Is the DEA a Domestic Terrorist Organization?

By Carol Levy, PNN Columnist

Terrorism is very much in the news these days, given the Israeli-Hamas war and all the fallout from it around the world. But terrorism can also hit close to home and in unexpected ways.

The FBI defines domestic terrorism this way:

“Violent, criminal acts committed by individuals and/or groups to further ideological goals stemming from domestic influences, such as those of a political, religious, social, racial, or environmental nature.”

It may not be domestic violence in the literal meaning of the term, but I would posit the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration is a domestic terrorist organization.

Why would I believe that? The answer lies in how terrorists work. Their goals and methods are simple: kill one person and scare thousands. In the DEA's case, it means arrest a doctor and allege that they overprescribe opioids without a legitimate medical reason. This has a chilling effect on thousands of other physicians, who then limit or even refuse to prescribe opioids.

If a doctor knows his patients well and has been prescribing opioids safely to them for years, with beneficial results, makes no difference. The doctor is essentially arrested on ideological, social and political grounds, which gives validation to the concept that they are being terrorized.

The DEA’s war on drugs has gone far beyond its original goal of going after street drugs and drug dealers. It has escalated into a war against prescription opioids and the doctors who prescribe them, essentially making patients hostages to the DEA's political persecution.

I know there are instances when the arrests are legitimate, but from what I can tell many of the doctors caught in the DEA snare have been unfairly targeted.

I have never been a victim of their terrorism. I did lose one of the best doctors I ever had when he lost his privileges to write scripts for opioids. Although this was not due to the DEA but his own inappropriate actions, it allows me to better understand the effect that DEA terrorism has on so many of us.

My experience is nothing compared to the stories of patients who can no longer work, play with their kids, or even get out of bed because the opioids that allowed them to do these things were tapered or discontinued. Or they can’t get their opioid prescriptions filled at a pharmacy.

It’s nothing compared to all the stories of patients killing themselves because they can no longer get the medication that was helping them. Or the patients who were abandoned by a doctor who fears the DEA, who then struggle to find another doctor with the courage to risk going to jail by prescribing opioids.

To the DEA, the fact that these medications are working and that doctors are legitimately prescribing them is irrelevant. Fear seems to be their primary goal. Is that not terrorism?

Until the DEA and politicians get out of the exam room, I fear that pain patients will remain their hostages.

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. 

A Pained Life: Stop Terrorizing Doctors

By Carol Levy, PNN Columnist

When I visit chronic pain support groups online, it is almost astounding how often posters turn to talking about the “opioid crisis,” no matter the subject of the initial post. One person wrote that she lives in a town where there is not one doctor who will prescribe opioids, no matter what the diagnosis.

I see comments like, “My doctor won't prescribe them for me anymore even though they were helping,” or “My doctor reduced what I was taking without any effort to ask how I was doing.”

Often they’ll add, “My doctor said he has changed his prescribing practices because of the CDC guidelines.”

Human Rights Watch recommended last year that the CDC guideline be revised because too many doctors were using it as an excuse to abruptly cutoff or taper patients.

“Even when medical providers understood that the Guideline was voluntary, they believed they risked punishment or unwanted attention from law enforcement agencies or state medical boards if they maintained patients at high doses,” Human Rights Watch found.

How does this fear, engendered by political institutions like the CDC and DEA, not fall under the definition of terrorism? This is how Miriam-Webster defines terrorism: 

“The unlawful use or threat of violence especially against the state or the public as a politically motivated means of attack or coercion.”

Granted, the guidelines are not unlawful, but they have had the exact effect of being coercive on many in the medical community. I would also contend that the threat of being arrested and going to prison is a threat of violence.

The guidelines were engendered by the public outcry and governmental concern over the level of opioid overdoses and deaths. The CDC said the guidelines are voluntary, but to many doctors, pharmacies and insurance companies they are enshrined in stone as commandments. They were promulgated as a political response. They were not based on the medical model or the realities of patients in pain.

The point of terrorism is to instill fear. Terrorize one and others will fall in line. The guidelines have had exactly that effect. Accuse one doctor of overprescribing or running a pill mill – even if no charges are actually filed -- and other doctors will change their practices by reducing or refusing to prescribe opioids out of fear of being falsely accused, even when they know doing so will hurt their patients.

And how are patients hurt? Attorney Mark Rothstein, Director of the Institute for Bioethics at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, answers that question.

“Many physicians who previously prescribed opioids now have reduced or discontinued such prescriptions, even for established patients with chronic pain. In some cases, the change in policy was adopted literally overnight,” Rothstein wrote in the American Journal of Public Health.

“With no alternatives for pain control... and the physical and mental pressure of unremitting pain, many patients turned to illicit drugs, especially heroin. The result has been greater addiction, more deaths from overdoses, and an increase in cases of HIV/AIDS and hepatitis from contaminated syringes.”

It is long past time to end what has been interpreted as policy, a policy that hurts patients and the community. It’s time for the terrorism to stop.

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.

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represent the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.