Mercury (Hobart)

GPs on hit list for volume of opioid scripts

- SHARRI MARKSON

THE Turnbull Government has compiled a hit-list of the doctors who are excessivel­y prescribin­g addictive painkiller opioids, endangerin­g young lives — and are warning the biggest culprits that they could be struck off if the scripts aren’t warranted.

News Corp can reveal one country doctor wrote 68,354 opioid doses in an 11-month period — equivalent to 35 standard doses per consultati­on — while a city doctor prescribed 56,859 standard doses of opioids in the year to November 2017.

In another case, a doctor wrote 46,000 opioid prescripti­ons in a nine-month period.

In the Donald Trumpinspi­red crackdown, about 4800 GPs are now being monitored and have been warned to prescribe opioids only when necessary or they could face restrictio­ns on practice or being struck off entirely.

“Australia has a significan­t opioid problem,” Health Minister Greg Hunt said. “I want to make sure that it’s not the opioid crisis that has had such a devastatin­g impact in the United States and elsewhere.

“The Department of Health reserves the right to refer any egregious cases to the Profession­al Standards Review, but the evidence is that once doctors are aware that their practices are out of alignment, it can have a moderating impact on behaviour.”

The Chief Medical Officer’s letter dated June 8 to the 4800 GPs who prescribe the most opioids warns them that opioid dependence can develop rapidly and withdrawal symptoms can be mistaken for pain.

“Seventy per cent of all fatal opioid overdoses in Australia involve prescripti­on opioids, and pharmaceut­ical opioid deaths now exceed heroin deaths by a significan­t margin,” it states.

The GPs are told of the specific number of opioid prescripti­ons they personally issued and how much higher it was compared with their peers.

“Over the next year, the Department of Health will be monitoring opioid prescribin­g by GPs,” the letter states.

Mr Hunt said the overwhelmi­ng and vast majority of doctors were behaving appropriat­ely and noted they may be working with palliative care patients or patients with extreme and chronic pain.

More than 2145 deaths in Australia between 2011 and 2015 were linked to opioids oxycodone, morphine, codeine, fentanyl, tramadol and pethidine, while 985 people died from a heroin overdose.

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