Call & Times

Patients say opioid law creates new crisis

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AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — Jane Avery says the pain from her psoriatic arthritis is the worst at 2 a.m. when she can't sleep and already has met her daily limit on painkiller­s. Her daily dosage of the drugs was cut in half about six months ago.

Avery, 81, says she and other chronic pain patients are suffering as Maine rolls out the nation's strictest law targeting opioid prescripti­ons. By July, Maine doctors will not be allowed to prescribe more than 100 milligrams of opioid medication per day to most of their patients.

State health officials say the law has exceptions that can help the estimated 16,000 Mainers who get high daily doses of opiates for chronic and acute pain. But Avery and others with chronic pain have told lawmakers their doctors say they don't qualify for an exception.

"It's like we have to go on bended knee and beg, and it shouldn't be that way," she said.

About 10 percent of the Maine patients receiving high daily doses of opioids will face increased depression and suicidal tendencies on reduced doses, cautioned Dr. Steven Hull, director of a pain rehabilita­tion program at Mercy Hospital in Portland.

The law comes as Maine deals with the nation's highest rate of prescripti­ons for longterm opiate medication. Last year, at least one person died each day in the state from drug overdoses.

And there's evidence the problem is improving, said Gordon Smith, executive vice president of the Maine Medical Associatio­n. Retail prescripti­ons of opioid painkiller­s in Maine declined 21.5 percent from 2013 to 2016, compared with 14.6 percent nationally, according to health informatio­n company QuintilesI­MS.

Maine's law has excep- tions for "palliative care," cancer pain patients, end-oflife care, hospice care and and medication-assisted treatment for substance use disorder. Some doctors and medical groups say the law doesn't clearly define "palliative care."

Several lawmakers at a Thursday hearing said doctors think of end-of-life care when they hear palliative care. Meanwhile, "the state believes that palliative care is anything they need an exemption for," Smith said.

Doctors are simply concerned about violating the law, said Dr. Alan Ross of Augusta. He said lawmakers need to better define when an exception is OK, something legislator­s are is considerin­g.

The law also is receiving pushback from the Academy of Integrativ­e Pain Management, an associatio­n of doctors, chiropract­ors, acupunctur­ists and others who treat pain.

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