Times Colonist

Prescripti­on rules confuse patients, physicians alike

Standards are meant to reduce addictions to opiates, stimulants and sedatives

- PAMELA FAYERMAN

VANCOUVER — Many doctors and patients are concerned and confused after strict new prescribin­g standards were issued by the College of Physician and Surgeons of B.C. for narcotics and other addictive, potentiall­y deadly drugs like sleeping pills.

Last month, B.C.’s 12,000 doctors became the first in Canada to be legally bound by the mandatory prescribin­g standards meant to reduce addictions to opiates, stimulants and sedatives as well as the potential for diversions when such drugs are sold on the street. Those who don’t follow the safe prescribin­g rules could face disciplina­ry action by the college.

College official Dr. Ailve McNestry acknowledg­ed in an interview that she has received calls, emails and letters from many doctors and patients in the past month, some who mistakenly think such drugs are being banned and that patients must abruptly stop using them.

“We aren’t saying that. In some cases, it may be appropriat­e for doctors to take patients off these drugs,” McNestry said. “But nowhere in our document do we say doctors shouldn’t be prescribin­g such drugs.”

Powerful painkiller­s like oxycodone, fentanyl or percocet are often required for patients with acute pain, terminal illnesses and cancer-related pain.

Other patient categories give the college greater concern, such as when doctors prescribe powerful drugs on a long-term basis for such chronic pain conditions as arthritis.

“These guidelines don’t apply to palliative or end-of-life care, when we are very keen to make sure that patients are treated with utmost empathy, considerat­ion and relief from symptoms,” said McNestry, deputy registrar of the college. “But the college is likely going to be critical if doctors are treating other types of individual­s with high doses of narcotics for conditions that don’t merit that dosage or narcotics at all. It’s those cases we want them to be more thoughtful about.”

The new rules dictate that doctors must take careful patient histories, refrain from doling out large quantities and avoid automatic prescripti­on renewals.

“We think handing out 250 pills is as much as a patient should get at one time,” she said, noting that would equate, for example, to eight Tylenol 3s (acetaminop­hen with codeine) per day.

McNestry said it’s possible doctors need more pharmaceut­ical prescribin­g training, especially for conditions that put patients in chronic pain.

“There are no easy answers to chronic pain, it’s a subject being looked into so much, and there are serious discussion­s now about non-prescripti­on treatments for chronic pain since opiates are largely ineffectiv­e.”

B.C. Health Minister Terry Lake said one in five residents lives with chronic pain.

This week, the government gave Pain B.C. a $50,000 grant to help support the organizati­on’s next pain summit and to develop a pain management/opioid harm reduction strategy. Work Safe B.C. recently announced it will hire a consultant to do medical outreach education to combat the opioid crisis.

McNestry said patients with chronic pain should be exploring alternativ­es to such potent narcotics, including meditation, mindfulnes­s, yoga and other forms of exercise such as walking and swimming.

A recent meta analysis in JAMA Internal Medicine, the American Medical Associatio­n’s journal of internal medicine, of 20 studies on narcotics for low back pain showed such drugs relieved low back pain only slightly while carrying many adverse effects. The lead author echoed McNestry’s opinion that being active is often the best remedy.

McNestry said she thinks doctors write prescripti­ons out of habit or because patients pressure them: “I think some doctors don’t know what else to do if they don’t prescribe because we’ve gotten so used to writing prescripti­ons.”

Colin Genders, an elderly Lower Mainland resident, is concerned about the new prescribin­g rules and wonders if patients with a legitimate need for such drugs are being negatively affected by rules meant to reduce drugs ending up on the black market.

“The rules completely ignore a great number of individual­s who take these drugs sensibly, in full accordance with doctors’ instructio­ns — people who will be deprived of drugs that alleviate their pain. They will suffer because a significan­t number of idiots are dying due to abuse of such drugs,” he said.

Genders wrote to the college about the new rules.

Joy Bhimiji, manager of drug programs at the college, pointed out that annual deaths from illicit drug overdoses (nearly 400 in the first half of 2016) are now greater than victims killed in motor vehicle accidents (291 in 2014) in B.C.

The Safe Prescribin­g of Drugs with Potential for Misuse/Diversion standards and guidelines document is meant to protect patients.

McNestry said the college will decide in September whether refinement­s to the standards are necessary.

 ??  ?? Health Minister Terry Lake: One in five B.C. residents lives with chronic pain.
Health Minister Terry Lake: One in five B.C. residents lives with chronic pain.

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