The fuzzy line between medication use and abuse
www.kevinmd.com/blog/2016/11/fuzzy-line-medication-use-abuse.html
Opioid painkillers, such as Vicodin (hydrocodone) and OxyContin (oxycodone), are crucial medical tools that are addictive and widely abused. Tranquilizers and sleeping pills of the benzodiazepine class, like Xanax (alprazolam), Ativan (lorazepam) and Klonopin (clonazepam), are safe and effective in limited, short-term use, but are often taken too freely, leading to drug tolerance and withdrawal risks. Stimulants such as Ritalin (methylphenidate) and Adderall (amphetamine) ease the burden of ADHD but are also widely used as college study aids as well as recreationally. All of these medications are available only by prescription. This means prescribers serve as
gatekeepers, permitting access for medical needs and denying it otherwise.
This gatekeeping can be difficult. Doctors are imperfect lie detectors and can be fooled with a plausible story. Pain, anxiety, insomnia and inattention are mostly invisible. The internet offers quick lessons in how to fake a medical history. Beyond the initial assessment, every physician has patients who repeatedly “lose” bottles of painkillers or tranquilizers and request more. Secretly seeing multiple doctors to obtain the same drug remains fairly easy. While a few doctors run illegal “pill mills” and flout the gatekeeper role, many more are simply too overworked to be vigilant with every patient.
None of us became physicians to fight the war on drugs. On the contrary, most of us are uncomfortable doubting our patients’ honesty. It’s stressful to worry about being too suspicious or too gullible, and it’s a waste of valuable time.
The possibility of tranquilizer abuse arose with a new patient of mine recently. My concern led to multiple phone calls to pharmacies and to consulting California’s CURES database online. I was convinced enough that something was amiss that I confronted my patient, who responded by calling me names, making vague threats and leaving in a huff without paying for the appointment (and, of course, never coming back). Although the reaction seemed confirmatory, in truth I’m still not certain my suspicions were correct. Why did I put my patient and myself through such grief? Because I wanted to “do no harm.” Accepting the gatekeeper role requires scrutinizing and sometimes confronting the patient at the gate.
Let’s consider other drugs that are used both medically and recreationally — but unlike those mentioned above, do not involve a physician gatekeeper.
The best candidate may be cannabis. Currently legal in 25 states, medical marijuana requires a doctor’s authorization but not a prescription that specifies dosage, frequency and duration of treatment or route of administration. By definition, a Schedule 1 drug, like marijuana, is not “FDA approved” for any medical use. Yet cannabis is very much like the Schedule 2 drug Adderall: it has a few solid medical uses, a much larger set of dubious or controversial ones and a sea of mostly illegal recreational use. A lot of medical marijuana is used for relaxation or sleep, blurring the medical-recreational distinction in much the way Adderall does when used for studying. Purely recreational use is legal in four states as of this writing. Legalization is on the ballot this November in five additional states, including California where I practice.
I have never authorized medical marijuana, although several of my patients were approved by other physicians and use it regularly. Once a patient tells me he or she uses marijuana, whether doctor-approved or (for now) illegally, I can act in my preferred role as advisor. We can discuss risks and benefits, sativa vs indica, THC and CBD, all without me having to second-guess my patient’s story, make a paternalistic decision about whether to authorize access or even cast judgment on the decision to use it.
In states where recreational cannabis is newly legal, it joins the three drugs already native to our cultural landscape. Adults consume alcohol, caffeine and nicotine with nary a prescription, gatekeeper or hoop to jump through. And although we rarely think about it, all three have medicinal effects. Alcohol can reduce stress, aid sleep and may promote health in a number of other ways. Caffeine treats fatigue, migraine headaches and possibly obesity. Nicotine eases Parkinson’s disease and perhaps schizophrenia and helps with weight loss. While smoking rates are declining in the U.S., most Americans continue to use alcohol and caffeine often for a complex mixture of reasons: taste, psychoactive effects, social custom and sometimes for plainly medicinal purposes. Widespread use also leads to addiction in a significant subset of the population: caffeine becomes necessary and not just optional, and we go to extraordinary efforts to manage alcoholism. As tragic as this is, nearly everyone agrees that Prohibition was the greater evil.
I like that I’m an advisor, not a gatekeeper, for marijuana and the (other) legal vices. I also reject the gatekeeper role for stimulants by telling callers I don’t treat ADHD. This is trickier, my refusal to treat a legitimate psychiatric disorder is arguably too finicky. It can be hard for an earnest sufferer to obtain a thorough evaluation and treatment, even if, paradoxically, it is all too easy for a drug abuser to tell a sob story and score a prescription. Nonetheless, with stimulants, as with medical marijuana, I’m uncomfortable making Solomonic distinctions where medical and non-medical uses lie so closely on a continuum.
In any event, I draw the line there. I continue to prescribe tranquilizers and sleeping pills for my patients who seem to need them. I may unwittingly abet substance abuse in some cases, but the alternative is to not prescribe any abusable medication, a stance that feels far too finicky. After all, medication gatekeeping is the norm for many physicians. Oncologists, surgeons and ER doctors can’t tell patients they don’t treat pain. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy sent a letter to every U.S. physician in August urging us to help fight the “opioid epidemic” by limiting dosages and durations of opioid prescriptions and by substituting non-narcotic alternatives — in essence, by being better gatekeepers.
The only way to avoid doctor-as-gatekeeper entirely is to make all drugs available without a prescription. The prospect of narcotics and amphetamines on the open market strikes most of us as extremely foolish, even though Prohibition and the failed war on drugs should give us pause. Another strategy is to embrace gatekeeping even more seriously, as Dr. Murthy advises. Careful comprehensive evaluation, “start low and go slow” prescribing, close monitoring using a system like CURES and strictly limiting refills should drive down prescription drug abuse. Unfortunately, this takes more clinical time, one thing most physicians can’t spare, and trades away doctor-patient collaboration for something more wary and legalistic. As usual, physicians are asked to erode the traditional doctor-patient relationship and do more work to keep the system afloat. Meanwhile, patients suffer further small indignities and colder encounters.
Alternatively, we could wait it out. The line between medical treatment and personal enhancement or optimization gets fuzzier all the time. Society may soon fail to distinguish treating an anxiety disorder and taking something to relax in the evening or treating ADHD and simply maximizing one’s mental sharpness. The medical-recreational divide already looks more like a continuum for marijuana and stimulants, and it is essentially gone with respect to alcohol, caffeine, and nicotine. If this trend continues, physicians may no longer be called upon to distinguish legitimate from illegitimate drug use. Our focus as medication gatekeepers may shift from the purpose of the prescription to its safety, making us more like pharmacists than judges.
Filed under: General Problems
RED, I do hope that you are right. I fear that even if all those suffering and their families make lots of noise and are actually listened to but because of the simple fact that those suffering the most just don’t have the strength, physical and emotional, to yell it’s not going to happen. I do what I am able but know it’s not enough. When the government has an agenda they tend to keep their blinders on and earplugs in. Keep up the good fight!
I write/forward every death,,every forced endurement of physical pain from medical illness to all my governmental representatives at least 1nce a day,,,,,and Wisconsin is 1 of thee worse states to be a chronic pain humanbeing still,,Some of us are trying,,always,,,but what I,ve seen is they are just outright refusing to acknowledge they are committing willfull torture and genocide unto the medically ill w/longterm medically painful conditions,,,,”they” see it as taking a good/hard line on this failed drug war,,,,and Parents of adult children r exploited by politician,,when their ADULT offspring makes a poor decision,,dies,,,or o.d.’s,,,,the parents want REVENGE,, for the death of their offspring,,,,,,big difference between revenge and greif,,What the media has done to us,,is exactlly what they did to Trump,,sooo maybe he’ll understand???The DEA,, they just want employment,and its a heck of alot easier to sit infront of a computer to arrrest someone,,,then to get off their ass’s and chase down real drug dealers and addicts,,,tHE dea’s propaganda has gotta stop,,,it is ALLLLLL lies,THEIR PUTTEN OUT,, and curiously every single time i go to any cbs,nbc,medhealth, web site to point out these lies w/truth,fact,,my comments are censored,,,maryrw
Red Lawhern, Sadley we already know that the problem is.not pain patients, their medication or their doctors and that government agencies, newspapers, news broadcasts etc are deliberately lying to the public. They are so good at lying that even people who should know better are believing those lies. It boils down to money, job security and control! Without a true miracle happens these lies will continue indefinitely and millions of people will suffer and die needlessly as a result. We can and should continue to fight with the few and mostly useless weapons at hand such as petitions and rallies and hope that a miracle happens SOON!!
I don’t believe in miracles, Connie. But I believe concerted political action can make a difference. And if pain patients will not take such action to make their anger known to elected and appointed officials, then we won’t see positive change. Until it costs a politician — or a hundred politicians — their job, our pain doesn’t matter.
Steve, I’ve supported chronic pain patients for over 20 years as a non-physician webmaster, moderator, advocate and online research analyst. I’ve communicated with well over 12,000 chronic pain patients in open forums. I wrote the most recent NINDS Trigeminal Neuralgia Fact Sheet, and the Wikipedia article on Atypical TN. So I’ve been around this block a few times.
From that background, I would suggest that the current hype over “prescription opioid abuse” has largely been mis-characterized and misdirected. The key public health issue is NOT pain patients abusing opioid medications. It is instead the diversion of opioid drugs to addicts who are not otherwise in pain, by theft or their own fraud. Secondary to this issue is the reality that postmortem determination is highly unreliable in determining the roles played by opioids in patient deaths and the specific agents involved; medical examiners are also too often underfunded and under-trained to generate accurate assessments of causes of death. Thus we face a public health issue complicated by our inability to reliably attribute causes and effects.
I also understand the discomfort which many physicians feel over being gatekeepers. At present there seems to be no real alternative to that unhappy bind. Clearly one of the priorities of NIH should be research on rapid, reliable, and CHEAP blood or urine tests that detect people who have recently used opioids. Present testing is exorbitantly expensive and too often unreliable, with large numbers of false positives.
I suggest that the so-called “epidemic” of opioid deaths wasn’t created by treatment of chronic pain patients — and it won’t be solved by withholding medical treatment or driving pain management doctors out of practice. Both of those unhappy outcomes are now widespread in the wake of the CDC Opioid Guidelines and the arbitrary and ill founded edicts broadcast by our unqualified Surgeon General.
Sincerely,
Richard A “Red” Lawhern, Ph.D.
Our society has a history of creating problems to “treat” It’s a very lucrative practice for some and very dangerous for others. When antiperspirants were first coming into being the people who wanted to make money off their sales had to convince the population that body odor was a bad thing and not just a normal part of life. The dea and other government agencies have taken this type of lying to the public to a whole new level especially when it comes to medications to treat pain!
There was NO PROBLEMS,, up until 2001,,when the dea started playing Dr.Government,,,it was then and only then,,did this ,”problem,” start,,,Before then,,,Doctors all had there own method of weeding out the ,”addicts,”,,,not perfect,,but a hell of a lot better then what has happen’d from 2001 till now,,,,mary