Ending the War on Drugs Probably Won’t Help Pain Patients

By Roger Chriss, PNN Columnist

America’s war on drugs has been running for half a century and calls to bring it to an end are increasing. Lawmakers and public health experts are questioning federal and state policies that criminalize drug use, while the public generally supports less punitive measures to address drug abuse and addiction.

"The war on drugs must end,” said a recent editorial in The Lancet. “Decriminalisation of personal drug use, coupled with increased resources for treatment and harm reduction, alongside wider initiatives to reduce poverty, and improve access to health care, could transform the lives of those affected."

But ending the war on drugs probably won’t help people with chronic painful conditions. That’s because decriminalization of recreational drugs is not necessarily associated with full legalization – as is the case with marijuana -- while legalization of recreational drugs is separate from medical care with pharmaceutical prescriptions.

The debate about how to end the drug war is largely ideological at this point. In the new issue of The American Journal of Ethics, Carl Hart, PhD, author of the book “Drug Use for Grown Ups,” writes with colleagues that laws criminalizing drug use are “rooted in explicit racism.”

"We call for the immediate decriminalization of all so-called recreational drugs and, ultimately, for their timely and appropriate legal regulation," they wrote.

But bioethicist Travis Rieder, PhD, author of the book “In Pain” about his experience with opioid-based pain management, wrote in the same journal that “ending the war on drugs does not require legalization, and the good of racial justice and harm reduction can be achieved without legalization.”

Yet another view comes from Stanford psychiatrist and PROP board member Anna Lembke, MD, who wrote in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs that creating a “safe supply” of drugs by legalizing the non-medical use of prescription medication would be a mistake.

“The expanded use of controlled prescription drugs should not occur in the absence of reliable evidence to support it, lest we find ourselves contending with a worse drug crisis than the one we’re already in. No supply of potent, addictive, lethal drugs is ‘safe’ without guarding against misuse, diversion, addiction, and death,” said Lembke.

The Lancet points to Portugal as an example that other countries should follow. But contrary to common belief, Portugal has not legalized drugs. In Portugal, drug possession of no more than a ten-day supply is an administrative offense handled by so-called dissuasion commissions.

Portugal has not even legalized recreational cannabis. Medical cannabis is legal in Portugal, but only when prescribed by a physician and dispensed by a pharmacy if conventional medical treatments have failed. Personal cultivation of cannabis remains against the law.

Further, neither decriminalization nor legalization necessarily improves racial and social justice. For instance, the University of Washington’s Alcohol & Drug Abuse Institute reports that the legalization of cannabis in Washington state in 2012 has had no impact on reducing racial bias in policing and other disparities in the criminal justice system.

Broad drug decriminalization or legalization would likely have little impact on pain management. Healthcare professionals routinely prescribe medications that are illegal outside of clinical medicine, after weighing the risks and benefits for each patient. Patients are often monitored via pain contracts and drug testing, with some agreements even disallowing cannabis and restricting alcohol use for patients taking medications like opioids or benzodiazepines.

Physicians and pharmacies are under increasing scrutiny from law enforcement, insurers and regulators in the hope of curbing drug abuse. If decriminalization or legalization of drugs leads to more abuse, addiction and overdose, then the scrutiny could increase. So in an unexpected way, an end to the war on drugs could have negative impacts on pharmacological pain management.
 
Supporting an end to the war on drugs is a right and just action. But it would be a mistake to assume that an end to that war will necessarily bring a positive change to pain management. For that, it would be better to support physician autonomy and greatly expanded clinical research into pain management.

Roger Chriss lives with Ehlers Danlos syndrome and is a proud member of the Ehlers-Danlos Society. Roger is a technical consultant in Washington state, where he specializes in mathematics and research.