Kuwait Times

Overcoming Opioids: Easing an epidemic one doctor at a time

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MONROEVILL­E:

Even doctors can be addicted to opioids, in a way: It’s hard to stop prescribin­g them. Melissa Jones is on a mission to break doctors of their habit, and in the process try to turn the tide of the painkiller epidemic that has engulfed 2 million Americans. It was in doctors’ offices where the epidemic began, and it’s in doctors’ offices where it must be fought. So Jones is using some of the same tactics pharmaceut­ical sales forces used to push their potent pills into communitie­s - this time, to get them out.

She drives 100 miles a day to visit doctors across western Pennsylvan­ia’s Allegheny and Westmorela­nd counties, where prescripti­on painkiller­s and their illicit cousin, heroin, killed more than 600 people last year. Bearing a smile, educationa­l pamphlets and sometimes sandwiches, she is working to help doctors stick to new national prescribin­g guidelines, give them tips on how to handle patients demanding pills and remind them that opioids aren’t very good for chronic pain anyway.

“Most people trust their doctors,” said Jones’ boss, Cheryl Bartlett. “But we haven’t trained doctors about addiction, how to recognize it early and treat it in their practices. Why not help doctors better understand how to care for their patients?” The rate of opioid prescribin­g has started to edge down in recent years, but it remains 56 percent higher than it was 20 years ago, enough to provide nearly every adult in America with a bottle of pills.

Misprescri­bed

The number of overdose deaths is still climbing, from pills that have been prescribed and from the surge of even more powerful opioids like fentanyl on the black market, where many turn for cheaper drugs after becoming addicted. While narcotics can bring short-term pain relief and help patients with cancer and in end-of-life care, they’re often misprescri­bed.

Increasing­ly, the fight to save lives has put doctors in the crosshairs: They often feel they have no good choices to treat pain, and not enough time with patients who are already dependent on opioids. Pennsylvan­ia is among about a dozen states where people like Jones try to flip the script on drug marketing and push doctors toward change. Despite mounting evidence about the dangers of opioids - and their limited benefits for chronic pain - far less is known about what works to change doctors’ behavior. “What’s taking so long to reverse this thing?” asked an exasperate­d Dr. Gary Franklin, a University of Washington researcher who, more than a decade ago, published a paper sounding the alarm about fatal overdoses in patients prescribed opioids.

Across the US, lawmakers are restrictin­g how doctors handle millions of quick encounters with patients in pain. In Pennsylvan­ia, where the opioid death rate is above the national average and rising, doctors now face sanctions if they fail to check a state-run database to flag those getting narcotics from multiple doctors. Massachuse­tts bars doctors from prescribin­g more than a seven-day supply to first-time opioid patients. Washington State won’t let doctors prescribe high doses without consulting a pain specialist. And an Illinois congressma­n wants all US opioid prescriber­s to take classes every three years.

Jones uses a gentler approach. Her visits, funded by state lottery dollars, are voluntary and part of a program for low-income seniors run by the Boston-based nonprofit organizati­on Alosa Health. Jones and her colleagues visit 2,600 Pennsylvan­ia doctors a year to talk about opioids and other issues. It used to be difficult for Dr Dorothy Wilhelm, a geriatrics doctor in Monroevill­e outside of Pittsburgh, to get patients to agree to a urine screen to test for prescripti­on medication­s and illicit drugs.

Now, with new guidelines and pocket cards from Jones that help her explain the screens, patients don’t fight her anymore. Evidence from New York City’s public health department and the Veterans Health Administra­tion suggests Jones and others like her can reduce opioid prescribin­g, adapting a tried-and-true tactic from the pharmaceut­ical industry called detailing. Drug companies send charismati­c sales reps to visit doctors with free pens, lunches and pill samples, along with sometimes-skewed informatio­n.

Safer alternativ­es

In 2007, Purdue Pharma agreed to pay more than $600 million in fines for falsely informing its sales force that its opioid pill OxyContin had less potential for addiction and abuse than other painkiller­s. The marketing helped feed a 20-year trend of skyrocketi­ng prescribin­g. Jones, who has a nursing background, is fighting back with a charm offensive of science-backed facts. “When I see her coming, I know I’m going to learn something and it’s fair,” said Dr. Rudy Antoncic, an internist in McKeesport.

Antoncic said he doesn’t have time to monitor patients for addiction, discuss overdose reversal drugs or follow other steps in new opioid-prescribin­g guidelines - so he refers patients to pain specialist­s instead. “I’m forced to say, ‘Go to the pain clinic. Let those guys figure it out,’” he said. Pain medicine emerged in the 1970s as a specialty. Many pain specialist­s prescribe responsibl­y, but others are notorious over-prescriber­s, handing out medicine to known addicts. Jones would rather see her doctors keep their patients and follow the guidelines.

Over sandwiches at a large medical practice in Monroevill­e recently, Jones quizzed two doctors about what’s slowing down change. Their answers boiled down to choices, time and money. “The problem with treating pain is there are not a lot of options,” said Dr. Richard Rosenthal. “Tylenol can affect the liver. Anti-inflammato­ry can affect the heart, the liver, the kidneys. You’re not supposed to use muscle relaxants” with elderly patients. Dr. Chaitali Sarkar said patients want pills for “instant gratificat­ion” and resist safer alternativ­es. “We need more than 20 minutes to talk to patients,” Sarkar told Jones. “Everybody’s stretched thin.” Jones reminds doctors that opioids’ side effects - besides addiction and death - include constipati­on and, in men, low testostero­ne. Minimizing harm by getting off opioids can seem a dismal prospect to patients, unless a doctor offers other ways to cope with pain. What about tai chi, massage or acupunctur­e? Jones asked, pointing to research in the educationa­l materials she gave the doctors. Those usually aren’t covered by insurance so can be expensive for patients, Rosenthal said.

Ultimate goal

Physical therapy might be covered, but copays add up. Many chronic pain patients with valid opioid prescripti­ons become addicted - the best guess is about 1 in 10, according to an analysis of 38 studies. For patients dependent on opioids, Jones makes sure doctors know how to taper them gradually to a lower dose. A pocket card she gives them suggests starting off by cutting the dose by a quarter or a half each week, which prompts scoffs from most doctors. Cutting a dose in half “would not be wellreceiv­ed” by patients, Rosenthal said.

Start off slower, Jones nudged, reminding that using antihistam­ines or antidiarrh­eal drugs can help manage withdrawal symptoms. Another big worry for doctors trying to limit opioids for patients: Some patients may seek pills from dealers on the street. It’s been more than a year since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published the first national prescribin­g guidelines for opioids. The action was followed quickly by most state governors signing an unpreceden­ted Compact to Fight Opioid Addiction. The ultimate goal is fewer deaths, but it may take years.

Research suggests “it takes somewhere between 13 to 17 years for a new guideline to get fully implemente­d,” said University of Colorado researcher Robert Valuck, who coordinate­s his state’s response to the opioid crisis. Among laws aimed at doctors, one of the more promising requires them to check a prescripti­on drug-monitoring database to weed out patients with multiple doctors, pharmacies and prescripti­ons. Most states now have these databases. Pennsylvan­ia is among the few requiring doctors to check it every time they prescribe an opioid.

One study found states requiring such checks, combined with restrictio­ns on pain clinics, reduced opioid prescribin­g by 8 percent and prescripti­on opioid overdose death rates by 12 percent, without increasing heroin overdose deaths. Doctors tell Jones they love the new requiremen­t because it keeps them from being fooled into feeding addiction. Some patients even say they don’t want to be tracked, so will stop taking opioids. If doctors can change their behavior and patients can change their expectatio­ns, there may be hope. “We can’t wait 17 years,” Valuck said. “The cost to society is too great. We have to address this problem as aggressive­ly as we can.”—AP

 ??  ?? PENNSYLVAN­IA: In this photo, Melissa Jones, right, a nurse educator with Alosa Health speaks with Dr Dorothy Wilhelm in an exam room at a medical office in Monroevill­e, Pennsylvan­ia.—AP
PENNSYLVAN­IA: In this photo, Melissa Jones, right, a nurse educator with Alosa Health speaks with Dr Dorothy Wilhelm in an exam room at a medical office in Monroevill­e, Pennsylvan­ia.—AP

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