New Hampshire Law Protects Patient Access to Rx Opioids

By Pat Anson PNN Editor

Patient advocates around the country are looking with keen interest at a new law in New Hampshire that stipulates chronic pain patients should have access to opioid medication if it improves their physical function and quality of life.

HB 1639 was signed into law by Gov. Chris Sununu late last month. It amends state law to add some key provisions that protect the rights of both pain patients and their doctors.

Under the law, physicians and pharmacists are required to consider the “individualized needs” of pain patients, treat them with dignity, and ensure that they are “not unduly denied the medications needed to treat their conditions."   

Since the CDC’s controversial opioid prescribing guideline was released in 2016, dozens of states have adopted laws and policies that restrict the prescribing of opioids to the CDC’s recommended daily limit of 90 MME (Morphine Milligram Equivalent). Doctors who exceed that dose often come under the scrutiny of law enforcement and some pharmacists have stopped filling their prescriptions. As a result, millions of patients have been tapered to lower doses or cut off from opioids altogether, causing withdrawal, poorly treated pain and increased disability.  

Under the New Hampshire law, “all decisions” regarding treatment are to be made by the treating practitioner, who is required to treat chronic pain “without fear of reprimand or discipline.” Doctors in the state are also allowed to exceed the MME limit, provided the dose is “the lowest amount necessary to control pain” and there are no signs of a patient abusing their opioid medication.

“Ordering, prescribing, dispensing, administering, or paying for controlled substances, including opioid analgesics, shall not in any way be pre-determined by specific Morphine Milligram Equivalent (MME) guidelines.

For those patients who experience chronic illness or injury and resulting chronic pain who are on a managed and monitored regimen of opioid analgesic treatment and have increased functionality and quality of life as a result of said treatment, treatment shall be continued if there remains no indication of misuse or diversion.”

Importantly, the new law broadly defines chronic pain to include any pain that is intractable, high impact, episodic or relapsing — meaning the pain doesn’t have to be continuous.

“This innovative new law is historic in that it states that controlled substances, including opioids, can't be pre-determined by specific morphine milligram equivalents,” says Dr. Forest Tennant, a retired pain management specialist in California. “The law specifically states that patients can't be unduly denied the medications needed to treat their conditions. This point can't be over-emphasized.”

Another provision of the law requires that a diagnosis of chronic pain made by a physician anywhere in the U.S. that is supported by written documentation should be considered adequate proof that a patient has chronic pain. That part of the law is intended to make it easier for out-of-state pain patients to get treatment in New Hampshire.      

The law is the result of two years of lobbying by a small group of patient advocates known as the New Hampshire Pain Collaborative, which worked closely with state Sens. John Reagan and Tom Sherman in drafting the legislation. Key provisions eventually became part of the healthcare omnibus bill that won bipartisan support in the New Hampshire Senate and House of Representatives, and was signed into law by Governor Sununu.

Bill Murphy, a member of the Pain Collaborative, made this video to help other patients and advocates create similar legislation in their states:

“I would like to say a big congrats to all who worked on that project! Isn't it amazing what you can accomplish when you all work together?” said Donna Corley, director of the Arachnoiditis Society for Awareness and Prevention (ASAP), a patient advocacy group.

“Many patients aren't aware of just how important this bill truly is. This should have been enacted and should be implemented in every state in the United States to help secure safe, and reliable pain care treatment for all patients who suffer chronic pain in the United States. To be able to have diagnoses from other states and it be accepted by your doctor is phenomenal as well.”

“All concerned parties need to salute and follow suit of the New Hampshire law,” Dr. Tennant said in an email to PNN. “The tragedy of the recent over-reach to control opioid abuse, diversion, and overdoses has caused immense suffering for legitimate, chronic pain patients, an epidemic of suicides among deprived pain patients, and the forced retirement of many worthy physicians (including yours truly). All this ugliness would have been prevented with the New Hampshire law.”

According to the CDC, New Hampshire physicians wrote 46.1 opioid prescriptions for every 100 persons in 2018. That’s well below that national average of 51.4 prescriptions. That same year, 412 people died of drug overdoses in New Hampshire, the vast majority of them involving synthetic opioids such as illicit fentanyl and other street drugs.  Only 43 of those 412 deaths involved a prescription opioid.