Patients in Addiction Treatment Often Stigmatized by Doctors

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Most chronic pain patients are well aware of the stigma associated with using opioids. A recent PNN survey of over 3,600 pain sufferers found that about a third had been abandoned by a doctor (29%) and many were unable to find a new physician to treat their pain (36%).

“I was abandoned by the doctor who did my last operation,” a veteran with CRPS told us. “I should have been put on whatever pain medication possible to ease my pain. I wasn't. I'm not a drug addict and I damn sure don't appreciate being treated like one!”

“The stigma and refusing to treat needs to be addressed. Stigma by pharmacists, doctors and society is cutting life short. Patients have become social pariahs. Severe surgeries are conducted and patient is sent home with Aleve. It’s barbaric, cruel and inhumane,” another patient said.

The stigma also extends to people being treated for opioid use disorder (OUD), according to a new study of patients in the Canadian province of Ontario. Researchers at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto analyzed the health records of nearly 155,000 patients who were discharged by a primary care physician between 2016 and 2017.

The research findings, recently published in PLOS Medicine, found that patients prescribed an addiction treatment drug such as Suboxone or methadone were 45% less likely to find another primary care provider (PCP) in the next year compared to other patients.

"There are considerable barriers to accessing primary care among people who use opioids, and this is most apparent among people who are being treated for an opioid use disorder. This highlights how financial disincentives within the healthcare system, and stigma and discrimination against people who use drugs introduce barriers to high quality care," said lead author Tara Gomes, PhD, a researcher at St. Michael’s Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute.

"Ongoing efforts are needed to address stigma and discrimination faced by people who use opioids within the health care system, and to facilitate access to high quality, consistent primary care services for chronic pain patients and those with OUD.”

Surprisingly, Gomes and her colleagues found that pain patients on long-term opioid therapy in Ontario did not have a harder time finding a new PCP. That finding is at odds with a recent study in the United States, which found that nearly half of primary care practices would not accept new patients who were already taking opioids.

Researchers think the discrepancy may be due to the U.S. having a private healthcare system, where there is a financial incentive to drop patients with complex health needs, as opposed Canada’s publicly funded healthcare system.

During the gap in their primary care coverage, about 5% of Ontario patients on long-term opioids visited an emergency room, suggesting that the loss of a PCP led to further health problems that made them seek care in a hospital. In effect, patient abandonment not only made those people sicker, it shifted the financial burden of their healthcare to someone else.

“Although the structure of primary care differs across North America, our findings suggest that even in a province with a publicly funded healthcare system that has undergone considerable primary care transformation, barriers to care continue to exist for people who use opioids, particularly those with an OUD,” Gomes wrote.

The researchers said insurance reimbursement policies should be reviewed to ensure that they do not lead to the discrimination and stigmatization of patients. Doctors should also be educated on how abandoning or discharging patients can be harmful.

Patient abandonment may have grown worse since Canada adopted a new opioid prescribing guideline in 2017. A 2019 survey of patients by the Chronic Pain Association of Canada found that about a third of patients had either been abandoned by a doctor or their doctor refused to continue prescribing opioids to them.