Controversial Montana Doctor Suspends Practice

By Pat Anson, Editor

A Montana doctor who has been at the forefront of the debate over opioid prescribing is closing his urgent care clinic and will no longer prescribe medication to pain patients. Dr. Mark Ibsen said he didn't do anything wrong, but was tired of facing regulatory scrutiny over his opioid prescribing practices.

“The clinic is closing today. I’m going to disappear for awhile,” said Ibsen, who owns and operates the Urgent Care Plus clinic in Helena.

Ibsen said he would stop practicing medicine “in solidarity” with Dr. Chris Christensen, another Montana doctor who was arrested last week and charged with 400 felony counts, including two negligent homicide charges, in connection with the overprescribing of opioids.

Ibsen himself was the target of a lengthy investigation by the Montana Board of Medical Examiners after he started treating many of Dr. Christensen’s former patients after Christensen’s Ravalli county clinic was shutdown. Many of the patients were in opioid withdrawal and went to Ibsen because he was one of the few doctors in the state still willing to prescribe pain medication.

“I’m the last man standing in Montana, I think. I don’t know if there is anyone else who will do it. I think not. Because they were all coming to me because they were abandoned by their doctors,” said Ibsen.

Although a state hearing examiner ruled this summer the medical board “did not meet its burden of proof” in the overprescribing case against Ibsen, he has not yet been formally cleared of charges.  The examiner recommended that Ibsen be put on probation for 180 days for poor record keeping.

Ibsen told Pain News Network he was under a lot of stress and was deeply in debt from the legal cost of defending himself and treating Medicaid patients at low reimbursement rates.

“This is not a protest. This is me saying I can’t do this. I’m working in a hostile regulatory environment. And I’m stopping,” Ibsen said.

dr. mark ibsen

dr. mark ibsen

“I’m frightened. They’ve got me scared. The DEA said to me two years ago, ‘Dr. Ibsen you are not only risking your license, you’re risking your freedom by prescribing to patients like these.’ And I said patients like what? And they said patients who might divert their pills. And I said might? And they said yes. I said that’s a law enforcement job. My job is to treat the patient in front of me and do what I think is best for them based on what they tell me and what my testing shows.”

Ibsen said his urgent care clinic treated about 30 to 60 patients a day for a variety of conditions and he regularly prescribed opioids to a “couple hundred” patients. He said he didn’t know where they would get their pain medication now.

“I have also deeply considered whether stopping prescribing opiates sends a message that I'm afraid I've done something wrong. Let me assure you I have done nothing wrong. I have upheld my oath as long as I can. The pressure is just too much and today in particular I cannot concentrate on these complex cases. Therefore my clinic is closed and I'm going home,” he said.

"Dr. Ibsen was unfairly targeted and helped Christensen's patients wean from high doses.  Who is going to wean Ibsen's patients now?" asked Terri Anderson, a chronic pain sufferer and patient advocate who lives in Hamilton, MT.

"Pain patients are ultimately the ones who suffer.  I try to look at it from all sides and if it were my brother who overdosed then I would be upset. However it is easy to judge and my first thought is that pain patients come with risk to the prescriber, because they often suffer many other health issues besides just pain, including anxiety, depression and PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder)."  

In the last month, Ibsen said three staff members had resigned from his clinic, which he likened to a “war zone” because of the stress of treating patients who had nowhere else to go.

“Maybe I will come back. But I’m rattled. I’m too rattled to think of the right blood pressure medication to give to a patient. I can’t concentrate. I don’t want any patient injured today because my concentration is so poor,” Ibsen said. “When I am well enough, and I feel safe to practice in the way I know how, I will return.”

Reader Calls for Pain Patient 'Bill of Rights'

By Pat Anson, Editor

A North Carolina woman who suffers from Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy and several other chronic pain issues wrote to us recently about a serious problem she had with a urine drug test (UDT) performed in her doctor’s office.

Her urine tested positive for oxycodone and hydrocodone, two opioid pain medications she did not have prescriptions for. So the doctor dropped Paulette Waters from his practice, informing her by registered letter that she would no longer be his patient after 12 years without any other issues.

“This is where my horror story starts and has as of yet to end. The letter stated that I had broken the pain agreement and my doctor would not be seeing me anymore. The letter being generic and not including any details or UDT results,” wrote Paulette, who asked that Pain News Network not use her real name because she’s afraid of being blackballed by more doctors.

We’ve written before about these “point of care” (POC) urine tests. The immunoassay tests are often used by doctors to screen pain patients for the misuse or abuse of drugs – but they’re wrong about half the time. One study, for example, found that POC tests give false positives 41% of the time for oxycodone. Sometimes even a simple over-the-counter medication like ibuprofen can trigger a false positive for marijuana.

A more complex laboratory test that uses chromatography-mass-spectrometry to identify individual molecules is far more accurate than POC tests, but they cost thousands of dollars -- something many insurers and patients are unwilling or unable to pay for.

Instead of conducting additional tests or giving a patient the benefit of the doubt, some doctors take the easy way out by dropping patients like Paulette.

The problem now has become that since this test, no pain clinic will see me, let alone let me tell my side of the story,” says Paulette, who has been struggling for the past year to clear her name and get the pain medication she needs.

“Knowing I have a legitimate chronic disease there is no cure for, why would I jeopardize myself by doing something that would put me in a position to not have the medicine I needed to help me live somewhat of a normal life?” she asks.

Paulette has called different lawyers and even the ACLU, but no one has taken her case. She’s also written to the state medical board, believing her doctor didn’t follow proper protocol before dismissing her.

“As of now a patient who legitimately suffers from chronic pain has no voice, recourse or method to keep them from being falsely accused of failing a urinary drug test,” she adds.

Patient Bill of Rights

Paulette thinks it’s long past time for a “Patient Bill of Rights” – one that spells out exactly what’s expected of doctors andpatients before, during and after a drug test, including:

  1. Make patients aware that UDT’s can have false positives and false negatives.
  2. Inform patients what kind of test they are taking.
  3. Make sure the patient and doctor have a list of all prescription drugs the patient is taking, including over-the-counter meds, vitamins and supplements that could affect the test results.
  4. Make patients aware what consequences they could face if a test result is abnormal.
  5. Make sure the patient has a signed copy of their pain contract or drug agreement.
  6. Allow the patient to observe the urine sample being sealed in front of them.
  7. Make patients aware that insurance companies do not always pay for drug tests.
  8. Make doctors follow guidelines if there is an abnormal test result. Have them tell the patient in person, instead of a generic letter dismissing them.
  9. Allow at least one more reliable drug screen to be sure false positives or negatives did not occur.

Paulette says pain patients have paid a price for too long in the “War on Drugs” – becoming casualties of misguided policies they have no voice in. 

“All of these battles are between the DEA, insurance companies and doctors,” she says. “The one person that is left out is the patient who is the one suffering. that only has the option of seeing a doctor for their chronic pain. This leads them to such things as buying street drugs, depression, committing suicide, and other health problems because their legitimate chronic pain is not under control.”

Pain Education Improves Opioid Prescribing

By Pat Anson, Editor

A safe opioid prescribing course --- aimed at filling in gaps in pain education at many medical schools -- can help reduce the abuse and misuse of opioids, according to a new study published in the journal Pain Medicine.

Boston University School of Medicine launched its Safe and Competent Opioid Prescribing Education (SCOPE) program in 2013, offering live or online courses in chronic pain and safe opioid prescribing practices.

A survey of over 10,000 doctors who took the SCOPE program found that two months after the training about two-thirds of participants reported greater confidence in their prescribing practices, and 86 percent improved how they prescribed opioids and monitored patients.

"Our program improved knowledge, attitudes, confidence and clinical practice in safe opioid prescribing," said corresponding author Daniel Alford, MD, associate professor of medicine at Boston University School of Medicine and course director of the SCOPE of Pain program.

SCOPE was the first program to receive funding from the Food and Drug Administration’s Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS), which requires opioid manufacturers to fund continuing education programs in pain management.

"While education cannot be the only strategy to combat this national crisis, it can help improve clinician behaviors and be a major part of the solution,” said Alford.

An earlier survey of physicians by Boston University found that many lacked confidence in managing patients on opioids. Over a quarter (28%) said they had not completed certified medical education (CME) in safe opioid prescribing. Many also said they lacked the time or staff to implement an opioid monitoring system for patients, such as drug testing and pill counts.

Only a quarter of the doctors surveyed said they were very confident about their ability to safely manage chronic pain with opioids.

Pain education for doctors – or the lack of it – is such a concern that the National Pain Strategy considers it a top priority.

“Many health professionals, especially physicians, are not adequately prepared and require greater knowledge and skills to contribute to the cultural transformation in the perception and treatment of people with pain,” a draft version of the report states. “Core competencies in pain care are not fully developed and generally do not inform undergraduate curricula in health professions schools or graduate training programs, even those in pain medicine.”

A 2012 study published in the Journal of Pain  called pain education in the U.S. and Canada “lackluster” and warned that unless steps were taken to improve the training of pain physicians, “the crisis in pain care and resultant deaths from opioid abuse will only spiral upwards.”

The study of 117 U.S. and Canadian medical schools found that less than 4% required a course in pain education and only one in six schools offered a pain elective. A large number of U.S. medical schools do not have any pain courses and many of those that do have less than five hours of classes.

The Painful Truth: How Patients Are Treated Shamefully

Lynn Webster, MD, is past President of the American Academy of Pain Medicine, vice president of scientific affairs at PRA Health Sciences, and one the world’s leading experts on pain management. He treated people with chronic pain for more than 30 years in the Salt Lake City, Utah area.

Dr. Webster’s new book, “The Painful Truth,” is a collection of stories involving several of his former patients, who struggled with the physical, emotional and financial toll that many chronic pain sufferers experience.  

Pain News Network editor Pat Anson recently spoke with Dr. Webster about his book.

The interview has been edited for content and clarity.

Dr. Lynn webster

Dr. Lynn webster

Anson: Dr. Webster, you’re no longer practicing medicine, but you’re still very involved in the pain community and in research. Why write this book now at this stage of your career?

Webster: It takes a lot of time to write a book, as you can imagine, and it’s taken me four years to get to this point.  I think that at this stage in my career I can look back and put together a story about the people who I’ve taken care of for most of my career that I’m not sure I could’ve done in the middle of it. I think that’s given me the ability to look back and reflect and feel the heartache that patients have, and my inability to deliver to them everything that I wanted to deliver to them, because of all of the barriers and obstacles in healthcare.

I’m hoping that my book is going to be a seed that will contribute to a cultural change, a social movement that will bring some dignity and humanity to a large population of our country.

Anson: In your book you said the painful truth is that people in pain are treated shamefully. What did you mean by that?

Webster: When I was growing up on a farm I observed something as a young boy that always puzzled me and that was watching the injured or sick animals. We had all sorts of animals; cows, pigs, sheep, and chickens, and I could see that the injured somehow were always separated from the healthy ones. It wasn’t that the sick separated themselves from the healthy, but the healthy separated themselves from the injured or the ill.

I see that to some degree in people and I wonder if this hasn’t been a biological aspect of survival for man from the beginning. We as humans are better than that; we’re better than we may have been thousands of years ago.

Today, I think that it is shameful that people are stigmatized because they have pain, they’re isolated, and they’re denigrated often. Because of our healthcare system, at least in this country, they’re viewed as addicts, lowlife’s, and druggies. That’s rarely true and it absolutely prevents, it really contributes to the harm that pain sufferers feel towards themselves and their inability to get the type of care they need. I think that it hurts our society in so many different ways, but most importantly the people in pain.

Anson: A lot of your book is dedicated to telling the stories of some of the pain patients that you treated. Virtually every one went through what you just described, where they had trouble getting proper treatment, they had trouble with their jobs, with their families, and with their friends. Is that why you write the book in this way, so that their stories get across the point you’re trying to make?

Webster: Absolutely. It’s less important that a physician tells a story than a patient tells their story. I wanted this book to be felt by the readers, to understand what people in pain experience and the struggles they have.

Anson: You wrote that, “People in pain need to be both treated by medical professionals and supported by all the important people in their lives.” Is that happening?

Webster: No, of course not. There are some patients that have pain who have great support structures in their personal life. For example Alison, she is an individual who had what I thought was the quintessential family support. Were it not for her mother, father and sister, she could’ve gone down the path that too many others take, which would be resignation rather than resilience. It’s one where drugs are used to cope and to escape the pain, physical but also the emotional.

Too many people are separated and too few have the structure of the support system that Alison had.  Our healthcare system is abominable. It shamelessly abandons them with limited resources, limited access and actually a labeling of the individual as if they’re a leper; they have a disease that is contagious.

Anson: Is the average physician in U.S. prepared to treat chronic pain?

Webster: No. I think it’s been reported that medical schools average less than 10 hours of education on pain and even less for addiction. Yet this is the number one public health problem in America and it’s not recognized by the CDC like many other disease states have been.

And so very few physicians understand what pain is. In fact, many think that it’s just a symptom and you never die from pain which is categorically wrong. As I write in my book, pain can be as malignant as any cancer and it can be just as devastating. It can take the soul but it also takes the life of some individuals when we ignore it and when we’re unable to provide them the relief that they deserve.

Anson: If you were a young man again in medical school and trying to decide what specialty to go into, knowing what you know today, would you go into pain medicine?

Webster: Without a doubt, there is no hesitancy in this response; I love the field that I’ve been in. As an anesthesiologist I could’ve stayed in the operating room and honestly the compensation of doing that would have been far better than the path that I chose. But the rewards I’ve received from trying to make a difference and the thank you’s that I’ve received will never be matched by any kind of financial or professional recognition in any other areas.

The most rewarding part of life is really to be able to make a difference in someone else’s life. And I think I’ve been able to do that with hundreds, if not thousands of individuals. That actually is the reason for the book. I’m hoping the book is going to make a difference for more people than I could physically touch in my clinic.

Most of the people that I saw as patients were already experiencing a large amount of pain, they’ve been through the mill and many had their chronic pain for years before they came to see me. We are basically going to be taking care of them the rest of their life. We do get to know them, much like a primary care person does to a family they’ve been caring for, and so we get to know them well. They get to know us. We also begin to see the struggles that they have in the system and with the rejection of their families sometimes, their friends, the isolation. And we become the only source that’s grounded, that gives them potential hope. I took that very seriously and I think that’s why it was so rewarding for me.

Anson: You wrote that you’re neither pro-opioid or anti-opioid. What do you mean by that?

Webster: My focus has never been about making opioids available or that they should be used. In fact ten years ago I started the first national campaign about the risk of opioids. My campaign was called Zero Unintentional Overdose Deaths and you can still find that on the Internet. I did a lot of work at trying to understand the potential risks and mitigate those risks so we can prevent people from harm because I knew one day that if we couldn’t prevent people from being harmed from opioids that there would be political response to this that could be very harmful to a large number of people who are not harmed by opioids.

I think the focus should always be about what’s best for a patient and not about whether a drug or a certain treatment is good or bad. All treatments have potential risks and complications, and we need to evaluate whether or not the potential benefit outweighs the potential risk or harm and it has to be patient centered. So my focus has never been about really any treatment, but it’s always been about what’s best for the patient. I’m more anti-pain than I am pro or anti-opioid.

Anson: You prefer a multi-disciplinary approach to pain treatment?

Webster: Yes, it’s been demonstrated that for people with moderate to severe chronic pain, the type that’s not likely to be resolved, it is best managed in a multi-disciplinary, integrative approach. I see the need for more cognitive behavioral therapy. We should always tap into the different treatments that have low risk associated with them before we ever tap into something that has more risk, for example opioids or even interventional treatments we as anesthesiologists and some of the other pain specialists can provide.

Much about pain is really learning how to cope, how to deal with it from day to day and how to manage the stress that’s associated with it because stress augments all pain. And so it’s really important that we use all of the resources that we have to manage the pain and not just a single modality, certainly not opioids or spinal cord stimulators, but look at how we can manage this in a more mindful way, even as clinicians. I use that word intentionally because mindfulness is really what the doctor needs to use as much as the patient in order to optimize the treatment with the lowest risk.

Anson: Has the pendulum swung too far against use of opioids?

Webster: I think there’s too much focus on opioids by almost everyone. And what it has done is it’s forgotten about people. Opioids can cause a great deal of harm, we see way too many people harmed from opioids. But certainly a vast majority of people who have been exposed to opioids are not harmed by them and there are countless number of people, a huge number of individuals who have been on opioids for decades, that believe very strongly that they’ve improved their lives and they could not live without them.

I think the focus is in the wrong place. Our focus should not be on opioids and whether they should or should not be prescribed, but what is the best treatment for the patient? And if opioids are inappropriate as a pain treatment, then I say all of the anti-opioid people as well as the individuals who are interested in helping people with pain should come together and demand that we have more money invested in research so we can replace opioids entirely.

We cannot always know who’s going to have an addiction triggered by exposure. As I pointed out in my book, Rachel just went in for an appendectomy and that initial opioid that she received lead her down a serious, dreadful path because she didn’t have the social support to keep her from taking that path.

I think that the anti-opioid people and those of us who are interested in bringing some dignity and humanity to a large population of people in pain need to come together and insist that we have a Manhattan Project basically and to discover safer and more effective therapies that are not addictive.

Anson: The final version of National Pain Strategy will soon be released, with the goal of advancing pain research, healthcare and education in the U.S.  From what you’ve seen and heard so far about it, are they on the right track?

Webster: Yes, I think it’s an important step forward. I think that it brings most importantly the government into the picture, recognizing the need that we do something on a national scale and that alone is a big step forward.

It’s kind of like in my book there are three important words, “I believe you.” This is really the way the government can say, “I believe you.”  There is a problem in this country with the way in which we treat pain and the National Pain Strategy is about how they’re going to address that. Having the federal government say I believe you, there is a problem, let’s see if we can change the way pain is treated in this country is a huge step forward.

Anson: Thank you, Doctor Webster.

You can follow Dr. Webster on his blog, and on Twitter @LynnRWebsterMD, Facebook and LinkedIn.

Purdue Pharma's 'Misleading' Websites

By Pat Anson, Editor

Days after launching a new website promoting abuse deterrent technology, drug maker Purdue Pharma has reached a settlement with New York’s Attorney General in which the company agreed to be more transparent about how it promotes itself in “unbranded” websites.

The maker of OxyContin also admitted its sales representatives contacted doctors who were on a “No Call List” -- even after they were red flagged for possible abuse and diversion of opioids.

“Over the past two decades, New York has experienced a sharp increase in opioid addiction,” said Attorney General Eric Scheiderman. My office will work to ensure that prescription drugs are marketed and prescribed responsibly.”

The Attorney General’s investigation found that one of Purdue’s websites, In the Face of Pain, could “mislead consumers” by suggesting that its content was neutral and unbiased, when in fact nearly a dozen “advocates” who appeared on the site and in YouTube videos were paid nearly a quarter of a million dollars by Purdue.

“The website failed to disclose that from 2008 to 2013, Purdue made payments totaling almost $231,000, for speaker programs, advisory meetings and travel costs, to 11 of the Advocates whose testimonials appeared on the site. The videos on YouTube also fail to disclose Purdue’s payments to the Advocates. Purdue’s failure to disclose its financial connections with certain Advocates has the potential to mislead consumers by failing to disclose the potential bias of these individuals,” the settlement states.

The agreement calls on Purdue to disclose financial relationships with any individuals, including doctors and other healthcare professionals, that endorse the benefits of pain treatment.

Purdue removed the profiles of the paid “Advocates” from In the Face of Pain in April 2015, after the attorney general’s investigation was well underway.

The settlement also takes Purdue to task for its sales practices. Purdue admits that its sales representatives on at least three occasions contacted doctors on a “No Call List” of 103 physicians in New York state who the company suspected may have been involved in the abuse and diversion of opioids. The calls were made to promote OxyContin.

Purdue sales representatives, who amazingly were not required to check the company's No Call List, made about 1,800 sales calls to doctors on the list over a six year period, “some quite extensively,” even buying meals for about a third of them.  It's not clear if the sales calls were made before or after the doctors were added to the list. Some of those doctors were later arrested or convicted for illegal prescribing of opioids.

A company spokesman told Pain News Network that sales calls could have also been made to doctors on No Call Lists outside of New York.

Under the terms of the settlement, Purdue agreed to adopt more “red flags” to identify doctors who may be prescribing opioids inappropriately or illegally. Sales representatives will also be required to check the No Call List before contacting a provider and will be disciplined if they don’t

As part of the settlement, Purdue Pharma will also pay $75,000 in fines and costs.

“Rather than pursuing an expensive, lengthy and uncertain litigation-based approach, the Attorney General’s initiatives will yield immediate and improved efforts to address issues designed to enhance public health,” said Robin Abrams, Vice President and Associate General Counsel for Purdue Pharma.

“For more than a decade we’ve implemented industry-leading programs designed to reduce the abuse and diversion of prescription medicine. We’ve relied on the input and encouragement of law enforcement officials, like the Attorney General, to continually upgrade and improve our programs.”

Purdue’s New Website

Early this week, Purdue introduced Team Against Opioid Abuse, a new website designed to help healthcare providers and laypeople learn about different abuse-deterrent technologies that make opioid medications harder to misuse and abuse.

Like In the Face of Pain, Team Against Opioid Abuse is not clearly identified as a Purdue Pharma website, except by a small copyright notice at the bottom.

“Using clear graphics and easy to understand language, the website features sections about why it's critical to deter abuse and how all the members on the healthcare team can make a difference,” Purdue said in a press release announcing its newest website.

In the wake of the New York settlement, the company said it would review the website, listen to feedback and incorporate any necessary modifications. 

Purdue was also in the news recently after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration quietly approved OxyContin for use by children aged 11 to 16 who suffer from chronic pain and who are already being treated with opioids.

The FDA’s move angered many anti-addiction advocates because the agency did not consult with an outside advisory panel or hold any public hearings before making its decision.

“We've known for a long time how immoral this company is.  As far as Purdue's role, this comes as no surprise; they have had this idea for some time now, as it represents a very lucrative market for them.  We've also known for a long time how unethical the FDA is.  This brings both truths out in the open,” said Pete Jackson, president of Advocates for the Reform of Prescription Opioids, who lost his 18-year-old daughter Emily to a single dose of OxyContin in 2006.

OxyContin was introduced to the U.S. in 1996 and soon became a blockbuster drug for Purdue,  reportedly generating profits in excess of $10 billion. Many believe it also helped fuel an “epidemic” of opioid addiction and overdoses, leading to the deaths of thousands of people.

In 2007, a class action lawsuit against Purdue for deceptive marketing ended when several company executives pleaded guilty to a felony count of misbranding OxyContin, by playing down its addictive and abusive side effects. The company and its executives were fined $634 million.

Florida’s ‘Modest’ Reduction in Opioid Prescribing

By Pat Anson, Editor

Florida was one the first states in the country to get serious about fighting the “epidemic” of prescription drug abuse.

In 2010, a year when eight Floridians were dying every day from drug overdoses, the state started cracking down on rogue pain clinics – “pill mills” -- and began to closely monitor the number of opioid prescriptions written and filled by physicians and pharmacies.

By most accounts, the crackdown has been a success – overdose deaths dropped and over 250 pain clinics were closed. But legitimate pain patients also began to complain that they couldn’t get their prescriptions filled. Their search for a pharmacy willing to dispense opioids – a search that could take hours or days – even got a name: Florida’s “Pharmacy Crawl.”

Which makes a new study in JAMA Internal Medicine all the more surprising.

Researchers analyzed an extensive database of prescription claims and found that there was only a “modest” decline of 1.4 percent in the number of opioid prescriptions in Florida from 2010 to 2012.

The reductions were generally limited to prescribers and patients with the highest rates of opioid prescribing and use – meaning the average pain patient shouldn’t have been affected at all.

That 1.4% reduction, researchers say, was a “statistically significant” decline by some measures. But they also acknowledge that Florida’s crackdown on opioids “had no apparent effect on days’ supply per transaction or on total number of opioid prescriptions dispensed.”

That less than overwhelming finding raises questions about the effectiveness of the crackdown and, in particular, prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs). Almost every state has implemented a PDMP in the last few years, spending millions of dollars to track patients with electronic databases that have yet to be proven effective. 

“Our findings highlight the need for more evidence demonstrating the effect of PDMP and pill mill laws,” wrote lead author Caleb Alexander, MD, of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Effect on Pain Patients

So if the number of opioid prescriptions in Florida barely budged, what about all those pain patients who claim they couldn’t get a prescription filled?

"The opioid lobby and media they've influenced portray Florida's efforts as draconian. We keep hearing that pain patients in Florida have lost access to opioids.  The study's findings refute these claims," said Andrew Kolodny, MD, a prominent critic of opioid prescribing practices who is President of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing.

“Dr. Kolodny can't see the whole picture just by looking at this short term study,” says Donna Ratliff, a chronic pain patient who founded the Fight for Pain Care Action Network, a non-profit group lobbying for adequate pain care in Florida.

“Things did get draconian after the DEA fined the distributors and chain pharmacies. The media headlines stigmatized the pharmacies and doctors early on into not treating legitimate pain patients out of fear.” 

It was in 2012 that Cardinal Health, one of the nation’s largest drug wholesalers, was fined $34 million by the DEA after it failed to report suspicious orders for hydrocodone at a distribution facility in Lakeland, Florida. Shipments of controlled substances from that facility were suspended for two years.

Walgreens and CVS Pharmacy were also fined tens of millions of dollars for violating rules and regulations for dispensing controlled substances. Afterwards, both pharmacy chains began to screen patients with opioid prescriptions more carefully, and told their pharmacists not to fill them if anything appeared suspicious.

Those developments, according to Ratliff, were not fully covered during the opioid prescription study, which ended in September 2012.

“This induced the pharmacy crawl, that got worse as time went by,” she told Pain News Network.

In a recent survey of hundreds of pharmacies, drug wholesalers and physicians by the General Accounting Office (GAO), over half said DEA enforcement actions had limited their ability to supply drugs to patients. Many said they were fearful of being fined or having their licenses revoked by the DEA.

“Some pharmacies may be inappropriately delaying or denying filling prescriptions for patients with legitimate medical needs,” the GAO report states.  

 

FDA Approves OxyContin for Kids

By Pat Anson, Editor

In a controversial move, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved OxyContin for use by children aged 11 to 16 who suffer from severe, long-term pain.

OxyContin is a potent, extended release opioid painkiller that has been blamed for fueling an “epidemic” of prescription drug abuse and addiction in the U.S.

One critic, whose teenage daughter died after a single dose of OxyContin, called the FDA’s decision “beyond disgusting.”

The agency did not make a formal announcement about its decision, issue a news release, or consult with an outside advisory panel about the risks and benefits of making OxyContin available to pediatric patients.

Instead, the news was revealed in an FDA blog posting, an interview with Sharon Hertz, MD, a Director in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

“OxyContin is not intended to be the first opioid drug used in pediatric patients, but the data show that changing from another opioid drug to OxyContin is safe if done properly,” Hertz said.

“In pediatric patients who require opioid treatment to manage pain, extended-release opioids may be a useful alternative because they are taken only once or twice per day rather than every 4 to 6 hours. Fewer daily doses may free patients for physical therapy appointments, allow them to go home from the hospital sooner, and may help them to sleep through the night without waking up from pain. So from that perspective it's very useful.”

Hertz said the FDA decision was a "team effort" involving physicians, pediatricians, clinical pharmacologists, statisticians, ethicists and opioid experts. It came after the safety and efficacy of OxyContin was studied in children who were prescribed the drug after extensive trauma or major surgery. 

“Prior to this action, doctors had to rely on adult clinical data to shape their decision-making in treating pediatric patients. This program was intended to fill a knowledge gap and provide experienced health care practitioners with the specific information they need to use OxyContin safely in pediatric patients,” said Hertz.

She said OxyContin should only be prescribed to pediatric patients when they have shown they can tolerate a 20 mg daily dose of oxycodone, an immediate release opioid.  

The Duragesic patch, which contains fentanyl, is the only other extended release opioid product approved for use by children.

Hertz hinted the FDA would be approving more opioids for pediatric patients in the future.

“Quite a few of the newer opioid drugs have pediatric studies underway to gather the data that will help prescribers use them safely. I expect that our teams will be working together a lot more in future to make sure that new pediatric pain management options continue to be safe for children in the U.S.,” Hertz said.

OxyContin has a controversial history. It was introduced to the U.S. in 1996 and soon became a blockbuster drug for Purdue Pharma, reportedly generating profits in excess of $10 billion.

In 2007, Purdue and three of its top executives pleaded guilty to felony criminal charges for the off-label marketing of OxyContin – falsely telling doctors it had low potential for addiction.

Critics, who blame Purdue for thousands of fatal OxyContin overdoses, are angry about the FDA's decision to approve the drug for children.

“We've known for a long time how immoral this company is.  As far as Purdue's role, this comes as no surprise; they have had this idea for some time now, as it represents a very lucrative market for them,” said Pete Jackson, president of Advocates for the Reform of Prescription Opioids.

Jackson lost his 18-year-old daughter Emily to a single dose of OxyContin in 2006.

“We've also known for a long time how unethical the FDA is,” Jackson said in an email to Pain News Network.  “This brings both truths out in the open.  This is the pinnacle of dysfunction in our federal government: that a federal agency would openly sanction the use of a deadly narcotic on kids without even an advisory committee meeting to hear from the experts and the public is beyond disgusting.”

By 2010, nearly half the patients entering drug treatment facilities for opioid abuse said they had used OxyContin to get high at least once in the previous 30 days. That same year Purdue introduced a reformulated version of OxyContin to discourage patients from crushing the tablets for snorting or injection.

As a condition of its approval for use in pediatric patients, Purdue is required to conduct a follow-up study examining rates of injury, overdose, accidents and medication errors involving OxyContin in pediatric patients.

Sedatives or Opioids: Which is the Bigger Problem?

By Pat Anson, Editor

New research shows that the prescribing of opioid pain medications is declining in United States, but the co-prescribing of sedatives with opioids remains a serious problem that raises the risk of an overdose.

In a study of over 35,000 patient visits for acute and chronic pain from 2001 to 2010, researchers found that the prescribing of benzodiazepines was three to four times more likely when opioids were prescribed.

Over a third of the patients prescribed opioids for chronic musculoskeletal pain were given a sedative. And patients with a history of psychiatric and substance abuse disorders were even more likely to be co-prescribed opioids and sedatives.

"Multidrug use is the trailing edge of the opioid epidemic," said Mark Sullivan, MD, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine. "We are making progress on decreasing opioid prescribing, but co-prescribing of opioids and sedatives has not decreased."

The study, published in the journal Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety, estimates that opioid prescribing peaked in 2007. It’s the latest indication there has been a reversal in the growth of opioid prescribing – which has long been blamed for the so-called “epidemic” of prescription drug abuse.

In April, another study was released showing that the painkiller hydrocodone was no longer the most-widely prescribed drug in the U.S.

While opioid prescribing is in decline, researchers found no evidence that the co-prescribing of opioids and sedatives is also dropping. Opioids, benzodiazepines and muscle relaxants are all central nervous system depressants. Mixing the drugs is potentially dangerous because their interaction can slow breathing and raise the risk of an overdose death.

"Patients who are on long-term combined opioid and benzodiazepine therapy are often on a treadmill," said Sullivan. "They feel relief when they take their medications and withdrawal when they stop, so they continue this combined therapy, even though many function poorly and some will die as a result."

A study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that as much as 80 percent of unintentional overdose deaths associated with opioids may also involve benzodiazepines. Nearly 6,500 people died from overdoses involving benzodiazepines in 2010.

“We are seeing a disturbing increase in the use of benzodiazepines, mostly Xanax and Klonopin and Adderall. I call this the evil trifecta,” said Percy Menzies, president of Assisted Recovery Centers of America, which operates four addiction treatment clinics in the St. Louis, Missouri area. “To make matters worse, the use of heroin continues to grow as Mexican farmers are switching to growing the opium poppy.”

While fewer opioids are being prescribed for pain, Menzies says there has been explosion in the use of buprenorphine – a weaker opioid – to treat addiction. For many years, buprenorphine was only available under the brand name Suboxone, but now there are several other buprenorphine brands competing in the lucrative addiction treatment market. 

“We have reduced the number of prescriptions for opioids but the use of opioids (primarily buprenorphine) are growing. Never in the history of drug treatment, has the sale of a medication exceeded $2 billion,” said Menzies in an email to Pain News Network.

Recent studies by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)  found a ten-fold increase in the number of emergency room visits involving buprenorphine. Over half of the hospitalizations were for non-medical use of buprenorphine – meaning  many users took the drug to get high.

Over 50,000 visits to ER’s in 2011 involved a combination of benzodiazepines and opioids, according to SAMHSA.

 

Fear of DEA Causing Drug Shortages

By Pat Anson, Editor

Millions of dollars in fines and thousands of investigations by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency have had a chilling effect on the nation’s drug supply chain, leading to quotas, shortages and legitimate prescriptions going unfilled, according to a new government report.

Pain patients have complained for years that it was becoming difficult to get opioid prescriptions filled, but the DEA called the evidence of that “anecdotal” and said it was not responsibility for any shortages.

In a survey of hundreds of pharmacies, drug wholesalers and physicians by the General Accounting Office (GAO), over half said DEA enforcement actions had limited their ability to supply drugs to patients. Many said they were fearful of being fined or having their licenses revoked by the DEA. Others blamed the agency for poor communication and unclear rules.

“In the absence of clear guidance from DEA some pharmacies may be inappropriately delaying or denying filling prescriptions for patients with legitimate medical needs,” the GAO report states.  

In recent years the DEA has fined distributors, pharmacies and practitioners over $94 million for violations of the Controlled Substances Act. Over 4,500 criminal investigations were also launched.

The crackdown helped lead to a reduction in prescription drug abuse and diversion, but it has also disrupted the drug supply chain. The GOA estimates that over half the distributors have placed a strict quota system on the amount of controlled substances that pharmacists and physicians can order.

“A distributor reported it refuses to distribute large volumes of controlled substances to prescribers or pharmacies that specialize in pain management, even if it has no evidence that the prescribers or pharmacies are engaged in diversion,” the GAO said.

One pharmacy chain told the GAO they were “afraid of being the target of DEA enforcement action even if they fill a prescription in good faith.”

Another small pharmacy chain said “we take things to the extreme to the point where we have received complaints from providers for turning away legitimate patients.”

“The DEA has NO communication out to pharmacies at all. The DEA is not preventative, it is all reactive,” one pharmacist complained. “The only experience we get with the DEA is hearing when they investigate and levy fines against a pharmacy for common pharmacy practices.”

The GAO recommended that the DEA improve its communication with distributors, pharmacists and practitioners so they would have a better understanding of what’s expected of them.

In response to the GAO report, a top DEA administrator wrote a letter stating there was only “anecdotal data that patient care is being compromised.”  

“The DEA would like to emphasize that it has no authority to control otherwise legitimate business decisions of registrants,” wrote Joseph Rannazzisi, deputy assistant administrator of the DEA’s Office of Diversion Control. “DEA and state partners have repeatedly and emphatically informed distributors that arbitrary thresholds are inappropriate, negatively impact legitimate patients, and are an inadequate substitute for fulfilling their obligations under the CSA (Controlled Substances ACT).”

The GAO report is the second this year to criticize the DEA for its management and policies. In March, we reported the GAO had faulted the DEA for "weak internal controls" and poor management of the system under which controlled substances are produced and distributed. The GAO said there were 87 “critical” shortages of drugs containing controlled substances, over half of them pain relievers.

The shortages have grown worse in recent years, according to many pain patients, who say controlled substances such as hydrocodone are increasingly difficult to obtain in some parts of the country.

Under federal rules, the manufacture and distribution of controlled substances is regulated by the DEA, while the Food and Drug Administration regulates what conditions the medications can be taken for. The two agencies are supposed to work together when shortages develop, but according to the GAO they do not have a “sufficiently collaborative relationship” and even “disagree about what constitutes a shortage.”

CDC Reports on Opioids Appear Biased

By Lynn Webster, MD, Guest Columnist

Like most people, I respect the opinion of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). It is our first and last line of defense against everything from chronic disease to full-fledged pandemics. That said, I am perplexed why the CDC would sound an alarm, while at the same time acknowledging that the fire doesn’t actually exist.

That’s more or less what the CDC did in a report finding that approximately a quarter of privately insured and a third of Medicaid-enrolled women of reproductive age (15-44 years) filled a prescription for an opioid each year from 2008 to 2012. The report went on to say that the trend of opioid prescriptions among childbearing women places unborn children at risk for birth defects. On this point, the report does not address how many of the women actually became pregnant and otherwise has a glaring absence of empirical data to support its claims.

If you are a clinician or scientist, the CDC report appears incomplete and biased against people in pain. If you are a patient or consumer of the news, the report is alarming. Neither of these outcomes advances medicine, nor do they help people who abuse prescription medication or those who experience chronic pain.

Without question, opioids must be replaced as a primary method of pain treatment in favor of safer and more effective therapies. It is clear that in many instances, the risks of opioid therapy far outweigh the benefits. However, many patients with pain have no other options, so until patients have access to effective alternatives, this type of reporting is counterproductive.

Because the report does not clarify the actual risks, nor compare them with the risks of continued pain in the absence of treatment, the CDC wades into dangerous territory of conjecture. Moreover, an overreliance on retrospective observational studies makes it difficult to evaluate the true impact of opioid use on the incidence of birth defects or whether other factors, such as the mother’s health status and co-occurring tobacco or alcohol use, were greater contributors. Although neonatal abstinence syndrome can definitely be traced to opioid use, the CDC investigators did not examine why the majority of infants born to opioid-consuming mothers do not develop it.

In addition to fuzzy reporting of the science, ethical issues are apparent in considering all women of childbearing age as fundamentally “prepregnant” when it comes to clinical decision making regarding opioid analgesia. These concerns were well delineated by Kristen Gwynne in an online article at RH Reality Check. Clinicians must always weigh potential benefits against potential harm before prescribing opioid therapy. But this has always been true of opioids and all medications, including nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, antidepressants and anticonvulsants.

The result of incomplete reporting could be the withholding of opioids from people based on gender and age, regardless of pregnancy status, even when strong pain-killing medications are indicated or when safer alternatives are not available. In fact, according to the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, “Abrupt discontinuation of opioids in an opioid-dependent pregnant woman can result in preterm labor, fetal distress, or fetal demise.”

To be viable, alternatives to opioids must be effective and be covered by public and private insurance payers. Commentators who suggest opioids should not be prescribed often fail to present this important perspective and also imply that harm from opioids is inevitable, an error that contributes to the stigma and isolation felt by those whose lives would be crippled without their legally prescribed medications.

And yet, slanted reporting continues. In February, another CDC report appeared, endorsing scientifically vague opioid classifications of “stronger vs. weaker” than morphine. In analyzing the February report, June Dahl, PhD, properly pointed out the error in failing to consider the differing pharmacologic factors, mechanisms of action, formulations and the clinical relevance of relative effectiveness when comparing the medications.

Given the concerns with accuracy of scientific reporting, is it reasonable to increase federal funding to the CDC to battle prescription opioid abuse, as requested? Only with an understanding of the real reasons for the current opioid problem can we solve the problem. Perhaps more dollars should instead go to the National Institutes of Health, which is in desperate need of more funding for pain research and to develop safer alternatives to opioids.

Regardless, solutions cannot succeed in the absence of recognition that uncontrolled chronic pain is a major public health problem, worthy of focus similar to efforts to battle cancer, HIV/AIDS and other life-threatening diseases. Education of clinicians is good but cannot create treatment options or adequate insurance coverage where none exist. CDC officials and others must think about the problem differently and with less prejudice against people with chronic pain. Often the focus is on cutting supply alone; but in reality, this is difficult to accomplish without harming people with genuine pain when the payor system does not adequately cover evidence-based alternative therapies, including multidisciplinary integrative programs.

Instead payors, particularly government programs such as the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and workers’ compensation, prefer the less costly opioid methadone, associated with more fatalities per prescription than any other.

Although a majority of opioid-prescribed patients do not abuse or become addicted, it is undoubtedly true that some people have contraindications for long-term prescribed opioids. These are potentially dangerous medications, which can be fatal. But effective solutions require a multifaceted approach and cannot ignore the needs of people in pain. Opioids formulated with abuse deterrents are needed as is greater funding and less stigmatization of people with the disease of addiction. Certainly, payors should cover safer and more effective therapies.

As I’ve said before, I hope opioids will one day not be needed, and commentaries like this one will be unnecessary. If the public health problem from opioids is too great, then it is the purview of the CDC to report on access to safer and more effective therapies in the interest of the other great public health problem: chronic pain. It is not an option to deny people in pain access to opioids if alternatives are nonexistent or unavailable.

Lynn Webster, MD, is Past President of the American Academy of Pain Medicine, and vice president of scientific affairs at PRA Health Sciences. He is a Pain Medicine News editorial board member and author of a forthcoming book, “The Painful Truth.”

This column is republished with permission from Pain Medicine News.

You can follow Dr. Webster on his blog, and on Twitter @LynnRWebsterMD, Facebook and LinkedIn.

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.

Study: Opioid Overdoses Occur Even at Low Doses

By Pat Anson, Editor

Overdoses from opioid painkillers occur frequently in people who are taking relatively small doses over a short period of time, according to a new study that has some experts calling for more restrictions on opioid prescribing.

Researchers at the University of Washington School of Public Health analyzed Medicaid data on over 2,200 opioid overdoses in Washington State between 2006 and 2010 – and found that many patients didn’t fit the usual profile of a long term opioid user taking high doses of pain medication.

The study, published in the journal Medical Care, found that less than half of the patients were “chronic users” who had been prescribed opioids for more than 90 days.

Only 17% percent of the overdoses involved patients taking a high morphine-equivalent dose of over 120 mg per day -- what is considered a "yellow flag" in Washington State for possible opioid abuse.

Surprisingly, nearly three out of ten (28%) patients who overdosed were taking a relatively low opioid dose of just 50 mg per day.

Sedatives were involved in nearly half of the overdoses and methadone in about a third of them.

In 2007, Washington State adopted some of the toughest regulations in the country on opioid prescribing -- guidelines that the researchers believe should be even more restrictive.

"It may be prudent to revise guidelines to also address opioid poisonings occurring at relatively low prescribed doses and with acute and intermittent opioid use, in addition to chronic, high-dose use," said lead author Deborah Fulton-Kehoe, PhD, a research scientist in the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences at the University of Washington School of Public Health in Seattle.

Based on the recommendations of this and other studies, Washington State’s Interagency Guideline on Prescribing Opioids for Pain was recently revised to caution doctors about prescribing opioids at any dose. The new guidelines extend to the treatment of acute pain, not just chronic pain. Physicians are also advised not to continue prescribing opioids to a patient if they don't show “clinically meaningful improvement” in physical function, in addition to pain relief.

While the overdose study focused on only one state, one expert says it has national and even global implications.

“The article notes that many overdoses occur when patients are prescribed medications at low doses. This has important implications for national policy and debate,” said  Dr. Jeroan Allison of University of Massachusetts Medical School, who is co-editor-in-chief of Medical Care. "The statistics are quite overwhelming and dramatic, and this problem affects every state in our nation."

According to the Centers for Disease Control, over 16,500 deaths in the U.S. were linked to opioid overdoses in 2010.

More recent data suggest that the “epidemic” of painkiller abuse is abating.

Hydrocodone prescriptions fell by 8% last year and it is no longer the most widely prescribed medication in the U.S.

A recent report by a large national health insurer found that total opioid dispensing declined by 19% from 2010 to 2012 and the overdose rate dropped by 20 percent.

According to the National Institutes of Health, only about 5% of patients taking opioids as directed for a year end up with an addiction problem.

Study: Drug Abusers Responsible for Painkiller Misuse

By Pat Anson, Editor

A new analysis of a federal health survey has confirmed what many pain patients have been saying all along – that drug abusers, not patients, are largely responsible for the so-called epidemic of prescription painkiller abuse.

Researchers at the University of Georgia analyzed data from the 2011-2012 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. Over 13,000 Americans aged 12 and older were asked about their use of prescription drugs, illegal drugs, tobacco, and alcohol.

Less than 5% of those surveyed reported they had used a pain medication not prescribed for them or that they took it only for the "high" feeling it caused.

A further analysis of those abusers found that marijuana, cocaine or heroin use within the past year was the “only consistent predictor” of pain reliever misuse among all age groups.

"Male or female, black or white, rich or poor, the singular thing we found was that if they were an illicit drug user, they also had many, many times higher odds of misusing prescription pain relievers," said lead author Orion Mowbray, an assistant professor in the School of Social Work and the University of Georgia.

The findings are published in the journal Addictive Behaviors.

Asked where they obtained painkillers, the vast majority of the abusers said they did not get the drugs through a legitimate prescription, but had stolen them, acquired them from friends or relatives, bought them from a drug dealer, or used a fake prescription.

"If we know how people come to possess the pain relievers they misuse, we can design better ways to lower that likelihood," said Mowbray. "This study gives us the knowledge we need to substantially reduce the opportunities for misuse."

Adults aged 50 and older were more likely to acquire pain relievers through more than one doctor, although the rate of misuse in that age group was the lowest (1.7%).

People between the ages of 18 and 25 were most likely to misuse painkillers (10.2%) and more likely to get them from a friend, relative or drug dealer.

The study calls for greater coordination between medical care providers to reduce the possibility of over-prescription of painkillers, and for improving the communication between doctors, patients and the public.

"Doctors may conduct higher quality conversations with older patients about the consequences of drug use before they make any prescription decisions, while families and friends should know about the substantial health risks before they supply a young person with a prescription pain reliever," said Mowbray.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, over 16,500 deaths in the U.S. were linked to opioid overdoses in 2010.

More recent data suggest that the “epidemic” of painkiller abuse is abating.

Hydrocodone prescriptions fell by 8% last year and it is no longer the most widely prescribed medication in the U.S.

A recent report by a large national health insurer found that total opioid dispensing declined by 19% from 2010 to 2012 and the overdose rate dropped by 20 percent.

According to the National Institutes of Health, only about 5% of patients taking opioids as directed for a year end up with an addiction problem.

A Pained Life: Speak Up, Speak Out

By Carol Levy, Columnist

I saw an advertisement on TV a few days ago. It was for some sort of a patch they were hawking for those with pain.

The testimonials were typical: "I use it and it's wonderful," said one man. "I recommend it highly," says a woman.

One testimonial really caught my attention: "I use it because I don't want to become addicted to pain medication."

So now the lie is even in TV commercials: Pain medication leads to addiction. And that should be your first thought and worry.

Never mind the reality that few people who use opioids for pain management become addicted. The lie has taken hold and is now part of the myth and stereotype; there is an epidemic of painkiller abuse and overdoses, and pain patients are on their way to addiction when they use these medications.

What bothers me about this, other than the spread of and belief in the lie, is the too many posts from members of chronic pain groups who have bought into the mythology and do not understand the difference between addiction and dependence.

They write they were on such and such a medication, often non-narcotic drugs like Lyrica, Cymbalta or anti-convulsants; drugs that do not have addictive properties.

"I have tried to get off it but I get sick when I do. Could I be addicted?"

No. Not from the poster's words. It may be physical dependence, which is nothing to be sneezed at. It is a bad problem and requires hard work to get off the medication. But that does not make it addiction.

The American Society of Addiction Medicine defines addiction behavior as an “inability to consistently abstain, impairment in behavioral control, craving, diminished recognition of significant problems with one’s behaviors and interpersonal relationships, and a dysfunctional emotional response.”

PainEDU.org defines dependence as a “state of adaptation that is manifested by a drug class-specific withdrawal syndrome that can be produced by abrupt cessation, rapid dose reduction, decreasing blood level of the drug, and/or administration of an antagonist.”

I cannot recall every reading or talking with people in chronic pain who said liked the narcotics they were prescribed. No one has ever said to me, "Wow. I love the way this drug makes me feel."

They may write or say the opioid has helped reduce their pain and that makes them happy, but invariably this lament usually follows: "But I hate the way it make me feel. Foggy, dry mouthed, and slow."

I hate writing and saying this because we have so much on our plates already, just getting through a day with pain, but we have to be the advocates. We have to get out the word that we do not take these drugs for fun. For some of us they are truly life savers. And yet it is our voice that seems to be absent in the midst of all the media hoopla and sensationalism.  

It is past time for us to take up our pens and raise our voices. We are the ones who get hurt by the misinformation. It is up to us to change the conversation.

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.

Changing Our Country One Addict at a Time

By Mary Maston, Guest Columnist

It’s obvious that our current ways of dealing with addiction aren’t working. They have never worked. The entire process of making drugs illegal and incarcerating those who use, possess, and sell them has been an epic fail in every way imaginable.

The “War on Drugs” – a phrase coined by President Nixon -- has been raging for almost 45 years, longer than I have been alive. How many trillions of our tax dollars have been spent in that time and where has it gotten us?

According to the officials, the problem of addiction is worse now than it’s ever been, despite throwing people in jail left and right. Making things even worse, legitimate chronic pain patients are being lumped together with addicts and drug abusers -- making opioid pain medication harder and harder to get.

We haven’t solved anything, and we never will if this is the path we continue to take.

"Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” -- Albert Einstein

It’s time that we start thinking outside the box. We need a different approach and the police chief of Gloucester, Massachusetts may have found one.

Chief Leonard Campanello has worked in law enforcement for 25 years. In that time, I’m sure he’s seen just about every scenario imaginable and then some. Perhaps he’s grown tired of seeing the same people in and out of his jail repeatedly. Or perhaps he just has a bigger heart than most, and the desire to contribute to a real solution. That’s what I choose to believe.

After dealing with addicts repeatedly over the years, Campanello has decided to change the way he does things and tackle the issue from a totally different angle.

Campanello recently announced that anyone who walks into his police station and asks for help with addiction, and surrenders any drugs and paraphernalia they have, will not be arrested. Instead he/she will be put into a detox and rehab program, funded by the money the police department has collected from drug raids.

You read that correctly: Anyone who asks for help will receive it without judgement, persecution, fines, or jail time. It’s called the Gloucester Initiative.

It’s a bold move. It’s never been attempted before. Many may say it’s crazy, that it will never work. It goes against everything we’ve heard about addiction.

Get this though: it is working.

It’s an absolutely brilliant concept and it’s already changing lives in the short time since it’s been started. It’s also gaining national attention. There are many organizations that are starting to come on board, and because of that, the Police Assisted Addiction and Recovery Initiative  was born.

police chief leonard campanello

police chief leonard campanello

So far over two dozen people have entered the program. While that doesn’t seem like many in the grand scheme of things, it’s a start. The drugs those people had are off the streets, and they are getting help when they would otherwise be using and selling. What if 28 drug addicts were no longer on YOUR streets and in YOUR community? Would you feel a little bit safer, maybe a little less cynical? Everyone has to start somewhere.

This proves that there are people who are addicted and who truly want help, but haven’t been able to get it for any number of reasons. Maybe they can’t afford it – rehab facilities aren’t cheap. Maybe they don’t have insurance or if they do, it doesn’t cover extended treatment.

If they are using illegal drugs but haven’t been caught yet, maybe they are afraid of going to jail for the first time. Maybe they enjoyed being an addict for a long time, but don’t want to be one anymore and don’t know how to stop.

Think about it for a moment. This could be a huge game changer for chronic pain patients, especially if this initiative takes off nationally like I’m hoping it will.

Right now, everyone is so quick to label anyone that uses pain medication for any reason as an addict. What if addicts weren’t abusing anymore? Perhaps that would equate to better treatment for us, without the stigma of being judged so harshly because we actually need medications to function; not because we want to get high, but because we want to live somewhat productive lives and medication is the only thing that helps us.

Think about how much better your life would be if medical professionals got back to actually treating patients with debilitating diseases and conditions – respectfully – instead of focusing on policing everyone that walks through their doors and denying medical care.

I’m not naïve enough to think that this is going to completely solve everything. Not everyone wants help and there are some genuinely bad people in this world, but I’m holding onto hope that this can potentially make a positive difference in the lives of millions – the ones that do want help.

Putting people in jail doesn’t accomplish that, and there are people out there that would stop using drugs if given the opportunity to do it in the right environment.

Just ask those that have come forward. Out of all of the things I’ve read over the years on the subject of the war on drugs, this is the only thing I’ve come across that has the potential to actually change things for the better and make an impact.

That’s why I fully support this cause. I would be insane not to.
 

Mary Maston suffers from a rare congenital kidney disease called Medullary Sponge Kidney (MSK), along with Renal Tubular Acidosis (RTA) and chronic cystitis. She is an advocate for MSK and other chronic pain patients, and helps administer a Facebook support group for MSK patients.

Mary has contributed articles to various online media, including Kidney Stoners, and is an affiliate member of PROMPT (Professionals for Rational Opioid Monitoring & Pharmaco-Therapy).

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

Opioid Implant Raises Safety Questions

(Editor’s Note: Our story about an opioid implant that could someday be used to treat chronic pain struck a nerve with a lot of readers. One of them was Mary Maston, a pain sufferer and  patient advocate, who wrote in expressing concern about the safety and risks associated with implants and other medical devices.)

By Mary Maston, Guest Columnist

Why is everything going to implants? Implants seem to have an initial success rate and I can't argue with the fact that they do work for some, but it seems that class action lawsuits for side effects and internal injuries invariably come about down the line.

Transvaginal mesh was touted as the "next big thing." I had a doctor try to convince me that it would solve all of my female problems. Luckily, I didn't bite. We all know how that ended up.

Bladder slings come to mind too. Some IUD’s have caused issues. People have had major problems with hip and knee replacements. Spinal cord stimulators are being pushed on patients in record numbers, and the bomb is eventually going to drop on those too.

While there are success stories, there are some pretty horrific stories floating around online about implanted devices in general. Some will argue collateral damage: "Just think of the ones they've helped. The many outweigh the few.”

But I can promise you that the ones that have been harmed by these implants see things much differently.

Here's the thing: anything implanted in the body is going to be seen as a foreign object. What does the body tend to do when there's a foreign object inside it? It attacks it, trying to force it out. That's why your eyes water when you get something in them, that's why you vomit when you ingest something that's harmful, and that's why you go to the bathroom -- so the body can rid itself of waste.

When it can’t force the implants out, the body rebels with side effects, infections and pain. The surgeries required to implant these things damage nerves and create scar tissue, which also contribute to pain.

courtesy titan pharmaceuticals

courtesy titan pharmaceuticals

If they're planning on this new implant being simply injected into the arm instead of being surgically implanted, that's going to have to be one heck of a big needle! The size of a match stick? Ouch!!

Then there is the issue of tolerance. Pain medication is not a "one size fits all" fix like the makers of this implant are implying. It comes with a preloaded dose of buprenorphine. How can they guarantee that the dosage they put in it is going to work for the majority of the people it's implanted in? 

What if it stops working in a month or two, or doesn't work at all? Do they have that one taken out and another one put in, or is the old one left in and a new one with a stronger dose implanted?

Will the patient be able to go back to taking oral pain medication? What if it causes side effects in the patient after a few days or weeks that they can't handle, or they end up being allergic to the medicine? How long would they have to live with those issues before it is removed?

Some people metabolize medications faster than others, so saying that it's going to work for a full six months for the implant or an entire month for the injection in everyone isn't practical. What about breakthrough pain? If someone had the implant, but showed up in the ER in pain because of their condition, would they be treated respectfully and in a timely manner, or dismissed because they had the implant and "that should take care of all of your pain."

There needs to be a very specific and compassionate treatment protocol set up for patients before this scenario happens, and all doctors need to be required to follow it.

I can understand and appreciate some of the pros listed in the article. Not having to make trips to the pharmacy, not having to remember to take pills and waiting for them to kick in to feel better. Possibly and hopefully not having to go to the doctor every month and being subjected to random drug screens and pill counts.

Doctors would certainly benefit because they wouldn't be prescribing pain medications nearly as much or maybe not at all. That would definitely get them off the hook with the DEA and I can see how that would make them want to push it onto all of their patients.

I understand that addiction and chronic pain go hand in hand for some people. Not all, but some. But as a chronic pain patient, I don't want to be lumped into the same category as addicts, because I am not an addict, never have been and never will be.

This raises serious questions that I think should be considered before we shout to the heavens how wonderful this new implant is going to be for addicts and legitimate chronic pain patients alike.

I understand there is still a lot of work to be done, and that it's going to take time and testing to answer a lot of these questions. Oral medications certainly have their own set of problems and aren't without risks either. However, history tells us that jumping on a bandwagon isn't necessarily a good thing down the road in a lot of cases.

I'm not saying that the thought of being pain free for an extended amount of time isn't appealing. Honestly, I would probably be more apt to try this than a spinal cord stimulator. But I hope that the manufacturers and the FDA will address the questions I've posed. I guarantee you I'm not the only one that will ask them.

Mary Maston suffers from a rare congenital kidney disease called Medullary Sponge Kidney (MSK), along with Renal Tubular Acidosis (RTA) and chronic cystitis. She is an advocate for MSK and other chronic pain patients, and helps administer a Facebook support group for MSK patients.

Mary has contributed articles to various online media, including Kidney Stoners, and is an affiliate member of PROMPT (Professionals for Rational Opioid Monitoring & Pharmaco-Therapy).

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