Harris County Attorney Vince Ryan said the lawsuit is seeking to prevent the group named in the lawsuit from selling opioids

Harris County sues drugmakers, doctors over opioid epidemic

https://www.click2houston.com/news/harris-county-to-sue-drug-makers-doctors-over-opioid-epidemic

Ryan said that the those named in the lawsuit put profits above the public good when advertising and prescribing the powerful painkillers. He said lies, half-truths and deception were used to foster the use of the drugs.

The doctors named in the lawsuit by Dallas defense attorneys have already had criminal charges filed against them, Ryan said.

DOCUMENT: View a copy of the lawsuit

Ryan said the lawsuit is seeking to prevent the group named in the lawsuit from selling opioids. He said it also seeks monetary damages and fines to be assessed.

Other defendants could be added as the county’s investigation continue, Ryan said.

Things to know about Harris County opioid lawsuit

  • 21 drug makers & distributors are named in the lawsuit by Law Office of Glenn C. McGovern.
  • Two of the national distributors named in the lawsuit have offices in the Houston area. The McKesson Corporation and Cardinal Health.
  • Harris County says it’s been forced to use all of its limited resources to address & deal with the opioid epidemic, across the board, from the criminal justice system side to the medical side. 
  • In Harris County, in 2015, 318 deaths were directly attributed to opioid overdoses. 
  • Harris County Attorney Vince Ryan or lawyers for wrongful death cases is asking all of the agencies within Harris County to look at the costs they’ve incurred as a result of the opioid epidemic. 
  • Additional defendants could be added to the lawsuit as the county’s investigation continues. 
  • The Harris County Attorney’s office is working closely with law enforcement and the District Attorney’s office who is prosecuting the results of criminal activity related to the opioid epidemic.  Help From David C. Hardaway criminal justice attorneys help will help in criminal cases.
  • Pharmaceutical companies make upwards of $10 billion a year on opioids, according to the county attorney. 

  It is estimated that the drug cartels generate 100 billion/yr in illegal drugs sales. So is this attorney going after the “smaller fish” – ones that provide FDA approved legal opiates thru legal channels –  in the opiate crisis… because they have better paper trails because of their DEA licenses and assets that the attorney can attach/seize more readily… unlike the cartels that are based outside of the USA ? Isn’t this the same methodology that bullies use… pick on the person that they can “readily beat up” with little chance of consequences ?

The First Count of Fentanyl Deaths in 2016: Up 540% in Three Years

Drug overdoses killed roughly 64,000 people in the United States last year, according to the first governmental account of nationwide drug deaths to cover all of 2016. It’s a staggering rise of more than 22 percent over the 52,404 drug deaths recorded the previous year — and even higher than The New York Times’s estimate in June, which was based on earlier preliminary data.

Drug overdoses are expected to remain the leading cause of death for Americans under 50, as synthetic opioids — primarily fentanyl and its analogues — continue to push the death count higher. Drug deaths involving fentanyl more than doubled from 2015 to 2016, accompanied by an upturn in deaths involving cocaine and methamphetamine. Together they add up to an epidemic of drug overdoses that is killing people at a faster rate than the H.I.V. epidemic at its peak.

 
Note: Data for 2016 is provisional.

This is the first national data to break down the growth by drug and by state. We’ve known for a while that fentanyls were behind the growing count of drug deaths in some states and counties. But now we can see the extent to which this is true nationally, as deaths involving synthetic opioids, mostly fentanyls, have risen to more than 20,000 from 3,000 in just three years.

Total U.S. drug deaths

Deaths involving prescription opioids continue to rise, but many of those deaths also involved heroin, fentanyl or a fentanyl analogue.

There is a downward trend in deaths from prescription opioids alone.

At the same time, there has been a resurgence in cocaine and methamphetamine deaths. Many of these also involve opioids, but a significant portion of drug deaths — roughly one-third in 2015 — do not.

The explosion in fentanyl deaths and the persistence of widespread opioid addiction have swamped local and state resources. Communities say their budgets are being strained by the additional needs — for increased police and medical care, for widespread naloxone distribution and for a stronger foster care system that can handle the swelling number of neglected or orphaned children.

Drug overdose deaths per 100,000 residents in 2015 and 2016

Of the 21 states that reported the highest quality data for 2016, the steepest rises were in Delaware, Florida and Maryland.

Note: Deaths were coded based on where the death occurred rather than residency.

It’s an epidemic hitting different parts of the country in different ways. People are accustomed to thinking of the opioid crisis as a rural white problem, with accounts of Appalachian despair and the plight of New England heroin addicts. But fentanyls are changing the equation: The death rate in Maryland last year outpaced that in both Kentucky and Maine.

This provisional data, compiled by the National Center for Health Statistics, was produced in response to requests from government officials after reporting from The Times in June. An early version of the report was posted online last month and will be formally published by the N.C.H.S. in the coming weeks. According to Robert Anderson, the agency’s chief of mortality statistics, the document is the first edition of what will be a monthly report on the latest provisional overdose death counts.

Because of delays in drug death reporting, the data is mostly but not entirely complete. The final numbers, released in December, could be even higher.

It’s too early to know what 2017 will hold, but anecdotal reports from state health departments and county coroners and medical examiners suggest that the overdose epidemic has continued to worsen. In March, President Trump created a commission to study the crisis. The commission’s interim report made a number of recommendations, but the administration has yet to take concrete action on any of them.

Data for 2016 is provisional and includes a small number of deaths from residents of other states (for the state data) or other countries. Some categories in the national chart include closely related drugs in addition to the named drug. (For example, “fentanyl” includes both fentanyl and fentanyl analogues as well as other synthetic opioids.) “Prescription opioids” excludes synthetic opioids. Categories are not mutually exclusive because deaths often involve multiple drugs. A small portion of the increase in deaths attributable to a specific drug may be due to improved cause-of-death reporting.

malpractice lawyer in New Jersey

If you need a malpractice lawyer in New Jersey, the man to call is Raymond Gill 655 Florida Grove Road, Woodbridge, NJ Phone:732-324-7600 He is WICKED ASS GOOD!

Genetic Study Defies ‘One-size-fits-all’ Approach to Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain

FAU Investigator Receives $4 Million NIH Grant for Novel Prescription Opioid Study

https://www.newswise.com/articles/view/686700/

Newswise — It impacts 100 million Americans, it is the number one reason that people go to see the doctor, and it is now a national crisis. The problem: chronic pain and prescription opioids. The dilemma: how to provide the most effective pain treatment for 80 percent of pain patients who are at least risk for addiction while causing the least harm to the remaining 20 percent who are at most risk. The solution: it’s very complicated, but it may be possible to address both problems without adversely affecting either.

Opioids (morphine, Oxycontin, Viocodin), which can lead to increased risk of addiction, have been the mainstay of treatment for moderate to severe pain for decades. The challenge is that their effects on patients vary tremendously. Prescription opioid-use disorder affects about 2 million Americans each year and is the number one cause of accidental death. Right now, attempts to prevent opioid use disorder focus mainly on reining in prescription practices, which is problematic.

A researcher from Florida Atlantic University’s Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine has received a five-year, $4 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to help solve the “one-size-fits-all” approach to prescribing opioids for chronic pain. Because of the high heritability, finding the genetic predictors of prescription opioid use disorder is more critical than ever. Currently, little data exists on clinical characteristics and genetic variants that confer risk for opioid use disorder.

In a novel study, Janet Robishaw, Ph.D., professor and chair within the Department of Biomedical Science in FAU’s College of Medicine, and colleagues from Geisinger Health System and the University of Pennsylvania, are assessing clinical and genetic characteristics of a large patient cohort suffering from chronic musculoskeletal pain and receiving prescription opioids. As part of the DiscovEHR project, they have leveraged data from Geisinger’s central biorepository and electronic health record (EHR) database to conduct large-scale genomics research and phenotype development.

With this information, this multidisciplinary team will derive a clinical and genetic profile of prescription opioid-use disorder and use this knowledge to develop an “addiction risk score.” Findings from this study will be key for identifying those who are at low-risk for opioid use disorder from those who are at high-risk and who need additional counseling and access to other treatment options.

“The overall goal of this project is figuring out if there is a unique genetic signature of patients who are most susceptible to addiction,” said Robishaw. “In the first part of our study, we are looking at the clinical characteristics of these patients to understand the cause of their pain and how prescription opioids are affecting their outcomes.”

As part of this initial process, the investigative team composed of Robishaw, Wade H. Berrettini, M.D., Ph.D., Karl E. Rickels professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania, and Vanessa Troiani, Ph.D., assistant professor at Geisinger, are administering questionnaires that will give them additional information on the patients’ pain phenotype as well as whether or not they’re showing symptomology of prescription opioid-use disorder. It will take them about two years to analyze the data to divide the patient population into cases and controls in order to complete a genome-wide association study, which is the second part of the research project.

The genome-wide association study will help the researchers determine if there is a particular subset of genes and genetic variants that are influencing susceptibility to becoming addicted to prescription opioids. Once they are able to generate the hypothesis that a genetic variant is responsible for increasing risk, the next steps for research will involve functional studies on those top associations to prove causation.

“There is an urgent need to develop clinical, genetic and neural characteristics of patients who are at moderate- to high-risk of becoming addicted to prescription opioids,” said Phillip Boiselle, M.D., dean of FAU’s College of Medicine. “The National Institutes of Health grant awarded to Dr. Robishaw and her collaborators will help them to identify the genetic factors that increase the risk of addiction in patients, which then become targets for new drug development.”

The investigative team stresses the importance of using a multipronged approach to addressing this national crisis, which should involve research, education and engaging patients so that they understand their susceptibility to risks and empower them in their health care decisions.

“Prescription opioid-use disorder is a lifelong problem that requires a thoughtful approach that is not going to be solved just by curtailing prescriptions of these narcotics,” said Robishaw. “We have to employ more rigorous prescribing practices and provide alternative treatments for moderate to severe pain that don’t involve opioids. And, we need to improve access to medication-assisted therapy for those patients already dependent on prescription opioids. Currently, only 7 percent of patients with prescription opioid-use disorder have access to such treatments and this is because of a variety of reasons like costs and availability of these services.”

The DRUG CRISIS … they don’t talk about.. because docs don’t prescribe it ?

Record number of meth users died in San Diego County last year

http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/public-safety/sd-me-meth-stats-20171212-story.html

More than a decade after a full-scale assault on methamphetamine production in San Diego County, the drug is continuing to ravage the region, killing a record number of users last year and hooking more than half of adults who end up in jail, according to a report released this week by the county’s Methamphetamine Strike Force.

The drug was linked to 377 deaths last year in the county — 66 more than the previous year.

“The trend line is very alarming and continues to head in the wrong direction,” county Supervisor Dianne Jacob said in a statement.

Rather than the sudden overdoses often seen with the opioid epidemic, meth is typically a slow killer.

Many of the people dying are middle-aged, long-term addicts who’ve developed other health complications, said Nick Macchione, director of the county Health and Human Services Agency.

Even though meth isn’t cooked in home labs here anymore — largely a result of laws that restrict access to precursor chemicals — the data show addicts are having little trouble accessing it.

The drug is now produced in mass quantities in cartel “superlabs” in Mexico and smuggled across the Southwest border — particularly in San Diego County, where a significant portion hits local streets before the rest moves on to other parts of the country.

Last year, 47 percent of all meth seizures along the border were in the county, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

Plus, San Diego meth is cheap — $250 to $450 an ounce last year compared to as much as $600 an ounce in 2015 — and incredibly pure. Nationwide, average purity levels last year tested above 90 percent per gram, according to the DEA.

The high purity and low cost indicate an oversupply in Mexico.

The drug cartels have also been able to adapt to stricter restrictions on precursor chemicals traditionally needed to make meth — first in the U.S. and now in China — by coming up with new techniques and formulations, according to the DEA.

The report also draws a strong link between methamphetamine and crime, showing 56 percent of adult arrestees booked into county jails tested positive for the drug last year. That’s compared to 49 percent in 2015.

The trend continued on a much smaller scale for juvenile arrestees — with 14 percent testing positive compared to 8 percent the previous year.

Both felony and misdemeanor arrests and citations for selling or possessing meth are also up, from 6,849 to 8,428 last year.

Another trend has emerged: Meth is involved in 20 percent of adult abuse cases reported to Adult Protective Services — mostly meth-using adult children victimizing their parents, according to the report.

Meth’s troubling trajectory in the region comes as attention has drifted to battling the nationwide opioid and prescription drug crisis. The Strike Force report stresses that more is needed to bring the meth story back into focus.

That wasn’t hard to do back in the mid-90s, when the Strike Force was established at a time San Diego was unofficially dubbed the “Meth Capital of the World.” But the county might now be fatigued on the issue, after hearing about it for so many years, Angela Goldberg, who works as the group’s facilitator, said in an interview earlier this year.

Besides greater public awareness, the Strike Force urges greater drug screening in older adults, wrap around treatment services to get addicts and their families into recovery, and continued use of intervention courts to treat underlying problems.

“Sending addicts to jail or prison without addressing their addiction problems does not solve the drug problem in our community,” District Attorney Summer Stephan said in a statement.

Have you noticed that the DEA is really not too interested in going after meth distribution… you see there is a legal prescription meth (DESOXYN) and it is indicated for ADD/ADHD.. and very few prescribers use it.. SO… there are very few prescribers that the DEA has to build a fake case against to seize their assets using Civil Asset Forfeiture Law.. since all the people ODing on meth is being imported from Mexico and ILLEGAL.. Just like most everything else… just have to follow the MONEY TRAIL

Happy Hanukkah

Dr Tennant Legal Defense Fund

https://www.gofundme.com/dr-tennant-legal-defence-fund

Forest Tennant, MD, DrPH, is an internist who specializes in the research and treatment of intractable chronic pain. Dr. Tennant has operated a pain clinic in West Covina, California for over 40 years, and has authored over 300 scientific articles and books on pain management.

Dr. Tennant is revered in the pain community because of his willingness to treat patients from around the country who have been abandoned by other doctors or have complex conditions such as arachnoiditis that are difficult to treat.

In November 2017, DEA agents raided the home and offices of Dr. Tennant, using a search warrant that alleged he was part of a drug trafficking organization and running a pill mill. The allegations would be laughable if they weren’t so serious and reflect a fundamental lack of knowledge about Dr. Tennant’s practice. Many of his patients require high doses of opioids and other medications, and would die without them.

Dr. Tennant has not been charged with a crime, but he deserves to have the best legal representation possible to defend himself and his reputation. There is legal help in case needed and one can find this info here helpful.

Please consider a donation to Dr. Tennant’s defense fund. Lives depend on keeping this good man in practice.

All I Want For Christmas Is For People Not To Hurt

https://www.acsh.org/news/2017/12/12/all-i-want-christmas-people-not-hurt-12271

I could never have imagined that I would ever see the cruelty that is now being inflicted upon pain patients – people who have to live their lives under conditions that are so horrible that the rest of us can’t possibly fathom the level of suffering they must endure.

It was bad enough a decade ago when chronic pain patients had two choices, both bad: 1) powerful opiate drugs, which can be very unpleasant to take in larger doses and have addiction potential (1) or 2) suffer from intractable pain that can be so bad that they become housebound. Suicide is not uncommon. And all of this was going on before our government fabricated a war against an unfortunate and powerless group of people under the faulty premise that it would diminish the devastating outbreak of overdose deaths from fentanyl and heroin that now claims tens of thousands of lives every year. (2) 

If this meant withholding or forcibly cutting back doses of opiates from people suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, spondylosis or chronic neuropathic pain (to name a few) so what? They’ll get by on Advil, yoga or acupuncture (3). I firmly believe that the CDC, DEA, politicians, and NGOs which all stood to gain from this phony war, knew damn well that their “war” was based on false information, something I have written about countless times. This is even worse than ignorance. They knew and just didn’t care.

So now we live in a pharmaceutical police state where doctors are prosecuted for caring for pain patients, and state laws set arbitrary (and scientifically bogus) daily limits on opiate doses, regardless of whether the pain patient has been doing “well” on these doses, sometimes for decades. 

What I want for Christmas is to give back whatever relief pain patients had access to before our own version of Kristallnacht hit them. Leave them and their doctors alone. They didn’t cause the problem.

And just for good measure, let’s leave a lump of coal in the stockings of the CDC, DEA, and Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing (PROP). Or maybe a turd for PROP.

NOTES:

(1) As I have written many times, one review after another has concluded that addiction of pain patients to opiates is rare, estimates ranging from 0.26% to 10%, mostly on the lower end. Pain management physicians who I have interviewed unanimously agree that addiction of pain patients is rare. There is a very big difference between dependence and addiction. And good luck finding a pain management physicians. They are fleeing in droves.

(2) It did no such thing. Opiate prescriptions are down. Total deaths are up. By a lot. 

(3) Here’s how bad this has gotten. The FDA has suggested that physicians learn about acupuncture as an alternative to drugs in pain management, despite the fact that it has been thoroughly debunked. (“Do You Believe in Magic?: The Sense and Nonsense of Alternative Medicine.” Paul Offit, M.D., Harper Collins, 2013)

 

 

And they wonder why insurance premiums and cost of Medicare/Medicaid is UP…UP…UP… ?

When my mate picked up this month’s prescriptions for me the pharmacy tech told him they will not dispense any of my pain pills next month unless I talk to the pharmacist about NarCan injectors!
I just got off the phone from talking to the pharmacist – this asinine requirement comes from the lunatic Kansas Legislature over-reacting to the mis-perceived ‘opioid crisis’ – which is a black market issue rather than a prescibed medicine problem.
If I CHOOSE to refuse to purchase the over-priced and totally unneeded injectors it will be entered into my permanent government-mandated official opioid record.
I did manage to get the pharmacy to agree to enter it as “Refused as an unnecessary and excessive cost.”
I am guessing I may have just put my Medicaid-covered pain pills in jeopardy.


I had to pick mine up also. I’m in Virginia but I was told by my doctors nurse he wouldn’t prescribe to me. I want her back in her own lane. When I asked her to refill another med and my husband picked it up she had called the Narcan in so it was ready also. My pain is so under treated now. I’m terrified of not having enough med through the holidays so I use it so sparingly. Wouldn’t I have revealed myself as an addict by now. I mean forget all my swollen red joints even with treatment they remain that way. Blood work with values that indicate both Lupus and RA…. when does this environment stop ???


I’m in Chicago and have been prescribed narcan for the past 2 years. Its 100% unnecessary. My insurance covers it at no cost to me so I just take it home and stick it in a drawer.


 

Chain Pharmacies: generating PROFITS … selling “bandaids” to addicts ?

Video shows man coming back to life after overdosing at a CVS

http://www.khou.com/news/nation-now/video-shows-man-coming-back-to-life-after-overdosing-at-a-cvs/498512524

 

DETROIT — Mark Harris had stopped at a CVS store in Detroit last month to pick up some medicine when he spotted an unusual sight. A young man was fading in and out of consciousness in an aisle, before collapsing to the floor.

Familiar with the neighborhood — Eight Mile and Gratiot — Harris says he didn’t need much convincing to know what had just happened. The man had overdosed.

“I see it a lot right there in the area, you see a lot of drug addicts. You can’t describe them, but when you see them you know it, they fit a profile,” he said.

With the young man on the floor, and CVS employees and customers beginning to buzz around him trying to figure out what to do, Harris pulled out his phone to document the traumatic ordeal.

The nearly 12-minute video, filmed Oct. 11 — and uploaded to YouTube the next day — shows an almost surreal scene. It starts with the young man unconscious on the floor and ends with him standing erect, fully functioning after EMS responders give him naloxone, a drug that blocks the effects of opioids.

The video showcases Michigan’s struggles with the national opioid crisis, the life-saving power of drugs like naloxone, and, most notably, a lack of education when it comes to handling an overdose scenario. As people wait for EMS to arrive bystanders and CVS employees do everything from gawk to pour water on the man’s head to suggest CPR, even though he already breathing.

Most notably, despite the incident taking place in a pharmacy — specifically, a pharmacy that is allowed to sell naloxone over the counter — nobody made any moves to find and administer the drug, waiting instead for the paramedics to arrive.

“People didn’t know how to respond so they didn’t know how to take action, unfortunately,” said Gina Dahlem a clinical assistant professor at University of Michigan’s School of Nursing, whose research focuses on opioid overdose prevention and education using naloxone.

“That shows the need for us to educate these public places and those who are involved — pharmacists, librarians, staff where overdoses are highly likely to occur,” Dahlem continued.

In May, Gov. Rick Snyder announced that pharmacies could dispense naloxone sans prescriptions if they registered with the state Department of Health and Human Services. Previously, only law enforcement, first responders, and doctors could administer the life-saving drug.

As of Nov. 2, 2,840 pharmacies — or 34% of the state total — obtained controlled substance licenses in Michigan in order to dispense naloxone to individuals over the counter. The CVS in question was one of those pharmacies. This led some — like Harris, who filmed the video and kept suggesting someone use Narcan, the brand name version of naloxone — to question why the pharmacist did not administer the naloxone himself.

“That’s heroin, they got some stuff Narcan that they shoot it up their nose to bring them back,” Harris is heard telling the group huddled around the man before paramedics arrived.

Watch (the video might be disturbing for some viewers): Video shows man coming back to life after overdosing at a CVS

In the video, the pharmacist at one point indicates that they may not have had the drug in stock at the moment — though the conversation was hurried and it’s unclear if the pharmacist was specifically answering the question about the drug’s availability.

CVS for its part said the pharmacist should not have administered the drug, but rather waited, as he did until EMS had arrived, stating that the drug is not meant to be “dispensed for immediate usage.”

“We make every effort to stock our pharmacy inventory based on patient demand, however, naloxone is not a medication that is dispensed for immediate usage,” CVS Director of Corporate Communication Erin Shields Britt said in a statement.

“In most cases, opioid users or their family members order naloxone to keep on-hand in an emergency to reverse an accidental overdose. In an emergency situation where naloxone is needed, 911 should be called, as was the case here.”

Dahlem of the University of Michigan, however, contends that the purpose of making naloxone available over the counter is for situations exactly like this and minimizing any lag time is ideal.

“The sooner you are able to revive a person the better the outcome,” she said. “This emphasizes the need for education in the community and of laypeople.”

The video, which documents the young man right after he lost consciousness to the moment he’s wheeled out by medics, shows not only the scary reality of a drug overdose but the confusion of many bystanders over what to do.

A CVS pharmacist is seen pushing on the man’s chest, while the man’s friend is seen pacing around the store dumping water on his head.

Dahlem notes that while the shouting and shaking of the man are actually helpful in an overdose situation, the pouring of water was in fact very dangerous. An overdose is a respiratory problem before it’s a cardiac problem, according to Dahlem, and dousing someone in water — a move people often do in overdose situations because they think it will help wake a person up — can, in fact, make the problem worse.

Michigan’s relationship with the opioid epidemic has worsened over the years. In 2015, the most recent year of data available, the state saw its third consecutive year of record drug overdose deaths. That year, 1,981 people died from drug overdoses, up 13.5% from 2014. Over the last 17 years, deaths from drug overdoses quadrupled, up from 455 in 1999.

For Harris, who decided to document the incident because he had never seen anything like it before, the incident highlighted a clear health and education issue, but also a disconnect between the response to the opioid crisis and what he witnessed 30 years back during the crack epidemic in Detroit.

“In the ’80s during the crack epidemic, most of the victims of the crack epidemic were jailed and criticized and now it’s an opioid epidemic and it’s more like they need help,” said Harris, who says he is a recovering alcoholic and that he’s sensitive to the realities of addiction.

“It’s a person’s own choice to use drugs or alcohol, but once you get addicted you’re sick. A lot of times, you need help to get out of addiction, but during the crack epidemic, they weren’t trying to help people like now. During the crack epidemic, they criminalized all of the people and mostly just put people in jail for just what the guy did.”

While it is unclear what ended up happening to the young man in the video, a YouTube commenter wrote to the Free Press that the man had entered himself into rehab.