Many politicians think that chronic pain is the cause of the opioid crisis. Yet, cracking down on pain patients has only increased overdoses of illegal opioids.

Why politicians are wrong about the opioid crisis

Dear politicians in Washington,

The opioid crisis was not caused by chronic pain and yet you seek to punish people in pain anyway because we’re the convenient scapegoats. I’ve written dozens of articles about the opioid crisis previously, but it has clearly not reached you so I’m begging you to listen this time. What you are doing is causing irreparable harm to people in pain.

The opioid crisis and why “partial fills” of opioids is problematic

One policy that is being supported by Senator Elizabeth Warren will harm people in pain. The proposal is a “partial fill” regulation that would allow pharmacists to judge if a patient doesn’t need their entire prescription.

On the surface this doesn’t sound terrible. Unfortunately in the current climate it is already almost impossible to find a pharmacy to fill a pain prescription. It doesn’t matter whether you have cancer pain, post surgical pain, or chronic pain. Pharmacists can already claim they “don’t feel comfortable” filling the prescription the doctor provided. This is someone who knows nothing about your own personal medical history. Yet they get to practice medicine without a license by refusing to fill a prescription.  Regrettably, this proposal backs up their ability to do so.

Pharmacists who know nothing about someone's medical history get to practice medicine without a license by denying prescribed pain medication Click To Tweet

Related posts: How a Myth defines treatment for pain patients

                       People in pain want alternatives to opioids

                       Pain Warriors documentary, the other side of the opioid crisis

Overriding the judgement of doctors

Furthermore, the “partial fill” rule means means that if your doctor gives you a prescription for 30 pills, the pharmacist can decide to give you 5. It overrides the judgment of the doctor who actually knows your medical history. It also hurts patients because most doctors are too busy to write a prescription every time a pharmacist decides to play doctor. Additionally, if the pain patient has to continually travel to the pharmacy every week this places a huge burden on someone who is already suffering.

 

As a patient advocate and healthcare writer who is very active in social media, I see reports from thousands of patients who have been denied a refill of valid prescriptions for opioid pain medications. This is particularly true for prescriptions at high doses. And it is a trend reinforced by insurance providers and pharmacy chains as policy without scientific support. It’s pretty obvious that Elizabeth Warren and her colleagues literally don’t know what they are talking about.— Richard “Red” Lawhern, Ph.D., Co‐​founder of the Alliance for the Treatment of Intractable Pain 

As the DEA lowers the amount of prescription opioids produced, hospitals run out and patients suffer. Meanwhile the shortage has no effect on non medical use or addiction.

 

Politicians are using the wrong rationale for addressing the opioid crisis

I’m picking on Elizabeth Warren here because her proposal is the loudest and most recent, but most politicians are approaching the opioid crisis as if it stems from overprescribed opioids. The opioids are pushed on people who don’t need them or are lost and stolen to be used non medically. Although this may have been the case in the beginning of the crisis, it’s not true any longer.

According to the Cato Institute:

…the DEA and other policymakers have effectuated a dramatic reduction in opioid prescribing only to see the overdose rate climb, as non‐​medical users have switched over to cheaper and more readily available heroin and fentanyl provided by the efficient black market. Furthermore, there is no correlation between prescription volume and non‐​medical use or addiction among persons age twelve and up.

There is no correlation between prescription volume of opioids and non-medical use or addiction.

There is no correlation between prescription volume of opioids and non-medical use or addiction. Click To Tweet

 

There is a pain care crisis

The real health crisis is what’s happening to people in chronic pain. The costs of getting pain medication has skyrocketed. People in pain have been regularly dumped by their doctors who are too afraid to treat pain. The closing of pain clinics cuts off thousands of patients from their treatment with no warning. This leads to terrible withdrawal which causes severe side effects, even death. Also, even if a patient isn’t in danger from withdrawal, many in this situation have killed themselves after being left to suffer alone.  Nearly 1 in 10 suicides in the U.S. is due to chronic pain and the rates continue to rise.

Please don’t limit the access to pain medication for those in pain. It will cause immeasurable harm, and the deaths of people in pain will be on your watch.

 

What you can do as pain patients

Contact Senator Warren to politely let her know what pain patients deal with. Our representatives probably don’t get to spend much time with those who experience chronic pain and suffer from the opioid crisis. They need to be made aware. 

 

Politicians think that if they limit the supply of opioids and punish people with chronic pain, the opioid crisis will be solved. In fact there is no correlation between prescription volume and non-medical use or addiction.

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6 thoughts on “Why politicians are wrong about the opioid crisis

  1. Excellent Post. I’ve written to my Congressmen about this very subject. It seems to fall on deaf ears. Just as you said. It’s very frustrating for those of us who pee test monthly, go to pain management, and follow directions to attempt to manage pain.

    1. Yes, it’s frustrating. No matter how much we do to prove we’re responsibly taking our medication, it seems like it’s never enough.

  2. ” Nearly 1 in 10 suicides in the U.S. is due to chronic pain and the rates continue to rise” – my gosh, that is so, so awful. I’m sorry things over there are just as messed up as here in the UK with changing guidelines that have been brought in to get people off opioids and painkillers in favour of CBT or acupuncture. I am so, so angry. I’ve written to the NHS and other bodies to campaign against it and explain my rational, which all of us living with chronic pain and likely using these medications as a last lifeline just to get us through the each day. I’m so glad you wrote this. More awareness is absolutely needed. It’s reckless to mistake the patients living with chronic pain for those spoken about amidst the opioid crisis. It’s very different living with chronic pain and taking pills that you don’t need or taking illegal concoctions. Very different indeed. xx

    1. It’s been sad to see this happening in the UK as well. CBT seems to be the favorite treatment here too, which is immensely frustrating.

  3. It’s so frightening that this is happening across the world just now. I really don’t know why people who are living with pain are being punished in this way. In the UK, they seem to think that a wee spot of exercise, a short course of acupuncture and a therapy session will help. They are wanting to stop prescribing or advising any form of pain medication. It’s so, so wrong – our lives are difficult enough.

  4. Living in chronic pain truly impacts the quality of live you live. I know what that’s like and I have searched for years for something to help me manage my pain so I can actually live my life. This has helped me so much!!! It completely changed my life and gave me a chance at living again! Click this link hybridm…ing.org/39a2VR8hybridm…ing.org/39a2VR8 and start living again!

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