
“Sometimes we inadvertently simplify it,” Baum said, “[saying] that it’s only one drug that’s causing the problem, but a lot of drug users use multiple drugs so we absolutely have to focus and are focusing on heroin and fentanyl and the opioids as the number one threat.”
LOOKING BEYOND DOSAGES
Health experts say the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and state authorities must not be so narrowly focused on quantity and dosage when looking at prescribers who might require disciplinary action.
“No entity should use [morphine milligram equivalent] – thresholds as anything more than guidance, and physicians should not be subject to professional discipline, loss of board certification, loss of clinical privileges, criminal prosecution, civil liability, or other penalties or practice limitations solely for prescribing opioids at a quantitative level above the MME thresholds found in the CDC Guidelines for Prescribing Opioids,” according to the AMA.
The DEA and other authorities told Fox News they are judicious when taking action against prescribers, stressing the number who face punitive measures are just a small part of the more than 1 million registered with the agency to handle controlled substances.
Ronald Chapman II, a Michigan attorney who represents doctors accused of overprescribing, said sometimes a prescribing problem doesn’t rise to the level of a crime, and should be addressed administratively. Many prescribers trigger so-called “red flags” by errors or omissions in pain patients’ medical records, he said, and shouldn’t automatically be treated as sinister.
“We have a lot of hammers out there looking for a nail,” Chapman said.
Physicians should not be subject to professional discipline, loss of board certification, loss of clinical privileges, criminal prosecution, civil liability, or other penalties or practice limitations solely for prescribing opioids at a quantitative level above the MME thresholds found in the CDC Guidelines for Prescribing Opioids.
John Martin, the DEA’s administrator of the Diversion Control Division, said his agency has taken steps to reach out to pharmacists and clarify how investigators go about opening cases.
“I’m sure there are doctors … out there that are afraid” to prescribe opioids now, Martin said, “but that’s part of our responsibility in communication. We had that issue with pharmacists over the years.”
Martin said DEA officials have met with more than 15,000 pharmacists and pharmacy technicians “to educate them on proper prescribing on the regulations, diversion and so forth.”
Martin said the agency is undertaking a similar effort aimed at doctors.
“We’re making them aware of what we’re actually looking for, so ways that they can reduce diversion and education so they understand the different regulations out there, what they can and can’t do,” he said.
But when prescribers are targeted by authorities, sometimes they lose access to their patients’ medical records, and either are forced to stop treating them because they lose their controlled substance prescribing rights or their medical license through suspension or revocation. Often, their patients are left to scramble, with nothing to fill the void of a doctor taken out of commission, and an abrupt loss of a medical treatment plan. Pain patient advocacy groups, and health care experts, say that authorities undertaking an investigation or disciplinary action must have a plan in place for patients who are under the care of such health care providers.
Health professionals also argue that regulators and law enforcement authorities must stay in their lane, so to speak, and not interfere in the doctor-patient relationship in an effort to address the largely illegal opioid crisis.
“The key is to get the government out of medicine entirely,” said Dr. Kenneth W. Fogelberg, who specializes in obstetrics and gyneacology. “Let the politicians and lawyers do what they do and let us practice medicine. We have licenses and DEA certificates and most of us know what we’re doing.”
“In 2006, we were required to take a course in pain management. The thrust of the course was that we were underprescribing and our patients were in pain. If a patient said she had pain I was expected, by the patient and the hospital nurse, to medicate. If I did not, I was written up. She might be sitting in bed reading a comic book but, if she said, ‘my pain is an 8’ (out of 10) she was to be medicated.”
“Now, MDs are blamed for overprescribing,” Fogelberg said. “Pain is subjective and I only can judge by what a patient tells me, but we are pretty good at separating legitimate pain from drug-seeking behavior. If the governments, both state and local, would let doctors doctor, we could handle this, but with their insatiable thirst for control of everything, the situation just keeps getting worse.”
MORE RESEARCH ON RISKS – AND BENEFITS
Most health experts agree more studies are needed on the effectiveness and dangers of opioid use.
“In medical school in the 1990s, it was taught that dosage does not matter if you go up slowly,” Dr. Deborah Dowell, lead author of the CDC guidelines, told Fox News. “Now we know there is an increased risk of opioid overdose.”
In an editorial in the “Annals of Internal Medicine,” Dowell noted “little evidence has been available to help weigh the benefits and harms of reducing or discontinuing opioids in patients already receiving long-term therapy or to guide clinicians in how to taper opioids safely and effectively.”
Other agencies, such as the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), are moving ahead with their own guidelines on opioid prescribing and pain management. In August, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb referred to the CDC guidelines as a commendable initial step, and said that his agency was working on developing evidence-based guidelines that would look at opioid prescribing.
In a rare acknowledgment of the depth of desperation among pain patients whose long-time opioid treatment had been abruptly cut down or cut off, Gottlieb expressed concern about suicides.
“In select patients and for certain medical conditions, opioids may be the only drugs that provide relief from devastating pain,” Gottlieb said in a statement on the agency’s website. “We’ve heard from some of these patients, and listened carefully to their concerns about having continued access to necessary pain medication. We’ve heard their fear of being stigmatized as a person with addiction, and the challenges they face in finding health care professionals willing to work with patients with chronic pain.”
“Tragically, we know that for some patients, loss of quality of life due to crushing pain has resulted in increased thoughts of or actual suicide,” Gottlieb said. “This is unacceptable.”
Little evidence has been available to help weigh the benefits and harms of reducing or discontinuing opioids in patients already receiving long-term therapy or to guide clinicians in how to taper opioids safely and effectively.
And this fall, Trump signed into law a bipartisan measure that calls on the FDA to assess “existing opioid…guidelines, examine how these guidelines were developed and any potential gap” in data.
Some experts say more should be done in the classroom to help better educate health professionals on treating pain.
“We have to look at our culture and attitude toward people with pain – and people with addiction – but mostly with pain,” said Dr. Lynn Webster, former president of the American Academy of Pain Medicine and author of “The Painful Truth: What Chronic Pain Is Really Like and Why It Matters to Each of Us.” “In our medical schools, there are less than seven hours on average of education about pain. Even though it affects more people than any other problem, it is the number one public health problem. But we’ve spent little on research to try to find a solution to this. We need to make pain and addiction a core of our medical education curriculum.”
RESEARCH INTO NON-OPIOID ALTERNATIVES
Webster has called for major funding in alternative pain treatment, which could offer relief with fewer risks and side effects. There’s also a need for quicker treatments for patients in urgent need of relief.
Stricter pre-authorization policies for prescription and non-opioid treatments, such as physical therapy, many times mean delays that leave patients in pain.
Several physicians told Fox News they’ve had to wait several days, or longer, for prescription pre-authorization. They also said there is much more paperwork required now in connection to pain management, leaving more room for error and, by extension, more potential for red flags that could lead to disciplinary action.
Most people interviewed by Fox News agreed there should be a concerted move toward a multi-faceted, more comprehensive way to treat pain. And, they stressed, because severe, unrelenting pain can lead to anxiety and depression, mental health must be an important part of treating the condition.
DOCTORS CAUGHT BETWEEN STRUGGLING OPIOID PATIENTS AND CRACKDOWN ON PRESCRIPTIONS
“There is a lack of multidisciplinary physicians and other health care providers who specialize in pain,” the AMA noted. “These physicians and other health care providers include pain specialists, addiction psychiatrists, psychologists, pharmacists, and others who are trained to be a part of the pain management team.”
Among the AMA recommendations was “Expand graduate medical residency positions to train in pain specialties including adult pain specialists, pediatric pain specialists, behavioral health providers, pain psychologists, and addiction psychiatrists,” and “expand availability of non-physician specialists including, but not limited to, physical therapists, psychologists, and behavioral health specialists.”
Some physicians and pain patients would like to see medical marijuana legalized in more states, and on the federal level. Military veterans who get their medical treatment from Veterans Administration health facilities say that even if they reside in states where cannabis is legal for health reasons, they cannot get a prescription because it is not legal on a federal level.
“My patients have benefitted by many opiate alternatives,” said Montana-based Dr. Mark Ibsen, who stopped prescribing opioids after running into trouble with state medical officials and the DEA over allegations, which he said were untrue, that he was unjustifiably giving high doses to pain patients. “Eighty percent of my patients on opiates got off with cannabis.”
Ibsen, whose license was reinstated, and who was never charged, said: “The key is to create a context for healing, which empowers the patient to interact with pain and their life in the most effective manner possible, and let go of what no longer works.”
Dr. Daniel Alford, the associate dean at Boston University’s School of Medicine’s Office of Continuing Medical Education, is on a mission to ensure that the next generation of doctors are better equipped to make decisions about safe opioid prescribing.
“We’ve been over-reliant, too opioid-centric in terms of our prescribing for chronic pain,” Alford said. “Opioids shouldn’t be the first choice, they should really be the last choice. But if opioids are to be prescribed, how do you do it in a way that maximizes risk to that patient. We should try to minimize dose escalation.”
A prioirty, Alford said, is to improve the patient’s quality of life.
“It’s important to acknowledge and appreciate a person’s pain, for them it’s real,” Alford said. “Until we have some method to say ‘This is exactly where [the] pain is, our responsibility is to say ‘I believe you.'”
Most of the time, he said, there’s “zero percent risk” of being deceived by the patient.
“Based on their risk profile, to the best of your ability, you think about what treatment is best for them,” he said.
If tapering is necessary, “I’m going to taper over a long period of time, I’m going to try to keep the patient engaged and I’m going to try to do what’s really really hard, I’m going to try to get the patient into other forms of treatment,” Alford said, adding that multi-modal treatment plans, combining medication and other therapy, often are successful.
But the approach won’t go very far if insurers won’t cover non-opioid or multidisciplinary treatments, health experts said.
“Insurance won’t pay for many evidence-based treatments,” said Michael Schatman, a clinical psychologist who runs Boston Pain Care, which uses an array of programs – including exercise, psychotherapy as well as prescription painkillers—to treat pain. “My program loses money every year.”
“Some patients need to be tapered, some need to be taken off opioids, they’re not good for everyone, but there’s a void because of our health care system,” he said.
At Boston Pain Care, patients go through multiple treatments simultaneously. Shatman claims it is more effective than the status quo approach, which often involves trying one treatment, perhaps two, which may not work. Often, patients are pressed to try different therapies, one at a time, until one offers some improvement.
“Sequential pain management is an incredible failure,” Schatman said. “As long as we have a for-profit insurance agency, it’s not going to get much better. We’re seeing the devolution of the profession of pain medicine to the business of pain medicine.”
MORE DIVERSE VOICES IN DISCUSSIONS ABOUT SOLUTIONS
The debate over opioids and pain management has become emotional, with the overdose crisis and the dearth of reliable data fanning the flames.
Some of the leading voices on different sides of the debate are calling for unity toward working on finding solutions to both pain management and the overdose crisis.
Schatman said he would like to see health experts who are firmly opposed to opioids sit at a table with peers who are supportive of them as a beneficial treatment and bat around ideas.
Many pain experts and health researchers say that committees for agencies such as CDC should include specialists in pain and pain patients.
Dr. Stephen Gelfand, a rheumatology consultant from South Carolina, was quoted in OpioidInstitute.org saying that forced tapering is concerning. But, he added, “there is also a significant percentage of these patients who actually have the disease of addiction and need addiction treatment services including medication-assisted therapy.”
And so, he said, “we also need to have victim advocates who have survived and overcome the scourges of addiction as the result of opioid overprescribing to sit on these patient advisory boards at every level of decision-making.”
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Trump: Pledge to Leave Social Security, Medicare Untouched – does this cover meds being cut/limited
Trump Doubles Down on Controversial Pledge to Leave Social Security, Medicare Untouched
President Trump delivered his first speech Tuesday night to a joint session of Congress, discussing his budget blueprint for the coming fiscal year which includes a $54 billion increase in defense spending, a large cut in funding for the Environmental Protection Agency– and “no changes” to Social Security and Medicare.
As of January, 66 million Americans were receiving Social Security, Supplemental Security Income payments, or both, according to the program’s website. As of 2015, there were 55.5 million Medicare beneficiaries, according to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
Meanwhile, the annual Social Security Trustees Report Opens a New Window. shows that by 2034, under current funding levels, Social Security will only be able to pay about 79% of promised benefits to recipients. After 2035, if left unchanged, the program will be able to deliver just 77% of benefits. The Trustees Report estimates Medicare “Part A,” or hospital insurance, will be officially bankrupt by 2028.
While Trump is following through on his campaign promise to leave entitlements untouched, his decision is likely to provoke ire among some fiscal budget watchers.
“It is utterly irresponsible to continue ducking the need for entitlement reform,” Michael Tanner, senior fellow at the Cato Institute, told FOX Business. “Medicare and Social Security alone constitute 38 percent of federal spending, and that percentage will only grow larger in the future. The unfunded liabilities of those two programs exceed $80 trillion.”
While Tanner says Trump is “playing to his base” by leaving entitlements unreformed, it could put him at odds with GOP leadership.
During an interview with Fox News in November, House Speaker Paul Ryan said “Obamacare rewrote Medicare, rewrote Medicaid, so if you’re going to repeal and replace Obamacare, you have to address those issues as well.”
In fact, Paul Ryan’s “Better Way” healthcare policy package included sweeping Medicare reforms, going so far as to propose overhauling the entire system into a “premium support” model; a fixed input for each beneficiary to purchase private insurance.
Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, who formerly chaired the House Budget Committee, said in November Republicans could use the budgetary process of reconciliation to begin reforming Medicare by summer, prior to being tapped for his new role.
In December 2016, Rep. Sam Johnson (R-TX), Chairman of the Social Security Subcommittee on the House Ways and Means Committee, introduced a bill to cut Social Security benefits, which Johnson told the Washington Examiner he hoped would serve as a starting point for reform discussions. So far, the proposal has been met with both praise and criticism.
Is the cutting/limiting of pain management meds and some other controlled meds…. for Medicare folks… TRUMP is breaking his pledge to leave MEDICARE UNTOUCHED ? Because the meds are covered under Medicare Part D & Medicare Advantage !
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One suspect hit a pharmacist over the head with a gun
Police need help identifying three suspects from Harrisburg pharmacy robbery
Harrisburg police need help identifying three suspects they say got away with around 2000 hydrocodone pills in a pharmacy robbery on Saturday.
Officers were dispatched to the Rite Aid at 2103 N Third Street around 4:53 p.m. Saturday, for a report of a robbery.
Employees told police three people came into the store, with one staying at the front and the other two going to the pharmacy and jumping the counter, police said. One suspect hit a pharmacist over the head with a gun.
One robber demanded a pharmacist provide “Oxys,” but the pharmacist told the robbers they had none. Instead, the pharmacist gave the robber “around 2000 hydrocodone pills,” police said.
All three then fled the store, police said. A pharmacist suffered a minor injury to the back of his head, police said. There were about ten customers in the store at the time of the robbery.
All three suspects were wearing gloves, masks and carried firearms, police said.
The first robber was described by police as wearing a dark jacket, ripped and faded jeans and sky-blue Nike shoes with a white sole and white “Swoosh” symbol.
The second robber was described as wearing a dark jacket, ripped jeans and black and white running shoes.
The third robber was described as wearing a black short-sleeve T-shirt over a white long-sleeve T-shirt, black pants and black shoes.
Dauphin County Crime Stoppers is offering up to a $2,000 reward for information that leads to successful prosecution of the case.
Anyone with information is asked to call Harrisburg Bureau of Police at 717-255-3118, or submit a tip through Crimewatch.
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