Apparently you can’t believe what is sent to you – RETRACTION – UN-RING A BELL !

On May 24th I received the following email


From: mark ibsen
Sent: Wednesday, May 24, 2017 5:35 PM
To: Steve Ariens
Subject: Fwd: Order Dismissing PFMA – Ibsen
 
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
From: Greg Beebe
Date: May 24, 2017 at 1:37:38 PM MDT
To: Mark Ibsen
Subject: Order Dismissing PFMA – Ibsen
Reply-To:
Mark:
The order dismissing your case with prejudice is attached. Nice job getting everything done. Talk to you soon.
Beebe Law Firm
1085 Helena Avenue
Helena, MT 59601
(406) 442-3625

To which I made this post on my blog:


 Dr. IBSEN – WINS COURT BATTLE – Dismissal With Prejudice

http://media.giphy.com/media/IjmMzurYulKEw/giphy.gif

Order Dismissing Charge – Ibsen

Dismissal With Prejudice: When a lawsuit is dismissed with prejudice, the court is saying that it has made a final determination on the merits of the case, and that the plaintiff is therefore forbidden from filing another lawsuit based on the same grounds.

Yesterday afternoon I received this email:

Christopher Storseth

May 25 (1 day ago)
to me, mark

 Hello

On behalf of Dr. Mark Ibsen, please retract your story on his winning his Court Case in Montana. The Documents you are referring to as basis, are for another unrelated case.   This is still an active Motion to Dismiss, with NO Order.    Please do it as soon as you can.
On behalf of Mark S Ibsen, who is also copied to this email.
Thanks 
Chris Storseth for Dr. Mark Ibsen
CC:Dr. Mark Ibsen  

 Christopher L Storseth 
Mobile Phone-406-303-1050
 
Montana Real Estate Broker RRE-BRO-LIC#13636
Broker/CEO/General Developer
Direct Phone-(443) 4-CHRIS-1  (Google Developer Voice Number)

Microsoft Dot NET Web Dev */*  Certified Web App Developer Microsoft

I received the email while I was out running errands on May 25, 2017 and as soon as I got home I DELETED the post on my blog, Face Book, Twitter that I could find and/or remembered.  The blog I posted appeared to be sent by Mark Ibsen and I posted the link to the order dismissing charge *.pdf.

Apparently to some of Dr Ibsen’s close supporters … deleting the posts was not sufficient… I should make a RETRACTION… UN-RING THE BELL…  I just reposted what was sent to me…  The only thing that I added was the definition of what  “Dismissal With Prejudice” meant… I believed this email was from Dr Ibsen… and I did not make any comments or statements about this was – OR WAS NOT – concerning Dr Ibsen’s case with the Medical Licensing Board in MT.  Apparently others believed that I should have KNOWN that the case addressed in  this email was from a different law firm and a different judge… than the one dealing with the Medical Licensing Board issues.

If any of you have forwarded/shared the original post, please do the same with this post. I do not appreciate being accused of postings/sharing FALSE STATEMENTS…

Illegal opiates… so plentiful …can be ordered like ordering a delivered pizza

Opioid epidemic: Can it be stopped at the source?

http://www.wfmj.com/story/35506202/heroin-epidemic-can-it-be-stopped-at-the-source

WARREN, Ohio – Fighting the opioid crisis head-on remains a challenge as the overdose death rate continues to climb across the valley.

Hidden websites and online options offering opioids, including fentanyl for sale, are making it difficult to stop the suppliers.

“In some cases people would order it like they would a pizza and have it delivered to them, it’s just that easy to get,” Keith Martin said, assistant special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration Cleveland Office.

Martin’s office handles investigations across northern Ohio from Toledo to Cleveland and Youngstown.

He tells 21 News that fentanyl, often laced with heroin, is coming into the Northeast Ohio region from other countries including China and India.

The sheer volume of packages delivered from overseas into the U.S. and throughout the country make stopping the supply chain a big challenge.

“To track a package like that is literally you’re looking for a needle in a haystack,” Martin said. 

Unless agents can determine the identities of the buyer and the seller, he says it’s almost impossible to locate the packages before they get into the hands of an addict.

If users go to the dark web, buyers and sellers can remain anonymous– leaving no trace of the purchase. 

On the streets of Warren, it’s rare for a weekend to go by without police responding to drug overdoses.

By the time the drugs make into the hands of users, there’s no telling where they came from.

“Usually when we come across it, it’s already packaged for sale,” Lt. Greg Hoso said, with the Warren police department’s Street Crimes Unit.

Hoso says the people they come across during overdose calls often didn’t know the potency of the drug they used. It’s common for police to recover evidence that eventually tests positive for a mix of synthetic drugs including fentanyl.

Martin says some sellers will stagger drugs throughout multiple shipments in an attempt to throw off investigators.

But in one local case, he says multiple packages from one sender set off a red flag.

“We were tracking a package coming from overseas and the sender of that package was tracking 21 other packages that same day of drugs coming to the U.S.,” he said.

The DEA remains in routine contact with foreign countries to know what trends could be next and how it could arrive into the hands of those looking for their next fix.

In October of 2016, the DEA dismantled a Mexican drug trafficking organization that was bringing kilogram quantites of heroin, cocaine and fentanyl into Cleveland.

Martin said some of those delieveries were then funneled into communities outside the city and into other nearby cities including Youngstown.

While they’re working to making progress by shutting down suppliers from all avenues, Martin believes the only way to make an lasting impact is to prevent people from getting hooked on opioids in the first place.

“We have to get the message out, it has to be education and prevention, because I don’t see law enforcement or anyone arresting their way out of the problem or even treating our way out of the problem,” Martin said.

 
 
 

IMAGINE THIS: DEA LIED TO CONGRESS ABOUT THEIR ILLEGAL BEHAVIORS

DEA misled Congress about Honduras shootings

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/dea-misled-congress-about-honduras-shootings/ar-BBBuIi2

WASHINGTON – Top Drug Enforcement Administration officials consistently provided inaccurate information to the Justice Department and Congress about three deadly shootings during 2012 anti-drug operations in Honduras, including one incident that left four civilians dead, according to a new internal government inquiry.The scathing review from the Justice Department, which largely focused on a fatally flawed May 2012 operation that sparked calls for the DEA’s expulsion from the country, concluded that top federal drug authorities withheld information from the U.S. ambassador to Honduras. DEA officials, according to the report, also blocked Honduran investigators from questioning U.S. agents or examining their weapons.

Among the most serious findings in the 329-page report released Wednesday was that the DEA long clung to unsubstantiated assertions that occupants of a passenger boat initially fired on a U.S.-Honduran anti-drug unit, prompting officers to return fire in the chaotic May encounter that left four dead, including a 14-year-old boy.

“Not only was there no credible evidence evidence that the individuals in the passenger boat fired first, but the available evidence places into serious question whether there was any gunfire from individuals in the passenger boat at any time,” the report stated.

Justice investigators found no evidence to contradict prior DEA claims that none of the U.S. agents discharged their weapons. However, investigators determined that a DEA agent “directed” a Honduran helicopter gunner to open fire on the river boat.

“The (helicopter) door gunner then fired multiple rounds at the passenger boat,” the report stated. “Honduran authorities later determined that four individuals in the passenger boat had been killed and four more injured. No evidence of narcotics was ever found on the passenger boat.”

And even as information emerged that conflicted with the DEA’s account of the incident – that the water taxi had no connection to illegal drug operations – DEA officials “remained steadfast with little credible corroborating evidence that any individuals shot by the Hondurans were drug traffickers” attempting to retrieve a shipment of seized cocaine that was being held on a nearby vessel occupied by U.S. and Honduran drug agents.

Much of the conflicting evidence was contained on a detailed video recording of the incident, which investigators concluded had been either disregarded or ignored by DEA officials.

The DEA did not launch a formal review of the encounter until weeks later when public reports of the civilian deaths surfaced, “resulting in mounting pressure from (Justice) leadership and congressional inquiries.”

Instead, U.S. officials largely relied on a Honduran government account that almost entirely absolved both Honduran and American law enforcement of any misconduct during the in the raid in the country’s Mosquitia region. Honduran investigators, however, did not question DEA agents or examine their weapons at the time.

“The resulting (U.S.) investigation was little more than a paper exercise,” the inspector general concluded, adding that the DEA review included no interviews and omitted key facts, including the U.S. agent’s order for the Honduran machine-gunner to open fire on the boat. While such DEA reviews require weapons inspections, none were conducted.

Nevertheless, the DEA provided assurances to then-Attorney General Eric Holder, while preparing for a 2014 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, that the weapons had been examined.

The information, according to the inspector general’s report, was emailed by then-DEA chief Michele Leonhart, though the message “does not reflect (Leonhart’s) source for this belief.”

Leonhart resigned in 2015 in the wake of a furor over agents’ misconduct including their participation in sex parties with prostitutes supplied by drug cartels in Colombia.

None of the conduct by DEA agents or executives was referred for prosecution, because the inspector general found insufficient evidence to prove that the officials knowingly provided false statements to government investigators or actively obstructed inquiries.

“The loss of life and injuries which occurred….were tragic,” DEA chief compliance officer Mary Schaefer said in the agency’s written response to the inspector general. “DEA acknowledges that its pre-mission preparation was not as thorough as it should have been and that the subsequent investigation lacked the depth and scope necessary to fully asses what transpired that (May) night.”  

Since 2012, when DEA agents were involved in two other fatal shootings in Honduras, much of the agency’s top leadership has been restructured. In 2015, then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch appointed former federal prosecutor and FBI senior counselor Chuck Rosenberg to run the agency.

“In the nearly five years that have elapsed since the events referenced in the report, much has changed internally… to include agency leadership and significant changes” to the agency’s teams deployed abroad,” Shaefer said. 

Former Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Administrator Michelle Leonhart listens while testifying on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, April 12, 2013, before the House Commerce, Justice Science and Related Agencies subcommittee hearing on the DEA's fiscal 2014 budget request.© Manuel Balce Ceneta, AP Former Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Administrator Michelle Leonhart listens while testifying on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, April 12, 2013, before the House…

 
 
 

DEA chief: ‘Marijuana is not medicine’… It is our CASH COW !

DEA chief: ‘Marijuana is not medicine’

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/dea-chief-marijuana-is-not-medicine/article/2624211

Drug Enforcement Administration acting Chief Chuck Rosenberg reiterated an Obama-era stance Thursday that “marijuana is not medicine.”

“If it turns out that there is something in smoked marijuana that helps people, that’s awesome,” he said, speaking at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio. “I will be the last person to stand in the way of that. … But let’s run it through the Food and Drug Administration process, and let’s stick to the science on it.”

 Marijuana is classified as a Schedule I drug under the Controlled Substances Act, alongside drugs like heroin and LSD, while other substances like oxycodone and methamphetamine are classified as Schedule II drugs, which are regulated differently. Despite repeated attempts by advocates requesting that marijuana be moved to Schedule II, the DEA has pointed to the FDA’s guidance that says it does not have medical value.

Rosenberg noted that the DEA takes recommendations about how to classify the drug from the FDA. He pointed out that marijuana studies have been ongoing and acknowledged some studies show it may have medical benefits for children with epilepsy.

Former Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, who was speaking alongside Rosenberg at the event, said that the country should be researching medical marijuana.

“Should we be reducing the administrative and other barriers to researching that in the government? 100 percent,” he said. “But what we should not do is make policies based on guesswork. When we do that, what we do is put people at risk.”

He also appeared to show some concern around state laws regarding recreational marijuana, saying that it is addictive, which can be harmful to a developing brain that is vulnerable to developing substance abuse and addiction.

State legislators, he said, have gotten “caught up in momentum” and passed policies on recreational marijuana that aren’t always supported by science.

“When you develop a substance use disorder at a young age, it actually increases the likelihood of you developing an addiction to other substances,” he said. “So in that sense addiction to marijuana or any substance, including nicotine, during adolescence and young adulthood when the brain is developing is very concerning.”

“I worry that we have gotten away from allowing science to drive our policy when it comes to marijuana,” he added.

 

ACLU Cares … JUST NOT THAT MUCH ?

The ACLU is concerned that the repeal of Obamacare will cause millions to go without healthcare, but try to get the ACLU to express any concern about the untold millions that are being denied pain management and mental health care because of the CDC guidelines, the DEA regulations, many of the state legislatures have decided to “practice medicine without a license” and without any medical knowledge/background and many healthcare corporations and insurance companies that have instituted some sort of opiate dosing limitations… without regard of the real medical need of the pt.

Healthcare is quickly become a “by the numbers” process.. “cookie cutter medicine”… and those who hold the pocket book strings… tend to believe that they can dictate the type or limit of healthcare that a person can receive.

 

If we can’t save the patient, the patient doesn’t matter

Why Some Hospitals Are Allowing Unnecessary Suffering

http://www.alternet.org/story/85637/why_some_hospitals_are_allowing_unnecessary_suffering

“His heart filled virtually his whole chest,” recalls Dr. Diane Meier describing her very first patient, an 89-year-old suffering from end-stage congestive heart failure. 

It was the first day of Meier’s internship at a hospital in Portland Oregon, and after being assigned 23 patients, she was suddenly told that one of her patients, who had been in the Intensive Care Unit for months, was “coding.” She raced to the ICU where the resident told her to put in a “central line.”

“I didn’t know how,” Meier admits.  “I felt overwhelmed and inadequate. Then, the patient died …

“Everyone just walked out of the room,” she remembers.  I stood there. I still sometimes flash back on that scene: the patient, naked, lying on the table, strips of paper everywhere, the room empty. This was my patient. I felt I was supposed to do something — but I didn’t know what.”

Meier left the room and, in the hallway, saw the patient’s wife. “I walked right past her,” she recalls, nearly shuddering at her own cowardice.  I didn’t know what to say. I didn’t even say ‘I’m sorry.’ As a physician, I didn’t think that I was supposed to do that. “

I heard Dr. Diane Meier tell this story at a conference for medical students at  Manhattan’s Mt. Sinai School of Medicine last week. When she finished, she asked her audience, “What is the hidden curriculum here? What does this story tell you?’

“Once the patient dies, he no longer matters,” said one student.

“If we can’t save the patient, the patient doesn’t matter,” added another.

Meier drew a third lesson: “Before he died, this patient had spent two months in the ICU. We had done everything possible to prolong the dying process.”  As a doctor, you have to step back and say, ‘What is this experience telling me, and is this right?'”

As a palliative care specialist, Meier spends much of her time with dying patients.  For many, “palliative care” offers a middle road between pulling out all the stops and simply giving up hope. Like traditional “hospice” care, palliative care focuses on “comfort” rather than “cure,” emphasizing pain management and easing the emotional trauma of facing death, both for the patient and for the family.  But palliative care also includes procedures aimed at treating the symptoms of the disease.

In the past, Meier explains, physicians have seen caring for a terminally ill patient as an “either/or” situation: “Either we are doing everything possible to try to prolong your life — or when there is ‘nothing more that we can do,’ only then do we make the switch to providing comfort measures. This dichotomous notion — that you can do one thing alone and then the other thing alone later — has nothing to do with the reality of what patients and their families go through.”

In her talk last week, Meier explained that her first patient was one of three who marked turning points on her life as a physician. Originally, she trained to become a geriatrician, a doctor who cares for people over 65.  “I think because I was very close to my grandfather,” she explained, “and because I’m a ‘lumper’ not a ‘splitter’,” she added, referring to the distinction between doctors who prefer to treat the whole patient, head to toe, and those who prefer to specialize in a body part: the foot, for example, or the eye.’

Her interest in treating the elderly brought her to Mt. Sinai, which, at the time, had the only Department of Geriatrics in the country.  But as her career unfolded, she found herself “become more and more alienated from medicine. Here, in the hospital, everyone was running around, ostensibly trying to help the patient, but actually often hurting the patient. I thought about quitting. I had a fantasy of opening a bakery/book shop where I could read and eat brownies …” she told the med students.

“Then I met a patient I will call Mr. Santanaya.”

Meier first encountered Santanaya when she was walking down a hospital hallway and  heard a man screaming and moaning in pain. She looked into his room and there he was, pinioned to his bed, hand and foot, in “four-point restraint.”

“I went to the nurse and asked, ‘Why is this man in a four-point restraint?”  The nurse called for the intern.

“I’ll never forget this kid’s face,” Meier recalled “To me, he looked about twelve years old. And terrified.

Meier asked the question again,  and the intern explained: “He has lung cancer that spread to his brain and he’s delirious. We put a feeding tube up into his nose and down to his stomach, and he pulled it out. So we tied his hands. Then he pulled it out with his knees and feet — so we tied his knees and feet.”

“The feeding tube is very uncomfortable,” Meier told the students. “It makes the nose and esophagus raw. I asked the intern, ‘Why do we have to do this?'”

“He looked at me with tremendous distress in his eyes: ‘Because if we don’t, he’ll die.”

“I realized he didn’t know any better,” said Meier.  “Neither did the resident or the attending physician. I realized that this was an educational problem.

“They cared about the patient. This wasn’t callousness or indifference or venality.  They just didn’t know when too much is too little.” So Mr. Santayana spent 33 days tied hand and foot to his bed before he died. He spoke no English, but during that time, he kept screaming “Ayudeme! Ayudeme!” (Help Me! Help Me!)

Why didn’t Mr. Santayana’s physician intervene to do something to help him? “He didn’t have a primary care physician because he was on Medicaid,” Meier explained. So it was left to the hospital staff, and not knowing what else to do, they simply followed procedure.

“This was the early 1990s, and that is when I decided to shift my career to try to make up for what happened to Mr. Santayana,” said Meier.  Then she got lucky.

Dr. Robert Butler, founder of gerontology at Mount Sinai, and  a friend of George Soros, urged her to apply for funding from Soros’s newly formed Project on Death in America. Meier and three colleagues won the funding and in 1995, with help from Soros and the United Hospital Fund, launched the Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation also invested in developing content.  In 1999 Meier and Dr. Christine Cassel founded the Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC) .  As a result of CAPC’s program, by 2005, the number of hospital-based palliative care programs in the U.S. had roughly doubled to 1,240, and some 3,100 health care professionals had been taught CAPC’s methods and ethics.

The third patient who Meier told the students about last week  is a 24-year-old who she called “Kate.” Kate had just graduated from college and had worked and saved enough money to go to Australia. There she developed the worst headache of her life. “She called her mother from Sydney and her mother came to get her,” Meier told her audience. “In retrospect, she might have been better off if she had stayed in Australia.”

The problem was that Kate had no health insurance.  She was only 24 and she thought she didn’t need insurance.

Her mother brought her directly from the airport to Mt. Sinai, “where she was admitted directly to the oncology service, not to a doctor,” Meier explains. Like Mr. Santayana, she would be on Medicaid and so wouldn’t have her own doctor. Kate was diagnosed with leukemia.

“I met Kate on day 7 when a consult called me to say that they had a manipulative drug-seeking patient with acute myeloid leukemia,” Meier recalled. “By then, Kate had earned the contempt and hostility of the house staff because she was constantly screaming for pain-killers.

“It turned out that no one knew the half-life of the opiate they were giving her — not the attending physician, not the resident, not the intern.”

Meier then turned to her audience, made up largely of second-year medical students. “Does anyone here know the half-life,” she asked, naming the pain-killer.

No one did. (The half-life of a pain-killer tells you how long it will be before it wears off.)

“What they were giving her provided relief for only 90 minutes,” said Meier, “and they were giving it to her every six hours.”  After 90 minutes , Kate would begin ringing for nurse. Then, after a half hour, when no one came, she would begin ringing more and more frantically, and finally begin screaming. “Between four and six hours, she would just be screaming,” said Meier.

This had been going on for seven days.  “The pain specialists wouldn’t see her because she had no insurance.”

“I doubled the dose and ordered that it be given to Kate every three hours, around the clock,” said Meyer. “And before long, she was transformed into the sweet, charming intelligent person she always had been.”

“Kate had become the victim of iatrogenic pseudo-addiction,” Meier added. She wasn’t an addict, but she was behaving like an addict and seemed like an addict — a pseudo-addiction created by her doctors, which makes it an “iatrogenic disease,” an illness caused, inadvertently, by medical care. 

Why hadn’t her mother tried to persuade the doctors to give her more pain-killers? “Kate was the middle child in an Irish family of seven kids and one of her brothers had become addicted to drugs. As a result, the mother was terrified of opiates,”  said Meier. “The palliative care team had to spend time with the parent, explaining that pain kills.

The only possible hope for Kate was a bone marrow transplant. Because she was on Medicaid, this would be very hard to get. “It took six weeks of begging to get someone to take her,” Meier recalled. “And then the transplant failed.

“While she was dying, Kate told us that the worst part of the experience had been those first six days when she was labeled a ‘manipulative drug addict.’ She was marginalized because her doctors did not know how to administer the opiates.

“Untreated pain is a medical emergency,” Meier told the students. “The reason no one here knew the half-life of that opiate is because learning about pain-killers is not a priority in medical curriculums.” In fairness, this is the sort of thing that doctors on the ward often look up. But in this case, no one even tried to look it up.

“The relief of suffering is a fundamental part of medicine,” Meier concluded. “In this country there is a tremendous amount of stigma associated with opiates. When you are caring for patients, and you leave an order for the  nurse to administer the pain-killers, remember, there’s a real chance that she’ll think, ‘This is dangerous. I don’t want something bad to happen on my shift.  Okay, I’ll give it to you — but I won’t give you enough.’

“This is why pain is so poorly managed in this country.”

In Italy, by contrast, a patient dying of cancer is often sent home, with morphine, to die in his own bed. His wife administers the morphine and she is given enough to keep him as much as he wants — when he wants it.   In the U.K., where hospice care was invented in the 1960s, there are many more palliative care specialists than in the U.S. 

Here, medicine is all about “cure,” not about “care.” “Defeating death at any cost: that is the priority,” Meier told me. “It comes ahead of reducing suffering or considering the quality of the patient’s life. If you look at NIH funding,” she pointed out, “you see that this is where the money goes — to cure cancer, to prevent all heart disease and stroke.”

This is not to say that Meier favors cutting back on end-of-life care because it is so expensive and so much money is “squandered” during the final year of a patient’s life. “The problem is, of course, that we don’t know who is in their last year — or their final three months,” Meier observed.  “The fact that we spend so much on these patients in their final months of life is not necessarily a bad thing,” she added. “These are the sickest people in the hospital, who need the most care. We shouldn’t say: ‘We’re wasting money on the dying.’ But,” she added , “we should be asking, ‘Is this the best care? Is it appropriate care?”

Clearly, we need more palliative care specialists like Meier. But this is another case where we don’t pay enough for “thinking medicine” — which involves talking to and listening to the patient — rather than cutting him or radiating him.

“When a three-person palliative care team made up of a doctor, a nurse and a psychologist spends 90 minutes in a meeting with a family, Medicare would probably pay $130 to $140 — for all three people,” Meier told me. “And Medicare is one of the better payers. This explains why Meier earns $100 for every several thousand dollars that her husband, an invasive cardiologist, takes home. “Though,” Meier said mildly, “it would be hard to say that one of us is practicing more sophisticated medicine.”

There Have Been Fewer Pharmacy Robberies in Indiana – HALF TRUTHS ?

U.S. Attorney: There Have Been Fewer Pharmacy Robberies in Indiana

http://www.wibc.com/news/local-news/us-attorney-there-have-been-fewer-pharmacy-robberies-indiana

In 2015 Indiana had more pharmacy robberies than any other state. That has changed.

INDIANAPOLIS–Pharmacy robberies have gone down drastically in the past three years. That may be thanks to a decision to prosecute people who rob pharmacies in the state in federal court and to send them to federal prison.

“Every defendant that commits a crime of pharmacy robbery in the Southern District of Indiana, will be charged in federal court and will face the hammer of federal sentencing,” said Josh Minkler, U.S. attorney, describing a decision that was made three years ago, with help from the Indianapolis Metro Police Dept. and Marion County authorities.

“Indiana led the nation in pharmacy robberies, most of those robberies occurring here in Marion County.”

But, not any more. Minkler described the stats, beginning in 2015.

“In 2015, there were 168 pharmacy robberies in Indiana, 129 of those occurring in Marion County. In 2016, there were 78 pharmacy robberies in the State of Indiana, 42 of those occurring in Marion County. Thus far in 2017, there have been only 10 pharmacy robberies in the State of Indiana, only five of those occurring in Marion County.”

Minkler talked about the stats during a news conference this week where he announced the indictment of a gang called “The Mob” that his office said robbed pharmacies, sold the prescription pills and used young people to do the dirty work.

They also used social media to intimidate neighbors.

Minkler said his office has been working with law enforcement throughout Indiana to round up the robbers.

“The name of this operation was ‘Operation: Pharm Aid’.” He said over the past two years they have arrested and prosecuted 36 people for 62 pharmacy robberies.

Robbing a pharmacy when controlled substances are involved has been a FEDERAL CRIME – the same as robbing a bank… since the mid-early 70’s and it took INDIANA  abt FORTY YEARS  to figure out that maybe they should use this federal laws..

No mention of the increased illegal Fentanyl analogs & Heroin on the street and opiate OD’s in Indiana and the 200+ people that were diagnosed with HIV+,Hep B&C in the small Scott county a couple of years ago because Indiana has been reluctant to create a “clean needle program”…

While the Legislature passed laws that it is damn near impossible to purchase Sudafed .. which they claim has reduced the number of Meth labs in the state… but.. don’t mention the amount of Meth that is sold on the street.. since 80% of the Meth sold in the USA is produced in Mexico.

The “picture” that these bureaucrats are putting forth is like a puzzle with a lot of pieces of the puzzle missing… so that no one can see the entire picture CLEARLY !!!

 

 

 

The Deepening Opioid Crisis Among Native Americans

The Deepening Opioid Crisis Among Native Americans

thecrimereport.org/2017/05/24/the-deepening-opioid-crisis-among-native-americans/

The Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma has launched a lawsuit against three national retail pharmacy chains and two of the largest national drug distributors in the country. The complaint charges that they knowingly flooded the tribal community with prescription opioids, fueling a deadly drug epidemic that has taken hundreds of lives and cost hundreds of millions of dollars.

The landmark lawsuit, filed on April 20, 2017, contends that retailers Walmart, CVS and Walgreens, and wholesalers AmerisourceBergen, McKesson, and Cardinal Health, “allowed massive amounts of opioid pills to be diverted from legitimate channels of distribution into the illicit black market in quantities that have fueled the opioid epidemic in the Cherokee Nation.

 The suit alleges the defendants ignored red flags and “turned a blind eye” to known problems in their supply chains. Todd Hembree, the Cherokee Nation Attorney General, said the drug companies failed to keep their opioids from being diverted and did nothing to prevent rampant over-prescribing.

The rate of drug-related deaths among American Indian and Alaska Native people has quadrupled since 1999 and is double the rate of the country as a whole. The diversion of millions of opioid pills over the past 18 years has contributed to nearly 400 deaths among the Cherokee Nation – double the death rate of the country at large – and 10,000 hospital visits.

 Actions like the Cherokee suit can be expensive—especially if you lose and have to cover the legal expenses.

Despite this, considering the social destruction that prescription opioids have caused the American Indian and Alaska Native populations, it’s possible we will see other tribal nations follow with their own lawsuits.

The reason: there’s strength in numbers.

Similar lawsuits have snowballed among cities, counties and states, where opioid addiction has cost taxpayers and citizens billions of dollars. From coast to coast, they’ve come to the same conclusion: Drug companies are complicit in the opioid epidemic, and they need to be held accountable.

The combined pressure is starting to have an effect. Recent federal cases against drug companies show that lobbyists and armies of lawyers are getting companies off rather lightly.

“They pay fines as a cost of doing business in an industry which generates billions of dollars in revenue,” the Cherokee suit says.

Light fines and no jail time helps fuel the problem. The industry has to start paying for its lack of responsibility.

I support the Nation’s suit, but much more legal pressure is needed.

 Almost every day we see new state, county and city laws and statutes that increase funding for local treatment and law enforcement.

At the federal level, the new 21st Century Cures Act has allocated the first half of a $1-billion grant to the states and territories for drug treatment, law enforcement and prevention programs.

Another important piece of federal legislation is the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA). Enacted in 2013 and set for completion in 2024, the DSCSA helps ensure prescription drugs get to where they are supposed to go.

Right now, drug companies are scrambling to be in compliance by November, when on-pack label serialization and tamper-evident packaging must be in use to prevent theft and counterfeiting. These new requirements are going to make a difference.

 All of this is helping. But for communities like the opioid-devastated Cherokee Nation, it’s mostly too little too late.

In the tribal communities, which are at high risk for substance use disorders, local governments need to expand education, treatment and prevention programs now.

We need insurance regulations that add to, not take away from, coverage for treatment of substance use disorders. And we need more access to medically supervised detox programs that help ease the pain and discomfort of prescription opioid withdrawal. These encourage people to attempt recovery, not avoid it. With more effective drug detox, rehab and support programs, we can greatly reduce relapse rates and enjoy successful long-term recovery.

I urge healthcare leaders and lawmakers everywhere to strengthen and more rigorously enforce all regulations that pertain to drug diversion. We must hold manufacturers, distributors and pharmacies responsible for the failures in the supply chain that lead to illicit diversion.

I heartily applaud the Cherokee Nation for its preemptive actions to deter diversion. They have implemented their own prescription monitoring program, and eliminated some of the most widely abused opioids from their own formulary.

 As an executive deeply involved in the world of drug and alcohol recovery, I have been outraged many times over the past 10 or so years as drug company after drug company has been charged with breaches of the law, brought to court, found guilty and paid enormous fines—from hundreds of millions to even billions of dollars—only to return to the same pattern of behavior as before

No one of consequence is ever jailed.

Bryn Wesch

We deal with the results of the opioid epidemic on a daily basis. We see and hear first-hand how these situations of dependence and addiction can develop, regardless of age or station in life, and so often from a single pill or two or three, usually borrowed or innocently gifted.

Every day we hear how opioids—meant to relieve pain—can ruin lives.

It is critical that we take immediate action to prevent further loss of life, deteriorating health issues and increased economic consequences.

Bryn Wesch is Chief Financial Officer at Novus Medical Detox Center, a Joint Commission Accredited inpatient medical detox facility that is also licensed by the Florida Department of Children and Families and known for minimizing the discomfort of withdrawal from prescription medication, drugs or alcohol. She welcomes comments from readers.

It is a well known fact that Native Americans and Alaska Native people have a high incident of excessive alcohol consumption.  The questions has to be asked is why haven’t these tribes sued all the alcohol companies for fueling the known alcoholic epidemic ?

Could it be that since a number of other entities are initiating similar law suits and they are just trying to “pile on” and ride on the “coat tails” of these other lawsuits ?

And why has it taken them 18 years to take this action… where they asleep at the switch or just not paying attention ?

 

VA hospital in Marion abruptly cutting opiate prescriptions

VA hospital in Marion abruptly cutting opiate prescriptions

fox59.com/2017/05/23/fox59-investigates-va-hospital-in-marion-abruptly-cutting-opiate-prescriptions/

VIDEO ON LINK

MARION, Ind. – A VA hospital once investigated for giving out too many opioids, is now cracking down hard on opiate prescriptions.

But are they going too far?

According to a number of veterans, the answer is yes. They say their opiate prescriptions were cut off, with no warning and no communication from doctors. Many of them rely on the Marion VA.

Three, who agreed to be identified on camera—Josh Keller, Rae Ann Panther and John Nelson—call the VA’s response to the opioid abuse epidemic “irresponsible” and “dangerous.”

“They’re treating us like we’re addicts, selling our prescriptions on the street,” said Nelson.

Nelson, along with the three others, acknowledges that some of their fellow veterans are addicts and may be selling their opiate prescriptions or otherwise abusing them. Their concern is that providers are now assuming everyone is an addict and treating them poorly because of that.

“None of us wants the drugs for the high,” said Panther. “We just want to live again.”

All three were left to struggle with pain and some even withdrawal symptoms, after they say their daily doses of Oxycontin, Lortab and Tramadol were suddenly cut off.

“I called back several times and finally got a nurse to say, ‘They’re not giving you any of your medication. I am extremely sorry,’” said Keller as he recounted the day he found out his prescription would not be refilled.  “And she was very upset on the line and it sounded like she was in tears. She said, ‘They’ve done it to not just you, but everybody. They’ve done this to everybody.’”

Panther had a similar experience. As a former nurse herself, she says the most unnerving part was not getting any prior communication from her doctor.

“They never contacted me to say, ‘Hey, we’re thinking about doing something, what’s your idea?’” recalled Rae Ann. “No plan of action. Cut you off, never talk with you about it.”

They say the cutoffs came just a day or two before their prescriptions ran out. They say they received no help tapering off the heavy-duty narcotics and no relief for chronic back and knee pain they spent years trying to leave behind.

For Nelson, who’s self-employed, that meant sometimes not being able to work and falling behind. For Keller, it meant using his vacation days because he was in too much pain to even get out of bed.

“I have to weigh my options,” said Keller. “Am I going to be sick? Can I call in sick today or is it going to be worse tomorrow?”

For Rae Ann, whose husband had to quit his job to care for her due to numerous illnesses years ago, the pain made her bad situation much worse.

“There’s no quality of life for people like us!” exclaimed Panther. “When they say, your pain level from 1-10. Dear God, what’s a one? We live, probably at a 4.”

They claim the doctors not only brushed off their concerns at being so abruptly cut off, but were quick to point the finger at one person, Dr. Lori Drumm, they say is making the decisions.

Dr. Drumm is not these vets’ primary physician. In fact, they say she never treated them at all.

Drumm wouldn’t speak on camera with FOX59, but her boss, Chief of Staff, Dr. Wayne McBride did.

“Dr. Drumm is a very experienced primary care provider and she is our service chief for the primary care service line,” said McBride.

He says part of Drumm’s job is to make sure providers are aligning their care with the national VA Opioid Safety Initiative. She’s also responsible for recommending changes to prescriptions.

There are two main reasons Drumm might suggest a change.

Sometimes, Dr. McBride says she might be looking through records and find that a veteran has violated what is known as a “pain contract” by taking opiates improperly. A veterans’ urinalysis that comes back negative when they’re supposed to be on an opiate might indicate they’re diverting their drugs and giving or selling them to someone else.

Dr. Drumm can also recommend changes when she believes the prescribed dose is too high.

“There have been times, I believe, when some of the providers and physicians have sought her assistance and she has then indicated to them, a certain course of action,” said Dr. McBride.

When asked why veterans are hearing these recommendations or orders from Dr. Drumm and not their own provider, McBride sympathized with the vets.

“I’m concerned, when the veteran has not received the communication from the assigned provider and Dr. Drumm is scripting this care or making those determinations,” said Dr. McBride.

With Panther’s permission, we showed Dr. McBride two My HealthyVet messages from the two times doctors said they were taking her Tramadol away.

In June of last year, a nurse tells Panther, “Dr. Drumm is not going to order additional opiates” and “Dr. Drumm is concerned about unintentional overdose.”

Panther replies, stating she’s “never been seen by Dr. Drumm.”

At the time, Dr. Drumm was covering for Panthers’ normal provider who was out on leave. But still, McBride says that doesn’t absolve her of all responsibility for what he considers proper communication with a patient.

“In this particular case, she was covering for another provider, but as I’ve acknowledged, I think it could’ve been handled better,” said McBride.

After Panther gets a nurse to help intervene, her prescription is renewed. But then in October, her nurse practitioner tries to cut her off this time.

Dr. McBride read where Panther relays to a nurse that she was told by a third party that her nurse practitioner would not refill her script.

That is not the way McBride wants these conversations to happen.

“It’s disturbing that she wouldn’t say, ‘Come in let`s talk about this,’” said Dr. McBride. “I don’t think you need this, why and have a conversation. So it’s concerning.”

Dr. McBride says his intent is for opiate reductions at the Marion VA hospital to always comply with the Opioid Safety Initiative.

“In many chronic pain conditions, opioid medications are now not thought to be the standard of care,” said McBride. “It is our intent, before we reduce the medication or even start to lower it or discontinue it, our intent is to make sure they have pain management from other sources, non-narcotic sources, where they will have access to chiropractic or physical therapy.”

Those alternative pain management sources can also include an acupuncturist or even a psychiatrist, as they’re slowly taken off opiates. But that doesn’t match the accounts from these three veterans or the many others.

“I’ve spent almost $1,200 of my own money using a doctor for acupuncture and chiropractic,” said Panther. “We ask them about it and they say, ‘Oh no you don’t need that.’ I’ve had a doctor say to me, I don’t believe in that stuff. I would believe in anything that helps me!”

McBride says he doesn’t want to see veterans spending their own money on care they should be able to receive through the VA or CHOICE program. Yet he admitted alternative pain care appointments aren’t always available quickly.

He also acknowledged that some doctors haven’t been following orders to wean veterans off their opiates.

“We have had accounts that have arisen in our healthcare system, where veterans have been removed from their opioid medications, perhaps a little bit aggressively,” said McBride.

McBride believes fear may be motivating some providers to move too swiftly.

“Concern is growing, that they may be subject to a review or their license, if they’re giving too many opioids, may be in some jeopardy,” said McBride.

But the veterans feel some primary care providers are putting their and other veterans’ lives in jeopardy.

“That’s why there’s 22 veterans committing suicide every single day,” said Panther. “Chronic pain is a killer. And in my opinion, these programs where they`re just abruptly taking medication from patients that absolutely need it, this is the cause.”

Dr. McBride’s point about the pressure doctors are feeling to cut the number of opiates they prescribe is key to why some doctors may be acting the way they are.

Under the new Comprehensive Addiction Recovery Act authored by Indiana representative Jackie Walorski, the number of opiate prescriptions provided by doctors and at VA facilities will be under review each year, starting with a report set to be filed this summer. These doctors’ prescription numbers will be under a microscope, in an attempt to keep veterans from getting hooked on the drugs in the first place.

The law clearly requires safe weaning from opiates, no matter the reason for stopping the prescription.

Her office says they’re concerned about reports of abrupt cutoffs throughout the Northern Indiana VA system. They plan to make sure a recently requested report from the system addresses potential issues at the Marion facility, as well as the Peru clinic also now under scrutiny since this investigation started.

They say they will also take into consideration that FOX59 received complaints from all over Indiana, as well as across the country, to make sure this isn’t a nationwide problem.

They volunteer to serve our country… we use/abuse them… we send them back home “broken”  and then the VA system abuses them even more.  The 535 members of Congress just sit up there on “the Hill” on their pompous asses and turn a “blind eye” to what is going on.

What a disgrace !!!

Isn’t “DRUG EDUCATION” suppose to prevent substance abuse ?

Residents of halfway house found two men dead from overdoses — their drug counselors

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/to-your-health/wp/2017/05/24/halfway-house-residents-found-two-men-dead-from-overdoses-their-drug-counselors/

The man’s losing battle with heroin was laid out right there on the nightstand of the halfway house.

There were three morning devotionals, including “God Calling,” geared toward keeping a person’s thoughts pointed heavenward. Then there was the nicotine: two packs of cigarettes, a vaporizer and a case of snus to quell cravings.

And near the edge: empty packets of heroin, a spoon and a syringe half full of the last hit the man would ever inject.

It was another scene in Pennsylvania’s ballooning drug epidemic. But the case had a twist that shocked even the first-responders summoned to the quiet neighborhood in West Brandywine: The victim — and another dead, overdosed man in an adjacent room — were both drug counselors.

“If anybody is wondering how bad the opioid epidemic has become, this case is a frightening example,” Chester County District Attorney Tom Hogan said in a news release.

“The staff members in charge of supervising recovering addicts succumbed to their own addiction and died of opioid overdoses. Opioids are a monster that is slowly consuming our population.”

Authorities didn’t release the names of the counselors. The Associated Press reported that many addiction counselors are former addicts, but it was unclear if that was the case with the men who died.

The counselors lived and worked at the Freedom Ridge Recovery Lodge, which bills itself as “a special recovery home for men that provides a safe place to live.” No one returned a message from The Washington Post left with an answering service at the lodge’s listed number.

The home’s website was offline, but a cached version identified one of its key missions: “Freedom Ridge will give you a solid foundation to help free you from the bondage of addictions.”

The site says the home strives to “incorporate family in this very early stage of recovery” and mandates that residents attend addiction meetings daily for 90 days.

Residents found the counselors dead or dying Sunday afternoon. They tried to resuscitate one of the men with the drug naloxone, which counters heroin’s deadly effects, but it was too late.

Two of the heroin plastic bags had a “Superman” symbol on them. Another was stamped with the symbol for “danger.”

Police think the drugs had been laced with fentanyl, another opiate that can make a hit of heroin more potent and more deadly.

Authorities chronicling the rise in heroin deaths in Pennsylvania largely attribute the uptick to fentanyl. According to the Patriot-News, fentanyl-laced heroin contributed to Pennsylvania having the sixth-highest overdose rate in the nation in 2015.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention deems the state “statistically higher” than the national average. Pennsylvania shares that diagnosis with a line of neighboring Rust Belt states.

In 2015, Pennsylvania coroners reported more than 3,500 overdose deaths in 2015, a 30 percent jump from 2014, the Patriot-News reported.

In September, Gov. Tom Wolf (D) told lawmakers that the opioid epidemic facing Pennsylvania is “a public health crisis, the likes of which we have not before seen. Every day, we lose 10 Pennsylvanians to the disease of addiction. This disease does not have compassion, or show regard for status, gender, race or borders.”

“It affects each and every Pennsylvanian, and threatens entire communities throughout our commonwealth. The disease of addiction has taken thousands of our friends and family members. In the past year alone we lost over 3,500 Pennsylvanians — a thousand more lives taken than the year before.”

Across the nation, opioids killed more than 28,000 people in 2014, more than any year on record, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

This week, shortly after the counselors’ bodies were found, authorities were trying to prevent more deaths.

They wanted the public to know about the “Superman” and “danger” stamps on the plastic bags and had one message for other area addicts: Stay away.

“They appear to be heroin laced with fentanyl and are likely to kill anybody who uses them,” Hogan said. “We will not even let law enforcement handle them without special precautions.”