DEA Report Downplays Role of Prescription Opioids in Drug Crisis

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

After a three-year absence, the DEA’s National Drug Threat Assessment (NDTA) has returned, with a tacit admission by the agency that prescription opioids don’t play much of a role anymore in the nation’s drug crisis.

Prescription opioids are mentioned only a handful of times in the 57-page report, mainly within the context of their theft and diversion declining to levels not seen in over a decade.

“The DEA Theft/Loss Reporting Database reveals that the number of unaccounted-for narcotic prescription drugs (opioids) in 2022 was at its lowest level in 12 years and continued to decline into the first nine months of 2023,” the NDTA report states.

The DEA said the number of unaccounted-for opioids fell from 19.5 million pills/units in 2011 to just 4 million in 2023, an 80% decline.

Most of the focus in the 2024 NDTA is on illicit fentanyl, methamphetamine, and counterfeit medications that have become increasingly more toxic and deadly.

Nearly 108,000 fatal overdoses were reported in 2022, with fentanyl and other synthetic opioids – most of them illicit -- involved in 68% of drug deaths. The remaining overdoses were linked primarily to cocaine, methamphetamine and other synthetic stimulants.

“The shift from plant-based drugs, like heroin and cocaine, to synthetic, chemical-based drugs, like fentanyl and methamphetamine, has resulted in the most dangerous and deadly drug crisis the United States has ever faced,” DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said in a press release.

“At the heart of the synthetic drug crisis are the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels and their associates, who DEA is tracking world-wide. The suppliers, manufacturers, distributors, and money launderers all play a role in the web of deliberate and calculated treachery orchestrated by these cartels.”

Most counterfeit medications in the U.S. are spiked with illicit fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times stronger than morphine. In 2023, a DEA laboratory analysis found that about 70% of counterfeit pills contain at least 2 milligrams of fentanyl, a potentially deadly dose.

Fake pills are also increasingly being found with xylazine, a potent animal tranquilizer, and nitazenes, a synthetic opioid chemically unrelated to fentanyl. According to some estimates, nitazenes are 40 times more potent than fentanyl and 1,000 times more potent than morphine. Nitazenes have never been approved for medical use in the United States.  

Although Milgram called the NDTA “a critical tool for informing and educating the public about the current drug threats,” the DEA’s annual report literally disappeared from public view three years ago. The last NDTA was released in 2021.

The DEA did not respond to a request for comment from PNN on why a NDTA was not published for three straight years or why one was finally released this week.

The DEA has been under growing criticism for its failure to stop fentanyl trafficking and for imposing steep cuts in production quotas on drug manufacturers, which has contributed to record shortages of opioids, ADHD stimulants and other essential drugs.  

Sometimes, what is not disclosed in the DEA’s report can be just as revealing as what is. For example, while the DEA officially lists kratom as a “drug of concern” and even tried to ban the herbal supplement, the agency has never said a word about kratom in a NDTA report. Not in 2021. And not in 2024.

Are Rx Drug Databases ‘Trojan Horses’ for Law Enforcement?

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) were widely adopted in the U.S. over a decade ago to help identify patients who might be abusing opioid medication or other controlled substances. All 50 states now have databases that physicians and pharmacists can use to monitor a patient’s prescription drug history and look for possible signs of abuse.

Although widely billed as a way to improve patient safety and prevent diversion, critics say PDMP’s quickly became a surveillance tool for local and federal law enforcement --- in effect, ‘Trojan Horse’ technologies that turned pharmacists into undercover cops.

“Equipped with PDMPs, pharmacists readily police patients. Pharmacists use this surveillance tool to interrogate patients about their drug use, document interactions defensively, and let patients know they are being watched,” said Elizabeth Chiarello, PhD, an Associate Professor of Sociology at Saint Louis University.

“PDMPs are surveillance technologies, not healthcare tools, so they do not offer pharmacists new ways to deal with patients’ pain or substance use disorders, they simply empower pharmacists to view patients with suspicion and refuse to treat them.”

Chiarello conducted 118 interviews with pharmacists in six states, asking how PDMP’s have affected their work and relationships with patients. Her findings, recently published in American Sociological Review, suggest that many pharmacists now feel pressured to work with law enforcement to identify suspicious prescriptions.   

A pharmacist in Mississippi said she was approached by a DEA agent, who gave her his card and said, “Call me anytime you need me.”

“From then on, she called the DEA when she spotted a fake prescription and worked with them to arrest the patient,” wrote Chiarello. “Pharmacists have become more comfortable deciding which patients deserve opioids and turning away those deemed undeserving. PDMP use has also strengthened communication with law enforcement, so pharmacists now contact them about troubling patients.”

A pharmacist in Missouri told Chiarello that he and his colleagues “work pretty well” with local law enforcement:

“We get calls all the time from the police that say ‘Hey, can you find out if they’re actually on this?’… I’ll call the police if I ever need any help, especially with someone who is jumping from pharmacy to pharmacy or doing something that’s illegal. But they’ll come back to me as well saying, ‘Hey, can you check the fill dates for this guy or can you check where he’s been filling for me?’ And so they kind of use me as a PDMP resource as well.”

Congressional investigators recently reported that three pharmacy chains -- CVS, Kroger and Rite Aid – faced “extreme pressure” from law enforcement to immediately respond to requests for patient information, even without a warrant. In most cases, patients are not informed that their medical records have been shared with law enforcement or why they were being sought.

Only three states – Louisiana, Montana and Pennsylvania – have laws that require a warrant or subpoena before medical data is disclosed.  

‘We Don’t Go Fishing’

In a recent webinar with medical providers, a DEA investigator denied that the agency uses PDMPs to troll for suspicious patients and providers.

“This comes up sometimes, so I'll just address the elephant in the room. We don't go fishing in the (PDMP) data. Okay? Why do people think we have this open access to driving records and that we pull whatever we want? No. We have to have a case and we have to have a subpoena. We just don't go trolling through the records,” said Jed Nitzberg, a DEA Supervisory Diversion Investigator.

The DEA has long been interested in prescription drug records. In 2020, the agency solicited bids from contractors to create and operate a surveillance program that would identify patients, prescribers and pharmacies that may be involved in the diversion or abuse of drugs.

Under the proposed program, the DEA would have “unlimited access” to prescription data, including the names of prescribers and pharmacists. The names of patients would be redacted, but if investigators suspect a drug was being abused or diverted, they could get a subpoena to identify them. No contract was awarded by DEA and it’s unclear if the surveillance program was ever initiated.

Even without prompting from law enforcement, pharmacists are under enormous pressure to be alert to suspicious behavior by patients and physicians. Under the national opioid settlement, if a pharmacy has too much “Red Flag activity” such as patients paying for drugs in cash or a prescription written by a doctor in another zip code, it risks being terminated from receiving any more shipments of opioids and other controlled substances.

Ironically, the theft, loss and diversion of prescription opioids is at its lowest level in over a decade. In the DEA’s latest National Drug Threat Assessment, the agency said the number of “unaccounted-for” opioids had fallen by 80 percent, from 19.5 million pills/units in 2011 to just 4 million in 2023.

A Pained Life: Stop the Denial

By Carol Levy, PNN Columnist

For many of us, pain is sporadic. Sometimes we know exactly when it will be start or what will set it off. Other times, it may hit spontaneously.

When my trigeminal neuralgia pain started in 1976, it was constant, triggered and spontaneous. Now it can be triggered by any touch to the affected area. Or it can come out of the blue.

When I don’t have pain, it often lulls me into denial. I’ll think, “Hey, I'm okay!” Denial is one of my defense mechanisms. I don't have the pain right now, so I won't have it. 

And then, like a freight train bearing down on me, the pain hits. That's when the denial ends. Sometimes it takes only a few minutes to recover, sometimes much longer.

Denial of pain also comes from friends, colleagues or family. It often results in an argument or anger. Does that change their denial? Not often.

Is it worth the hurt and emotional pain when we try to change their minds, when we try to convince them of the reality of our pain? Again, not often.

Many of us have had medical professionals refuse to accept our pain. Years ago, I found this note in my neurologist's chart: “There are days like today when I believe in her pain.”

It wasn't his to believe in or not. If he chose not to believe me, then the remedy was simple. Fire me as a patient. It is not worth debating with a doctor about the existence of our pain.  

A big pain trigger for me is eye movement. Any eye usage causes pain. I can read, sometimes for as long as 20 minutes, before the pain starts yelling at me and I am forced to put the book away.  

Too many times I don't want to give in to the pain. Just one more paragraph, I’ll think, or at least a sentence. If I try to deny the pain and continue to read, it grows stronger, bigger, a green hulk of pain.  

Then I have no choice. I fling the book away and wait, sometimes for hours, for the pain to subside to a tolerable level. I could have stopped the pain. I could have taken control over it. All I had to do was accept that I can't read for as long as I want. But, like a food addict, the pleasure I get from reading overwhelms my common sense.

For those of us struggling to stop denying the pain when we know we should, the denial only adds to our battle. We call ourselves “survivors” or “victims.” Those are words of war.

For me, the war isn’t over. If and when I win, I'll stop the denial. 

Carol Jay Levy has lived with trigeminal neuralgia, a chronic facial pain disorder, for over 30 years. She is the author of “A Pained Life, A Chronic Pain Journey.”  Carol is the moderator of the Facebook support group “Women in Pain Awareness.” Her blog “The Pained Life” can be found here. 

Seniors Often Left Stranded in Emergency Rooms

By Judith Graham, KFF Health News

Every day, the scene plays out in hospitals across America: Older men and women lie on gurneys in emergency room corridors moaning or suffering silently as harried medical staff attend to crises.

Even when physicians determine these patients need to be admitted to the hospital, they often wait for hours — sometimes more than a day — in the ER in pain and discomfort, not getting enough food or water, not moving around, not being helped to the bathroom, and not getting the kind of care doctors deem necessary.

“You walk through ER hallways, and they’re lined from end to end with patients on stretchers in various states of distress calling out for help, including a number of older patients,” said Hashem Zikry, an emergency medicine physician at UCLA Health.

Physicians who staff emergency rooms say this problem, known as ER boarding, is as bad as it’s ever been — even worse than during the first years of the covid-19 pandemic, when hospitals filled with desperately ill patients.

While boarding can happen to all ER patients, adults 65 and older, who account for nearly 20% of ER visits, are especially vulnerable during long waits for care. Also, seniors may encounter boarding more often than other patients.

The best estimates I could find, published in 2019, before the covid-19 pandemic, suggest that 10% of patients were boarded in ERs before receiving hospital care. About 30% to 50% of these patients were older adults.

“It’s a public health crisis,” said Aisha Terry, an associate professor of emergency medicine at George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences and the president of the board of the American College of Emergency Physicians, which sponsored a summit on boarding in September.

What’s going on? I spoke to almost a dozen doctors and researchers who described the chaotic situation in ERs. They told me staff shortages in hospitals, which affect the number of beds available, are contributing to the crisis. Also, they explained, hospital administrators are setting aside more beds for patients undergoing lucrative surgeries and other procedures, contributing to bottlenecks in ERs and leaving more patients in limbo.

Then, there’s high demand for hospital services, fueled in part by the aging of the U.S. population, and backlogs in discharging patients because of growing problems securing home health care and nursing home care, according to Arjun Venkatesh, chair of emergency medicine at the Yale School of Medicine.

Long Waits Risky for Seniors

The impact of long ER waits on seniors who are frail, with multiple medical issues, is especially serious. Confined to stretchers, gurneys, or even hard chairs, often without dependable aid from nurses, they’re at risk of losing strength, forgoing essential medications, and experiencing complications such as delirium, according to Saket Saxena, a co-director of the geriatric emergency department at the Cleveland Clinic.

When these patients finally secure a hospital bed, their stays are longer and medical complications more common. And new research finds that the risk of dying in the hospital is significantly higher for older adults when they stay in ERs overnight, as is the risk of adverse events such as falls, infections, bleeding, heart attacks, strokes, and bedsores.

Ellen Danto-Nocton, a geriatrician in Milwaukee, was deeply concerned when an 88-year-old relative with “strokelike symptoms” spent two days in the ER a few years ago. Delirious, immobile, and unable to sleep as alarms outside his bed rang nonstop, the older man spiraled downward before he was moved to a hospital room. “He really needed to be in a less chaotic environment,” Danto-Nocton said.

Several weeks ago, Zikry of UCLA Health helped care for a 70-year-old woman who’d fallen and broken her hip while attending a basketball game.

“She was in a corner of our ER for about 16 hours in an immense amount of pain that was very difficult to treat adequately,” he said. ERs are designed to handle crises and stabilize patients, not to “take care of patients who we’ve already decided need to be admitted to the hospital,” he said.

How common is ER boarding and where is it most acute? No one knows, because hospitals aren’t required to report data about boarding publicly. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services retired a measure of boarding in 2021. New national measures of emergency care capacity have been proposed but not yet approved.

“It’s not just the extent of ED boarding that we need to understand. It’s the extent of acute hospital capacity in our communities,” said Venkatesh of Yale, who helped draft the new measures.

In the meantime, some hospital systems are publicizing their plight by highlighting capacity constraints and the need for more hospital beds. Among them is Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, which announced in January that ER boarding had risen 32% from October 2022 to September 2023. At the end of that period, patients admitted to the hospital spent a median of 14 hours in the ER and 26% spent more than 24 hours.

Maura Kennedy, Mass General’s chief of geriatric emergency medicine, described an 80-something woman with a respiratory infection who languished in the ER for more than 24 hours after physicians decided she needed inpatient hospital care.

“She wasn’t mobilized, she had nothing to cognitively engage her, she hadn’t eaten, and she became increasingly agitated, trying to get off the stretcher and arguing with staff,” Kennedy told me. “After a prolonged hospital stay, she left the hospital more disabled than she was when she came in.”

What Seniors Can Do

When I asked ER doctors what older adults could do about these problems, they said boarding is a health system issue that needs health system and policy changes. Still, they had several suggestions.

“Have another person there with you to advocate on your behalf,” said Jesse Pines, chief of clinical innovation at US Acute Care Solutions, the nation’s largest physician-owned emergency medicine practice. And have that person speak up if they feel you’re getting worse or if staffers are missing problems.

Alexander Janke, a clinical instructor of emergency medicine at the University of Michigan, advises people, “Be prepared to wait when you come to an ER” and “bring a medication list and your medications, if you can.”

To stay oriented and reduce the possibility of delirium, “make sure you have your hearing aids and eyeglasses with you,” said Michael Malone, medical director of senior services for Advocate Aurora Health, a 20-hospital system in Wisconsin and northern Illinois. “Whenever possible, try to get up and move around.”

Friends or family caregivers who accompany older adults to the ER should ask to be at their bedside, when possible, and “try to make sure they eat, drink, get to the bathroom, and take routine medications for underlying medical conditions,” Malone said.

Older adults or caregivers who are helping them should try to bring “things that would engage you cognitively: magazines, books … music, anything that you might focus on in a hallway where there isn’t a TV to entertain you,” Kennedy said.

“Experienced patients often show up with eye masks and ear plugs” to help them rest in ERs with nonstop stimulation, said Zikry of UCLA. “Also, bring something to eat and drink in case you can’t get to the cafeteria or it’s a while before staffers bring these to you.”

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

You Have the Right to Lose Your Rights

By Mia Maysack, PNN Columnist

After experiencing medical injustice and malpractice multiple times, I began advocating for myself and others who live in similarly painful ways.

It didn't take long to realize that the concept of "pain" is universal, but different for each of us. We all experience pain to varying degrees, but our perspectives differ. Each individual possesses an existence that is unique to them alone.

All that is to say that my advocacy efforts shifted away from "my" cause and instead became “ours.” It has continued evolving to the point where it is no longer solely fixated on healthcare, but instead acknowledges all systems (political, economic, social, cultural, etc.) and how they tie together and influence each other.

That's why I no longer identify specifically as a "patient advocate."  I lost patience with all the sh*t!  Now I'm just someone who believes in rights and liberation for all, understanding there are different ingredients in that recipe for each person.

The following is a recent example of a situation I experienced that connected different systems together – and not in a good way. There are far too many examples of things like it leading to a person's harm, hurt or worse. My aim is to make an illustration of the hypocrisy behind it and the hurdles it creates.

‘We Don’t Make the Laws’

On some days, I just cannot get outta bed. Other days, I may be able to take a little trip somewhere.  Why not enjoy different scenery, apart from the four walls that seem to close in on me?

While taking a drive, I passed police officers on two separate occasions. Although I thought nothing of it either time because I had no reason to, they pulled me over. When they approached the vehicle to request my license, I respectfully asked why this was happening. 

Their reply was: “Your tints."

As someone disabled by a neurological disorder that makes me very sensitive to light, tinted windows assist in making moments of normalcy possible for me. This amenity even has the approval of a world-renowned neurology department in one of the top teaching hospitals in the country, which happens to be located in my state. I provided the proof of that claim to the officers, and what happened next is where the system fails.

Although it was acknowledged that my tints are for a health issue, it was also explained to me that even with proper documentation, I'm still not legally allowed to have tinted windows on my car. I've had them for years and driven endless places without an issue, but now I was being told that I can’t have them, because dark windows can be a safety issue.  

“Driving isn't something I'm always able to do,” I protested. “The law is prohibiting a tool that I need and helps keep myself and others safe."

"We don't make the laws," the officers said.

I understand that. But I also took the opportunity to explain that people in positions of authority -- whether a cop, doctor or elected official -- are public service workers. That means they exist to aid, assist, support and contribute to the betterment of those they are in the position to serve: Us.

Tints are a petty example in the grand scheme of things, but they speak to a deeper issue of policies and regulations being put in place that do not benefit each individual on a case-by-case basis.

Simply put, the law does not get to dictate what’s best for our health. This is an issue I’ll continue addressing, perhaps even in court, because it’s difficult enough to survive without having your liberties threatened. 

Mia Maysack lives with chronic migraine, cluster headache and fibromyalgia. She is a healthcare reform advocate and founder of Keepin’ Our Heads Up, a support network; Peace & Love, a life coaching practice; and Still We Rise, an organization that seeks to alleviate pain of all kinds.

 

Will Bird Flu Be the Next Pandemic?

By Amy Maxmen, KFF Health News

Headlines are flying after the Department of Agriculture confirmed that the H5N1 bird flu virus has infected dairy cows around the country. Tests have detected the virus among cattle in nine states, mainly in Texas and New Mexico, and most recently in Colorado, said Nirav Shah, principal deputy director at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, at a May 1 event held by the Council on Foreign Relations.

A menagerie of other animals have been infected by H5N1, and at least one person in Texas. But what scientists fear most is if the virus were to spread efficiently from person to person. That hasn’t happened and might not. Shah said the CDC considers the H5N1 outbreak “a low risk to the general public at this time.”

Viruses evolve and outbreaks can shift quickly. “As with any major outbreak, this is moving at the speed of a bullet train,” Shah said. “What we’ll be talking about is a snapshot of that fast-moving train.” What he means is that what’s known about the H5N1 bird flu today will undoubtedly change.

With that in mind, KFF Health News explains what you need to know now.

Q: Who gets the bird flu?

Mainly birds. Over the past few years, however, the H5N1 bird flu virus has increasingly jumped from birds into mammals around the world. The growing list of more than 50 species includes seals, goats, skunks, cats, and wild bush dogs at a zoo in the United Kingdom. At least 24,000 sea lions died in outbreaks of H5N1 bird flu in South America last year.

What makes the current outbreak in cattle unusual is that it’s spreading rapidly from cow to cow, whereas the other cases — except for the sea lion infections — appear limited. Researchers know this because genetic sequences of the H5N1 viruses drawn from cattle this year were nearly identical to one another.

The cattle outbreak is also concerning because the country has been caught off guard. Researchers examining the virus’s genomes suggest it originally spilled over from birds into cows late last year in Texas, and has since spread among many more cows than have been tested. “Our analyses show this has been circulating in cows for four months or so, under our noses,” said Michael Worobey, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

Q: Is this the start of the next pandemic?

Not yet. But it’s a thought worth considering because a bird flu pandemic would be a nightmare. More than half of people infected by older strains of H5N1 bird flu viruses from 2003 to 2016 died. Even if death rates turn out to be less severe for the H5N1 strain currently circulating in cattle, repercussions could involve loads of sick people and hospitals too overwhelmed to handle other medical emergencies.

Although at least one person has been infected with H5N1 this year, the virus can’t lead to a pandemic in its current state. To achieve that horrible status, a pathogen needs to sicken many people on multiple continents. And to do that, the H5N1 virus would need to infect a ton of people. That won’t happen through occasional spillovers of the virus from farm animals into people. Rather, the virus must acquire mutations for it to spread from person to person, like the seasonal flu, as a respiratory infection transmitted largely through the air as people cough, sneeze, and breathe. As we learned in the depths of covid-19, airborne viruses are hard to stop.

That hasn’t happened yet. However, H5N1 viruses now have plenty of chances to evolve as they replicate within thousands of cows. Like all viruses, they mutate as they replicate, and mutations that improve the virus’s survival are passed to the next generation. And because cows are mammals, the viruses could be getting better at thriving within cells that are closer to ours than birds’.

The evolution of a pandemic-ready bird flu virus could be aided by a sort of superpower possessed by many viruses. Namely, they sometimes swap their genes with other strains in a process called reassortment. In a study published in 2009, Worobey and other researchers traced the origin of the H1N1 “swine flu” pandemic to events in which different viruses causing the swine flu, bird flu, and human flu mixed and matched their genes within pigs that they were simultaneously infecting. Pigs need not be involved this time around, Worobey warned.

Q: Can I get sick from contaminated milk?

Cow’s milk, as well as powdered milk and infant formula, sold in stores is considered safe because the law requires all milk sold commercially to be pasteurized. That process of heating milk at high temperatures kills bacteria, viruses, and other teeny organisms. Tests have identified fragments of H5N1 viruses in milk from grocery stores but confirm that the virus bits are dead and, therefore, harmless.

Unpasteurized “raw” milk, however, has been shown to contain living H5N1 viruses, which is why the FDA and other health authorities strongly advise people not to drink it. Doing so could cause a person to become seriously ill or worse. But even then, a pandemic is unlikely to be sparked because the virus — in its current form — does not spread efficiently from person to person, as the seasonal flu does.

Q: What should be done?

A lot! Because of a lack of surveillance, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and other agencies have allowed the H5N1 bird flu to spread under the radar in cattle. To get a handle on the situation, the USDA recently ordered all lactating dairy cattle to be tested before farmers move them to other states, and the outcomes of the tests to be reported.

But just as restricting covid tests to international travelers in early 2020 allowed the coronavirus to spread undetected, testing only cows that move across state lines would miss plenty of cases.

Such limited testing won’t reveal how the virus is spreading among cattle — information desperately needed so farmers can stop it. A leading hypothesis is that viruses are being transferred from one cow to the next through the machines used to milk them.

To boost testing, Fred Gingrich, executive director of a nonprofit organization for farm veterinarians, the American Association of Bovine Practitioners, said the government should offer funds to cattle farmers who report cases so that they have an incentive to test. Barring that, he said, reporting just adds reputational damage atop financial loss.

“These outbreaks have a significant economic impact,” Gingrich said. “Farmers lose about 20% of their milk production in an outbreak because animals quit eating, produce less milk, and some of that milk is abnormal and then can’t be sold.”

The government has made the H5N1 tests free for farmers, Gingrich added, but they haven’t budgeted money for veterinarians who must sample the cows, transport samples, and file paperwork. “Tests are the least expensive part,” he said.

If testing on farms remains elusive, evolutionary virologists can still learn a lot by analyzing genomic sequences from H5N1 viruses sampled from cattle. The differences between sequences tell a story about where and when the current outbreak began, the path it travels, and whether the viruses are acquiring mutations that pose a threat to people. Yet this vital research has been hampered by the USDA’s slow and incomplete posting of genetic data, Worobey said.

The government should also help poultry farmers prevent H5N1 outbreaks since those kill many birds and pose a constant threat of spillover, said Maurice Pitesky, an avian disease specialist at the University of California-Davis.

Waterfowl like ducks and geese are the usual sources of outbreaks on poultry farms, and researchers can detect their proximity using remote sensing and other technologies. By zeroing in on zones of potential spillover, farmers can target their attention. That can mean routine surveillance to detect early signs of infections in poultry, using water cannons to shoo away migrating flocks, relocating farm animals, or temporarily ushering them into barns. “We should be spending on prevention,” Pitesky said.

Q: What could happen to people who get the H5N1 bird flu?

No one really knows. Only one person in Texas has been diagnosed with the disease this year, in April. This person worked closely with dairy cows, and had a mild case with an eye infection. The CDC found out about them because of its surveillance process. Clinics are supposed to alert state health departments when they diagnose farmworkers with the flu, using tests that detect influenza viruses, broadly. State health departments then confirm the test, and if it’s positive, they send a person’s sample to a CDC laboratory, where it is checked for the H5N1 virus, specifically. “Thus far we have received 23,” Shah said. “All but one of those was negative.”

State health department officials are also monitoring around 150 people, he said, who have spent time around cattle. They’re checking in with these farmworkers via phone calls, text messages, or in-person visits to see if they develop symptoms. And if that happens, they’ll be tested.

Another way to assess farmworkers would be to check their blood for antibodies against the H5N1 bird flu virus; a positive result would indicate they might have been unknowingly infected. But Shah said health officials are not yet doing this work.

“The fact that we’re four months in and haven’t done this isn’t a good sign,” Worobey said. “I’m not super worried about a pandemic at the moment, but we should start acting like we don’t want it to happen.”

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

Wild Orangutan Used Plant as Pain Reliever

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Humans have used natural remedies like cannabis, kratom and willow trees for thousands of years for pain relief. But other primates may have beaten us to the punch when it comes to using plants as medicine.

That’s one of the theories emerging after a wild orangutan in Indonesia was observed using a plant to help heal a facial wound. The orangutan, named Rakus by scientists, lost a chunk of flesh below his right eye, apparently during a fight with another male orangutan.

A wound like that could easily become infected in the damp rain forests of Sumatra, but Rakus had other ideas.

Scientists observed Rakus rubbing sap from a flowering vine called liana (Fibraurea tinctoria) directly on the wound and then chewing on its leaves to create a paste that he applied over the wound as a poultice.

Scientists say the wound never became infected and within a few days was completely healed.

Since liana leaves are not typically eaten by orangutans as food, it’s believed to be the first time that a big ape was observed self-medicating.

“The behavior of Rakus appeared to be intentional as he selectively treated his facial wound on his right flange, and no other body parts, with the plant juice. The behavior was also repeated several times, not only with the plant juice but also later with more solid plant material until the wound was fully covered. The entire process took a considerable amount of time,” says Isabelle Laumer, PhD, a researcher at the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior in Germany.

“Interestingly, Rakus also rested more than usual when being wounded. Sleep positively affects wound healing as growth hormone release, protein synthesis and cell division are increased during sleep.”

Rakus’ behavior raises several intriguing questions. Did he discover the healing powers of lianas on his own? Or was it something he learned from other orangutans and was passed down, from one big ape to another, over generations?

Indigenous people in Southeast Asia also use lianas as medicine. Are the plant’s medicinal properties something they learned while watching orangutans?

“This and related liana species that can be found in tropical forests of Southeast Asia are known for their analgesic and antipyretic (fever reducing) effects and are used in traditional medicine to treat various diseases, such as malaria,” said Laumer, who reported her findings in the journal Scientific Reports.

Like kratom, the pain-relieving effects of lianas comes from chemical compounds called alkaloids, which act on opioid receptors in the brain. The alkaloids in lianas also have antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, anti-fungal, and antioxidant properties that promote wound healing. In Borneo, native people have even used Fibraurea tinctoria to treat diabetes.

“It shows that orangutans and humans share knowledge. Since they live in the same habitat, I would say that’s quite obvious, but still intriguing to realize,” said co-author Caroline Schuppli, PhD, a primatologist at the Max Planck Institute.

“As forms of active wound treatment are not just human, but can also be found in both African and Asian great apes, it is possible that there exists a common underlying mechanism for the recognition and application of substances with medical or functional properties to wounds and that our last common ancestor already showed similar forms of ointment behavior.”

We only know about Rakus because he lives in an animal sanctuary where orangutans are closely monitored. In 21 years of observation, scientists there have not seen any other orangutans treat their wounds with lianas, although that may be due to the fact that they are solitary animals who spend most of their lives in trees and injured ones are rarely seen.    

Schuppli says Rakus may have learned how to treat his wound from his mother, by observing other orangutans, or through “individual innovation.” Orangutans eat hundreds of different fruits and plants, and it’s possible Rakus just stumbled onto the right one at the right time.

“As Fibraurea tinctoria has potent analgesic effects, individuals may feel an immediate pain release, causing them to repeat the behavior several times,” she said.   

Work Comp Claims for Opioids Down Significantly

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Workers’ compensation claims in the U.S. for opioids and other pain relievers fell significantly in 2023, one of the largest drops the work comp industry has seen in years, according to a new report.

San Diego-based Enlyte analyzes drug utilization and spending trends annually for property and casualty insurers. The company’s Drug Trends Report for 2023 estimates that overall opioid use per claim fell by 9.7 percent, with the use of sustained-release opioids such as oxycodone down more than 10 percent.

Surprisingly, work comp claims for non-opioid pain relievers also fell, even though they are increasingly prescribed as alternatives to opioids. Claims for non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) fell by 3% last year, with anticonvulsants like gabapentin down 7.4% and antidepressants such as duloxetine falling 6.1%. 

"This, by far, marks one of the largest drops in opioid utilization we've seen in years," Nikki Wilson, PharmD, senior director of clinical pharmacy solutions at Enlyte, said in a press release. "In addition, opioid alternatives commonly prescribed to manage acute and chronic pain also experienced decreases in utilization per claim, although to a lesser degree than opioids."

Enlyte said the decline in opioid use was “supported by prescribing guidelines,” noting that claims for high-dose opioid prescriptions have fallen for nine consecutive years. The 2016 CDC opioid guideline urged doctors not to prescribe doses higher than 90 morphine milligram equivalents (MME) per day. Although that recommendation is voluntary, it has taken root in many laws, regulations and insurance policies governing the use of opioids.

As a result, non-opioid analgesics and muscle relaxants are used more often than opioids for pain management during the first two years of a work comp claim. Only afterwards are sustained-release opioids used more frequently for chronic pain caused by job-related injuries.

Even though opioid use has fallen dramatically in recent years, opioids remain the top therapeutic class for claims, followed by NSAIDs, anticonvulsants, muscle relaxants, antidepressants and topical medications. Those six therapeutic classes represent over two-thirds of the prescription drug claims in 2023.

Respiratory and Migraine Drugs  

While the overall cost of prescription drugs fell slightly (down 0.2%) in 2023, the price of respiratory and migraine medications rose significantly, up 14.7% and 10.2%, respectively.

Newer migraine drugs that block calcitonin gene-related peptides (CGRPs) are some of the most expensive medications, with the average wholesale price of a Nurtec prescription reaching $1,916 and $1,654 for a Ubrelvy prescription.      

"Basically, what's driving these trends are the costs of the top three medications in their respective classes," Wilson said. "For instance, for migraine medications, Nurtec ODT is prescribed about 15% of the time yet makes up more than 31% of the total drug spend in this category. Similarly, respiratory medication like Trelegy Ellipta is prescribed about 10%, but accounts for nearly 19% of all respiratory medication total costs."

Enlyte reported the number of retail and mail order prescription drug claims is trending downward due to an “evolving work environment.” More people are working from home and as independent contractors, reducing the number of on-site job injuries and employee compensation claims.  

Blood Test Predicts Knee Osteoarthritis Years Before Symptoms Start

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

An experimental blood test could give doctors and patients a leg up in diagnosing and treating knee osteoarthritis, years before joint damage occurs and becomes visible on X-rays.

"Currently, you've got to have an abnormal X-ray to show clear evidence of knee osteoarthritis, and by the time it shows up on X-ray, your disease has been progressing for some time," says senior author Virginia Byers Kraus, MD, a professor of Medicine, Pathology, and Orthopedic Surgery at Duke University School of Medicine.

Kraus and her colleagues have devised a test that looks for serum biomarkers in the blood that can predict – with a fair amount of accuracy – the development of knee osteoarthritis (OA) up to 8 years before joint damage occurs. Osteoarthritis is the most common form of arthritis, affecting about 10% of men and 18% of women over age 60.

In previous studies, the biomarker test demonstrated 74% accuracy in predicting knee OA progression and 85% accuracy in diagnosing knee OA. The current study further refined the test by narrowing down the number of biomarkers from a dozen to only six.

Using a UK patient database, researchers used the refined test to analyze the blood of 200 middle-aged women with no chronic knee pain; half of whom were later diagnosed with OA and the other half without the disease. The study findings, published in the journal Science Advances, show the test correctly predicted knee OA with 77% accuracy within 6 years.

"What our blood test demonstrates is that it's possible to detect this disease much earlier than our current diagnostics permit," Kraus said in a news release. "This is important because it provides more evidence that there are abnormalities in the joint that can be detected by blood biomarkers well before X-rays can detect OA.

"Early-stage osteoarthritis could provide a 'window of opportunity' in which to arrest the disease process and restore joint health."

There are currently no diagnostic blood tests for OA and there is no cure. Treatment is limited to pain relievers and anti-inflammatory drugs that slow progression of the disease.

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Patients Blame DEA for Drug Shortages, Not Monopolies or Middlemen

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Two federal agencies are getting more than they bargained for when they asked the public to comment on record shortages of prescription drugs.

In February, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) made a joint Request for Information in the Federal Register, asking how wholesalers and other “middlemen” in the drug supply chain were contributing to persistent shortages.

“When you’re prescribed an important medication by your doctor, and you learn the drug is out of stock, your heart sinks,” HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra said in a press release. “This devastating reality is the case for too many Americans who need generic drugs for ADHD, cancer, and other conditions. (This) announcement is part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s work to tackle healthcare monopolies and lessen the impact on vulnerable patients who bear the brunt of this lack of competition.”

Nearly 10,000 comments have been received so far, with many blaming the federal government for the drug shortages -- not monopolies, middlemen or lack of competition. Drawing the most criticism is the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), which sets annual production quotas for opioids, stimulants and other controlled substances. The CDC and FDA also came under fire from frustrated patients.

“The heavy-handed failure of the FDA/DEA to properly and ethically manage the uptick in ADHD prescriptions is creating a crisis on par with their equally underhanded failure in managing the opioid crisis,” wrote Matti Dupre. “Hardworking Americans are left looking at the individuals leading these organizations as a source of pain rather than as a means of support.”

“Millions of people are having a hard time getting their prescription opioid medications filled at pharmacies now. Why? Because the DEA have cut production down so low, pharmacies can't get what they need to fill our prescriptions,” said Candi P. “Wake up! Stop playing with our lives!”

“The government has gone way too far, with their guidelines and regulations regarding opioids,” wrote Julie Anuskewic, who has a painful immune system disorder. “My pain is not controlled because the CDC has scared all doctors into not prescribing. It’s bad enough that they have destroyed the doctor-patient relationship. Now they are destroying the patient-pharmacist relationship.” 

Notably lacking in the FTC and HHS statement about drug shortages is any mention of the National Opioid Settlement, which has forced major drug wholesalers and big chain pharmacies to ration opioids and other controlled substances or risk losing their DEA licenses. Some manufacturers are also cutting back on production of generic opioids because the profit margins are low and the risk of further litigation is high.

A recent PNN survey found that 90% of patients with opioid prescriptions had trouble getting them filled, with one in five unable to get their pain medication even after contacting multiple pharmacies.  

“The FTC is looking in the wrong places for reasons for drug shortages, at least as far as opioids and stimulants are concerned,” wrote Andrea MacNary. “In those cases, the shortages are a direct result of the DEA's policies – with input from the FDA – that have seen annual reductions in the amount of drugs that manufacturers are allowed to produce.

”This results in patients being unable to obtain their legally prescribed medications in a timely manner. Because pharmacies have shortages, patients are then forced to call around to different pharmacies looking for their meds. This is extremely difficult, because not only do pharmacies not want to disclose whether they have the drugs in stock, but if the patient does find them, they must obtain a new prescription from their doctor.”

‘Broken Quota System’

One critic sees the public outreach by the FTC and HHS as a ham-handed attempt to coverup the DEA’s “crude and inadequate system” for regulating controlled substances   

“I believe the FTC is only trying to find cover for the Drug Enforcement Administration.The DEA is the only governmental agency that sets production and distribution quotas for every drug company manufacturing controlled medication,” William Dodson, MD, wrote in a recent op/ed in ADDitude. “This problem traces its roots and long tendrils back to the DEA alone. No other agency has the authority to create and prolong it. 

“The time has long since passed for the DEA to admit its fault and fix its broken quota system. There has already been too much needless suffering by innocent people who did nothing to cause the DEA’s restrictions.”

That’s not how the DEA sees it. This month a top DEA official compared the growing demand for Adderall and other ADHD stimulants to the early stages of the opioid crisis. Matthew Strait claimed the problem isn’t tight supplies, but excessive prescribing of stimulants.

“I’m not trying to be a doomsday-er here,” said Strait, deputy assistant administrator in the DEA’s diversion control division. “It makes me feel like we’re at the precipice of our next drug crisis in the United States.”

If you’d like to make a comment in the Federal Register on the FTC and HHS Request for Information, click here. Comments will be accepted until May 30. 

How ‘Injectrode’ Could Change Treatment of Chronic Pain

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

An experimental “injectrode” is showing potential as a new neuromodulation treatment for chronic pain, after the first human clinical trial demonstrated the device’s safety and effectiveness in stimulating nerves in the lower back.

The injectrode is a thin and flexible lead wire that is injected by a needle through the skin and placed near an injured nerve. The wire can then be charged by an externally worn stimulator that sends mild electrical impulses to the nerve to block pain signals.

The injectrode is being developed by Cleveland-based Neuronoff, Inc. as a treatment for many types of chronic pain, such as peripheral nerve pain, phantom limb pain and lower back pain. It all depends on the nerve being targeted.

“You can treat knee pain, shoulder pain, lower back pain by stimulating nerve fibers that are providing proprioceptive input sensory input into the spine and thereby help with a reduction of pain perception,” said Manfred Franke, CEO of Neuronoff, who compares the injectrode wire to a Slinky, a toy once popular with Baby Boomers.

“It’s like a spring, like a Slinky, that’s stuck inside a needle,“ he told PNN. “And when that Slinky comes out of the needle, it folds over and it can conform to the anatomy. If you want to take out the injectrode, all you have to do is pull at any point along its length and then the entire injectrode will come out. Nothing is at risk of being left behind.”

This video produced by Neuronoff demonstrates how the device is injected:

Because the injectrode is easy to install in an out-patient procedure, it could potentially be a low-cost competitor to more invasive neuromodulation devices, such as spinal cord stimulators, and reduce the need for pain medication, steroid injections and procedures such as nerve ablation.

“The injectrode represents a paradigm shift in the field of neuromodulation. Its unique flexible design allows for optimal customization to the patient's anatomy and has the potential to be both a temporary and permanent solution without an internal pulse generator,” said Hesham Elsharkawy, MD, an anesthesiologist and clinical advisor to Neuronoff. “The entire procedure takes just 5-10 minutes, making it highly efficient and accessible for patients seeking relief from chronic pain."

In the investigational pilot study, 10 healthy volunteers had injectrodes placed in their lower back and tested. After 30 days, there were no serious adverse events and the injectrodes were removed without analgesics or sutures.

Because the injectrodes work similarly to transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulators (TENS) already on the market, Franke is hopeful the devices will be cleared by the FDA for marketing without more clinical trials, perhaps as soon as early 2025. The key will being getting insurers to cover the injectrodes, which will cost a few thousand dollars, far less than spinal cord stimulators.

“Which is an advantage to the insurance company. And any advantage that you can provide to the insurance company is a benefit for the patient because you're more likely to be receiving prior approval,” Franke said. “The goal is to be cost efficient enough to the insurance companies, so you can replace repeat drug injections or nerve ablations.”   

In addition to pain, Franke says the electrodes have the potential to treat other medical conditions, such as overactive bladders and hypertension. In tests on animals, the devices significantly lowered blood pressure when they stimulated nerves in the neck.

Not Your Parents’ Pot: Cannabis Is More Potent Now

By Dr. Ty Schepis

Eventually, most adults reach a point where we realize we are out of touch with those much younger than us.

Perhaps it is a pop culture reference that sparks the realization. For me, this moment happened when I was in my late 20s and working with adolescents in school settings to help them quit smoking. When other drugs would occasionally come up, I didn’t understand some of the slang terms they used for these drugs. Many people may have that feeling now when the topic of cannabis comes up – especially in its different and newer forms.

As a professor of psychology, I focus my research on substance use in adolescents and young adults. A major change during my time in research is the legalization and explosion of cannabis availability across the U.S.

There are arguments for and against increasing legalization of cannabis for adult use in the U.S., but expanded access to legal cannabis also may have unintended consequences for adolescents. These consequences are compounded by the increasing potency of some cannabis products.

I use the word “cannabis” since it refers to the plant from which the drugs are derived. It also serves as a catch-all term for any substance with chemical compounds from cannabis plants and addresses concerns that the word marijuana has some long-standing racist overtones.

Cannabis now comes in a larger variety of forms than it used to. When most people over 40 think of cannabis, they imagine its dried form for smoking. This cannabis was not particularly strong: The average THC concentration of cannabis seized by the Drug Enforcement Agency in 1995 was 4%, while it was roughly 15% in 2021.

In addition to the smoked form, some might remember an edible form, often baked into a dessert like a brownie, or hashish, which is derived from more potent parts of the cannabis plant.

Today there are many different cannabis concentrates that have high levels of THC, typically ranging from 40% to 70%, and more than 80% in some cases, depending on the method of extraction. These include oils that can be vaporized by vape or dab pens, waxier substances and even powders.

Differences in Cannabis Products

THC and cannabidiol, or CBD, are the most common chemicals in cannabis. Each one interacts with the brain in different ways, producing different perceived effects.

CBD does not produce the same “high” that THC does, and cannabidiol may have benefits as a medication for severe epilepsy, as well as other potential but as yet unproven medical uses. The differences between THC and CBD come from how they interact with cannabinoid receptors – the proteins onto which these drugs attach – in the brain and body.

However, CBD can also make people sleepy, alter mood in unintended ways and cause stomach upset. Never use a CBD product without consulting a physician.

THC is the chemical most strongly associated with the high from cannabis. By increasing the amount of THC, concentrated products can increase blood levels of THC rapidly and more strongly than nonconcentrates such as traditional smoked cannabis.

Cannabis concentrates also come in many different forms that range from waxy or creamy to hard and brittle. They are made in a variety of ways that may require dry ice, water or flammable solvents such as butane.

The myriad names for cannabis concentrates can be confusing. Concentrate names include “budder,” which refers to a yellowish paste like frosting; “shatter” is made similarly to budder but comes in a thin, brittle and translucent form; there’s also “wax” or “crumble,” which confusingly is not waxy but is more like a powdery or grainy substance; and “keef” or “kief,” which is powdery in nature and derived from the most potent parts of the cannabis plant. It is similar to hashish.

The names change regularly and can vary by guide or from person to person. It is best to ask what a term means from an open and curious place than to act as if you know all the terminology.

Many concentrates are vaporized and inhaled. Vaporizing is different than smoking, as vaporizing heats the concentrate until it becomes a gas, which is inhaled. Smoking involves burning the compound to produce an inhaled gas.

Many who vaporize concentrates call it “dabbing.” This refers to the dab of concentrate to heat, vaporize and inhale. Another way to vaporize cannabis concentrates is to use a vape pen. Vape pens are sometimes also called dab pens, depending on the local terms.

Cannabis and Adolescents

One of the reasons why young people are drawn to these sorts of products is that vaping or dabbing the concentrated form makes it easier to hide cannabis use. Vaping cannabis does not create the typical smell associated with weed.

A 2021 systematic review found that past-year cannabis vaping nearly doubled from 2017 to 2020 in adolescents - jumping from 7.2% to 13.2%. A more recent study in five northeastern U.S. states found that 12.8% of adolescents vaped cannabis in the past 30 days, a more narrow time frame that suggests potential increases in use. In addition, a 2020 study found that one-third of adolescents who vape do so with cannabis concentrates.

Cannabis use by adolescents is scary because it can alter the way their brains develop. Research shows that the brains of adolescents who use cannabis are less primed to change in response to new experiences, which is a key part of adolescent development. Adolescents who use cannabis are also more likely to experience symptoms of schizophrenia, struggle more in school and engage in other risky behaviors.

The risks of cannabis use are even greater with concentrates because of the high levels of THC. This is true for both adolescents and adults, with greater risk for symptoms of schizophrenia such as hallucinations and delusions, mental health symptoms and more severe cannabis use.

The best analogy is with another drug – alcohol. Most people know that a 12-ounce beer is much less potent than 12 ounces of vodka. Cannabis in smoked form is closer to the beer, while a concentrate is more like the vodka. Neither is safe for an adolescent, but one is even more dangerous.

These dangers make early conversations with kids about cannabis and cannabis concentrates critically important. Research consistently shows that expressing disapproval of drug use makes adolescents less likely to start drug use.

Start these conversations early – ideally before middle school. You can find some helpful online resources to guide the conversation.

While these conversations can be uncomfortable, and you can look like the out-of-touch adult, they can be a major step toward preventing adolescents from using cannabis and other drugs.

Ty Schepis, PhD, is a Professor of Clinical Psychology at Texas State University. His research receives funding from the Food and Drug Administration and the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

This article originally appeared in The Conversation and is republished with permission.

Risk of Chronic Pain Doubles for People From Lower Socioeconomic Backgrounds

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

People from lower socioeconomic backgrounds are twice as likely to develop chronic pain after an acute injury, according to UK researchers who found that smoking, fear of movement, and poor social support also raise the risk of chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP).

The study, published in PLOS One, adds to a growing body of evidence linking economic, social and emotional stress to some chronic pain conditions.   

Researchers at the University of Birmingham analyzed over a dozen systematic reviews of clinical studies involving nearly half a million people with CMP. Their goal was to see what biopsychosocial factors are associated with CMP and potentially make pain treatment more difficult.

“The mechanisms of CMP are different to acute pain in that pain exists despite there no longer being evidence of ongoing healing, but rather due to a sensitized nervous system that creates a continued or repeated experience of pain despite no evidence of actual or potential tissue damage,” wrote lead author Michael Dunn, from the School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences at University of Birmingham

“This transition from acute to chronic MSK pain is associated with the presence of many biopsychosocial factors such as fear avoidance, low mood, and work satisfaction or strain. Despite this, healthcare services conventionally utilize approaches to treat CMP based on understandings of acute MSK pain, with focus often on identifying and treating perceived injured or irritated MSK structures.”

Dunn and his colleagues say many treatments for MSK pain, such as physical therapy and surgery, work no better than a placebo. That is because they only focus on the injured body part, and fail to account for psychological and social factors that contribute to acute pain becoming chronic.

“Put simply, current healthcare approaches do not address all the reasons people do not get better,” Dunn said in a news release. “Not only are current healthcare approaches inadequate, they may also be discriminatory, with current healthcare approaches that are orientated around the injured body part being geared towards those from higher socioeconomic backgrounds who are less likely to experience these psychological or social factors.”

In addition to socioeconomic factors, Dunn says stress and depression also raise the risk of developing CMP. He doubts that any single risk factor is the sole cause of chronic pain, but a combination of them make recovery from an acute injury more problematic.

Dunn’s findings mirror those of several U.S. studies that found social and economic factors were intertwined with the prevalence of chronic pain. In a 2021 study, for example, nearly 45% of people living below the federal poverty level reported having back pain. Another study found that people who did not complete high school were significantly more likely to have joint pain from arthritis.   

People with less education often have blue-collar jobs requiring manual labor that may contribute to musculoskeletal pain. They also tend to have lower incomes and less access to healthcare.

Princeton researchers Angus Deaton and Anne Case were the first to report on the role socioeconomic issues play in so-called “deaths of despair,” which linked financial and social stress to rising rates of pain, suicide, substance abuse, and death in middle-aged white Americans.

Low-Carb Diets More Effective than Medication for IBS

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Diets low in carbohydrates are more effective than medication in treating irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), according to a new study that found over 70% patients had significantly reduced symptoms after changing their eating habits.

IBS is an intestinal condition that causes abdominal pain, cramps, bloating, gas and diarrhea. An imbalance in gut bacteria is suspected as a possible cause of IBS, and symptoms can be aggravated by stress or eating a large meal.

Researchers at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden enrolled over 300 people with severe or moderate IBS symptoms in a randomized clinical trial, dividing them into three groups.

The first group was given traditional IBS dietary advice, while also focusing on a low intake of fermentable carbohydrates, known as FODMAPs. Foods such as lactose, legumes, onions and whole grains were avoided because they are poorly digested, tend to ferment in the colon, and cause IBS pain.

The second group also had a diet low in carbohydrates, but high in protein and fat. In the third group, there were no dietary changes and laxatives, antidiarrheals, antibiotics and other medications were given based on the patient's symptoms. The treatment period for all three groups was four weeks.

The study findings, published in The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology, show that 76% of participants in the FODMAP group had significantly reduced IBS symptoms. That compares to 71% of patients in the low-carb/high protein and fat group, and only 58% in the medication-only group. All three groups reported better quality of life, and less anxiety and depression.

Even after six months, when participants partially returned to their previous eating habits, a large proportion still had significant symptom relief: 68% in the FODMAP group and 60% in the low-carb/high protein and fat group.

“Although we found evidence that dietary treatments were more efficacious than medical treatment after 4 weeks, all three treatment options showed significant and clinically meaningful efficacy,” wrote lead author Sanna Nybacka, PhD, a researcher and dietician at the University of Gothenburg.

“The sustained positive effects of dietary interventions suggest their potential as first-line treatments for IBS, although patient preference, compliance, cost-effectiveness, and effects on nutritional status and the gut microbiota would need to be accounted for.”

Dietary advice for IBS typically includes sitting down during meals, chewing foods thoroughly, and avoiding excessive intake of coffee, alcohol, fizzy drinks, and fatty or spicy foods.

Foods low in FODMAPs include rice, potatoes, quinoa, and gluten-free pasta and bread, as well as a variety of vegetables, fruits, fish, beef and chicken.

Red Cabbage Juice Improves Gut Health

A new study by researchers at the University of Missouri found that juice from red cabbage can also improve gut health and ease inflammation in the digestive tract caused by Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD).

Symptoms of IBD and IBS are similar, but in IBD they become chronic, causing anemia, bleeding, weight loss and fever. About three million Americans live with IBD, including Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis.

In studies on laboratory mice with IBD, red cabbage juice relieved their intestinal inflammation. Mice are often used to study IBD because colitis in mice closely resembles ulcerative colitis in humans.

“Red cabbage juice alters the composition of gut microbiota by increasing the abundance of good bacteria, resulting in increased production of short chain fatty acids and other bacteria derived metabolites ameliorating inflammation,” said lead author Satyanarayana Rachagani, PhD, an Associate Professor of Veterinary Medicine & Surgery at the University of Missouri

“Its ability to modulate gut microbiota, activate anti-inflammatory pathways and enhance immune regulation underscores its potential as a valuable therapeutic agent for IBD and related inflammatory disorders.”

The study is published in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences.

Red cabbage juice is rich in antioxidants and Vitamin C, and has long been used as a natural remedy to reduce inflammation and improve overall health. It is also a good source of dietary fiber.

Few Take Advantage of Medicare’s Chronic Care Program

By Phil Galewitz and Holly Hacker, KFF Health News

Carrie Lester looks forward to the phone call every Thursday from her doctors’ medical assistant, who asks how she’s doing and if she needs prescription refills. The assistant counsels her on dealing with anxiety and her other health issues.

Lester credits the chats for keeping her out of the hospital and reducing the need for clinic visits to manage chronic conditions including depression, fibromyalgia, and hypertension.

“Just knowing someone is going to check on me is comforting,” said Lester, 73, who lives with her dogs, Sophie and Dolly, in Independence, Kansas.

At least two-thirds of Medicare enrollees have two or more chronic health conditions, federal data shows. That makes them eligible for a federal program that, since 2015, has rewarded doctors for doing more to manage their health outside office visits.

But while early research found the service, called Chronic Care Management, reduced emergency room and in-patient hospital visits and lowered total health spending, uptake has been sluggish.

Federal data from 2019 shows just 4% of potentially eligible enrollees participated in the program, a figure that appears to have held steady through 2023, according to a Mathematica analysis.

About 12,000 physicians billed Medicare under the CCM mantle in 2021, according to the latest Medicare data analyzed by KFF Health News. By comparison, federal data shows about 1 million providers participate in Medicare.

Even as the strategy has largely failed to live up to its potential, thousands of physicians have boosted their annual pay by participating, and auxiliary for-profit businesses have sprung up to help doctors take advantage of the program. The federal data showed about 4,500 physicians received at least $100,000 each in CCM pay in 2021.

Through the CCM program, Medicare pays to develop a patient care plan, coordinate treatment with specialists, and regularly check in with beneficiaries. Medicare pays doctors a monthly average of $62 per patient, for 20 minutes of work with each, according to companies in the business.

Without the program, providers often have little incentive to spend time coordinating care because they can’t bill Medicare for such services.

‘It Was Put Together Wrong’

Health policy experts say a host of factors limit participation in the program. Chief among them is that it requires both doctors and patients to opt in. Doctors may not have the capacity to regularly monitor patients outside office visits. Some also worry about meeting the strict Medicare documentation requirements for reimbursement and are reluctant to ask patients to join a program that may require a monthly copayment if they don’t have a supplemental policy.

“This program had potential to have a big impact,” said Kenneth Thorpe, an Emory University health policy expert on chronic diseases. “But I knew it was never going to work from the start because it was put together wrong.”

He said most doctors’ offices are not set up for monitoring patients at home. “This is very time-intensive and not something physicians are used to doing or have time to do,” Thorpe said.

For patients, the CCM program is intended to expand the type of care offered in traditional, fee-for-service Medicare to match benefits that — at least in theory — they may get through Medicare Advantage, which is administered by private insurers.

But the CCM program is open to both Medicare and Medicare Advantage beneficiaries.

The program was also intended to boost pay to primary care doctors and other physicians who are paid significantly less by Medicare than specialists, said Mark Miller, a former executive director of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, which advises Congress. He’s currently an executive vice president of Arnold Ventures, a philanthropic organization focused on health policy. (The organization has also provided funding for KFF Health News.)

Despite the allure of extra money, some physicians have been put off by the program’s upfront costs.

“It may seem like easy money for a physician practice, but it is not,” said Namirah Jamshed, a physician at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.

Jamshed said the CCM program was cumbersome to implement because her practice was not used to documenting time spent with patients outside the office, a challenge that included finding a way to integrate the data into electronic health records. Another challenge was hiring staff to handle patient calls before her practice started getting reimbursed by the program.

Only about 10% of the practice’s Medicare patients are enrolled in CCM, she said.

Jamshed said her practice has been approached by private companies looking to do the work, but the practice demurred out of concerns about sharing patients’ health information and the cost of retaining the companies. Those companies can take more than half of what Medicare pays doctors for their CCM work.

Physician Jennifer Bacani McKenney, who runs a family medicine practice in Fredonia, Kansas, with her father — where Carrie Lester is a patient — said the CCM program has worked well.

She said having a system to keep in touch with patients at least once a month has reduced their use of emergency rooms — including for some who were prone to visits for nonemergency reasons, such as running out of medication or even feeling lonely. The CCM funding enables the practice’s medical assistant to call patients regularly to check in, something it could not afford before.

For a small practice, having a staffer who can generate extra revenue makes a big difference, McKenney said.

While she estimates about 90% of their patients would qualify for the program, only about 20% are enrolled. One reason is that not everyone needs or wants the calls, she said.

Outsourcing Chronic Care

While the program has captured interest among internists and family medicine doctors, it has also paid out hundreds of thousands of dollars to specialists, such as those in cardiology, urology, and gastroenterology, the KFF Health News analysis found. Primary care doctors are often seen as the ones who coordinate patient care, making the payments to specialists notable.

A federally funded study by Mathematica in 2017 found the CCM program saves Medicare $74 per patient per month, or $888 per patient per year — due mostly to a decreased need for hospital care.

The study quoted providers who were unhappy with attempts to outsource CCM work. “Third-party companies out there turn this into a racket,” the study cited one physician as saying, noting companies employ nurses who don’t know patients.

Nancy McCall, a Mathematica researcher who co-authored the 2017 study, said doctors are not the only resistance point. “Patients may not want to be bothered or asked if they are exercising or losing weight or watching their salt intake,” she said.

Still, some physician groups say it’s convenient to outsource the program.

UnityPoint Health, a large integrated health system based in Iowa, tried doing chronic care management on its own, but found it administratively burdensome, said Dawn Welling, the UnityPoint Clinic’s chief nursing officer.

For the past year, it has contracted with a Miami-based company, HealthSnap, to enroll patients, have its nurses make check-in calls each month, and help with billing. HealthSnap helps manage care for over 16,000 of UnityHealth’s Medicare patients — a small fraction of its Medicare patients, which includes those enrolled in Medicare Advantage.

Some doctors were anxious about sharing patient records and viewed the program as a sign they weren’t doing enough for patients, Welling said. But she said the program has been helpful, particularly to many enrollees who are isolated and need help changing their diet and other behaviors to improve health.

“These are patients who call the clinic regularly and have needs, but not always clinical needs,” Welling said.

Samson Magid, CEO of HealthSnap, said more doctors have started participating in the CCM program since Medicare increased pay in 2022 for 20 minutes of work, to $62 from $41, and added billing codes for additional time.

To help ensure patients pick up the phone, caller ID shows HealthSnap calls as coming from their doctor’s office, not from wherever the company’s nurse might be located. The company also hires nurses from different regions so they may speak with dialects similar to those of the patients they work with, Magid said.

He said some enrollees have been in the program for three years and many could stay enrolled for life — which means they can bill patients and Medicare long-term.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.