From Yahoo:
“Amid backlash, CDC's new
opioid guidance aims to curb addiction and treat patients”
The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention on Thursday issued new guidance for doctors who treat pain
patients that reverses a 2016 version used to sharply curtail opioid
prescriptions, ultimately leading to devastating results for some pain patients.
The new guidance avoids strict figures on dosage and length of opioid
prescriptions, recommends how and when to prescribe opioids, and describes
harms and benefits. But the CDC emphasized the recommendations are voluntary
and flexible and should not be used to support a one-size-fits-all policy. The
original version was meant for primary care doctors who treat chronic pain
patients but ended up being used by states, licensing boards, insurers,
pharmacies and others to force millions of Americans to rapidly reduce or
discontinue prescription opioids. Pain patient advocates said the update
improves the original version that led to abrupt changes for 8 to 13 million
Americans who take opioids to manage pain. But they said prescribers, insurers
and others must adopt more nuanced policies to avoid harms such as addiction,
suicide and diminishing quality of life. "The CDC is sending a pretty
strong message to all payers, states and health systems that they need to
reverse course, that they misapplied the (2016) guideline and they need to
change because they're causing harm," said Kate Nicholson, executive
director and founder of the National Pain Advocacy Center.
What are the new
recommendations? The guidance addresses whether to prescribe opioids for
pain, determining dosages, length of initial fills and how and when to follow
up with patients.
The CDC guidance says doctors
should: Discuss alternative therapies and prescribe the lowest dosage for
patients who have not taken opioids before. Recommend pain pills for
chronic pain patients only if the benefits and ability to do daily tasks outweigh
known risks, which can include addiction, overdose and death. Discuss
risks and benefits, and consider how opioid prescriptions will be discontinued.
Rely on other therapies and try to gradually lower dosages or discontinue
opioids for patients already on higher dosages. Unless there's a
life-threatening issue such as signs of overdose, doctors should not abruptly
discontinue or rapidly reduce opioid dosages, the guidance says. "Patients
with pain should receive compassionate, safe and effective pain care,"
said Christopher Jones, acting director of CDC’s National Center for Injury
Prevention and Control. "We want clinicians and patients to have the
information they need to weigh the benefits of different approaches to pain
care, with the goal of helping people reduce their pain and improve their
quality of life.”
How is it different from the
old recommendations? Under the old recommendation, chronic pain patients
complained of being cut off from pills they had taken for months or even years.
Some in the middle of cancer treatments, sickle cell disease, or recovering
from operations could not get pain medications even though the policy did not
focus on these individuals. The updated guidance has recommendations for
those with short-term pain of less than one month, lingering pain of one to
three months, and chronic pain of more than three months. The original
guidance stressed that doctors should be careful to avoid daily opioid doses
that exceed 90 morphine milligram equivalents. The new version recommends
doctors be cautious but does not forbid prescribing daily doses of more than 50
morphine milligram equivalents. If doctors do prescribe that much, the guidance
recommends doctors offer overdose education and the overdose-reversal drug
naloxone.
How will the CDC monitor the
guidance? While the guidance is voluntary, the CDC will evaluate and
monitor how doctors and patients adjust to the new recommendations. The
CDC plans to educate doctors and others if the agency sees evidence people are
misinterpreting the guidance or using it as "justification for taking some
rigid action that applies to all patients," Jones said in a call with
reporters.
What are the lingering effects
of the original guidance? Studies show more than half of primary care
doctors won't see a patient who takes opioids to manage pain, Nicholson said.
Abruptly tapering or discontinuing opioids increases pain patients' risk of
addiction and suicide. Jones said abrupt tapering "creates a very real
risk" for patients, including mental health, thoughts of suicide, or
seeking illicit opioids to stave off withdrawal. After the 2016
guidance, more than half of states passed laws that limited initial opioid
prescriptions for acute pain to seven days or less. Many states limited pain
pill fills for Medicaid enrollees, and private insurers and pharmacies also
curtailed opioid prescriptions. Some states enacted strict limits on doses,
prompting doctors to aggressively taper patients who had been on opioids for
years, and medical boards sanctioned doctors who ran afoul of the tighter
requirements. After the original guidelines, a non-peer-reviewed survey
of more than 3,000 patients found 84% reported more pain and worse quality of
life, and 42% said they had considered suicide, according to the CDC.
Do disparities exist among
pain patients? Black patients have lower overdose rates from prescription
pain pills than white patients, Latinos and Native Americans, but one study
cited by the CDC showed Black patients were more likely than whites to have early
refills restricted. Another study showed doctors were substantially more likely
to discontinue opioids for Black people compared to white people if they
misused pain pills, the CDC said. Black patients are less likely to be
referred to a pain specialist, according to the CDC, and Black patients get
lower-dose opioids compared to whites.
^ The original recommendations did,
and continue to do, more harm than good. The CDC helped foster a Medical Field around
the United States that saw legitimate Sick, Disabled and Dying Patients using Opioids
to help ease their suffering as Drug Addicts.
Those recommendations and the rules
that were made across the country from them allowed Doctors, Nurses, Health
Insurance Companies, Pharmacists, etc. to treat Chronic Pain Suffers, the Disabled
and the Dying in anything but a humane way for years.
Even today people who use “recreational
drugs” are seen as normal, while those who need Opioids to help them carry-out
basic everyday functions are seen as back-alley drug users who are only looking
to score their next hit.
Every single so-called Medical Professional
and Politician that promoted (and continue to promote) the old recommendations are
a complete disgrace and lack any and all compassion for those who are Disabled,
Ill and Dying and seem to only go with the current trend of backwards thinking
rather than the Medical and Science Proof.
I don’t know if these new recommendations
will work or will help stop a years-long backwardness that has literally helped
people die in extreme pain and agony. I can
only hope that it will help change things for the better. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/amid-backlash-cdcs-opioid-guidance-191658837.html
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