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U.S. - Good News: Opioid Prescribing Fell. The Bad? Pain Patients Suffer, Doctors Say

S.J.B.

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Good News: Opioid Prescribing Fell. The Bad? Pain Patients Suffer, Doctors Say.
Jan Hoffman and Abby Goodnough
The New York Times
March 6th, 2019

Three years ago this month, as alarms about the over-prescription of opioid painkillers were sounding across the country, the federal government issued course-correcting guidelines for primary care doctors. Prescriptions have fallen notably since then, and the Trump administration is pushing for them to drop by another third by 2021.

But in a letter to be sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Wednesday, more than 300 medical experts, including three former White House drug czars, contend that the guidelines are harming one group of vulnerable patients: those with severe chronic pain, who may have been taking high doses of opioids for years without becoming addicted. They say the guidelines are being used as cover by insurers to deny reimbursement and by doctors to turn patients away. As a result, they say, patients who could benefit from the medications are being thrown into withdrawal and suffering renewed pain and a diminished quality of life, even to the point of suicide.

The letter writers form an uneasy alliance spanning differing positions on opioids -- professors of addiction medicine as well as pain specialists, some patient representatives who have taken money from the pharmaceutical industry, and the former drug czars, from the Obama, Clinton and Nixon administrations.

Michael Botticelli, who served as the drug czar under President Obama and now leads the Grayken Center for Addiction at Boston Medical Center, said he signed the letter because "there has been enough anecdotal evidence to raise the alarm bells" about the misuse of the guidelines leading to pain patients losing effective treatment.

"The C.D.C. really does need a rigorous evaluation of this because we don't know how big the problem is," he said. "Minimally, we need some level of clarification on appropriate use of the guidelines."

Read the full story here.
 
a whole team of scientists and doctors is not as loud as one parent whose 19 year old junkie daughter overdoses on fentanyl. This is why pain patients are fucked no matter what.

hows that prescription crackdown doing to help the fentanyl and heroin epidemic? seems to be working fabulously.
 
a whole team of scientists and doctors is not as loud as one parent whose 19 year old junkie daughter overdoses on fentanyl. This is why pain patients are fucked no matter what.

So true. I've known people who lost children to addiction but understand cutting the scripts isn't the answer. It's really sad that most parents who aren't also users won't understand that there is (or could be) some degree of choice, free will, individual responsibility at play.

It doesn't matter what drug I overdose on, I wouldn't feel it should change anyone else's lives or futures. Why should it? Alcohol kills 100,000+ people per year, tobacco almost half a million people, but no one cares other than the state of Hawaii? And they're only phasing out cigarette sales to protect the ECOLOGY OF THE EARTH... and they have to phase it out SLOWLY because the state is addicted to the tax money. Lovely.
 
a whole team of scientists and doctors is not as loud as one parent whose 19 year old junkie daughter overdoses on fentanyl. This is why pain patients are fucked no matter what.

hows that prescription crackdown doing to help the fentanyl and heroin epidemic? seems to be working fabulously.

The crackdown caused the heroin epidemic.
 
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