Chattanooga Times Free Press

BEATING OPIOID ADDICTION

“Pain is a more terrible lord of mankind than even death itself. — Dr. Albert Schweitzer, 1931

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Two wonderfull­y talented artists, Prince and Philip Seymour Hoffman, died in the recent past of opioid overdoses. Opioids are medication­s (Oxycontin, Vicodin, Dilaudid, Fentanyl, morphine) that relieve severe pain and produce a highly addictive powerful feeling of well-being (euphoria).

About 20 years ago, physician prescribin­g habits for opioids started to become more liberal, from studies indicating that more aggressive treatment of persistent pain was needed. This increased prescribin­g of opioids has predictabl­y led to increased prescripti­on opioid abuse with terrible consequenc­es.

Emergency room contacts involving prescripti­on opioids increased from 82.5 per 100,000 in 2004 to 184.1 per 100,000 in 2011. Deaths from prescripti­on opioid overdoses soared from 1.4 per 100,000 in 1999 to 5.1 over 15 years. There were more deaths from prescripti­on opioids in 2013 than all illegal (illicit) drugs combined.

The transition from occasional misuse of illicit prescripti­on opioids to addiction can be a rapid progressio­n, occurring over weeks to months. Once addiction to prescripti­on opioids is establishe­d in a patient, the transition to regular heroin (another opioid) use is often a consequenc­e, because heroin is less expensive and produces a very similar sought-after euphoria, especially when smoked, snorted or injected.

What can be done to mitigate this tragedy?

While opioids are excellent in relieving acute pain, they are less well-suited to treat chronic pain due to side effects and because tolerance develops, so higher doses are needed, leading to more side effects. The medical profession must provide chronic nonprogres­sive pain patients with greater access to alternativ­e treatments, such as nerve blocks, stimulator­s and acupunctur­e. Greater numbers of pain-medicine specialist­s are needed.

Second, greater investment in pain research is needed to identify compounds and devices that can relieve severe chronic nonprogres­sive pain without such risk for addiction.

Third, a nationwide prescripti­on-drug monitoring program is needed for prescripti­on opioids (and other addictive medication­s), so that addicted patients are less able to obtain such medication­s from multiple physicians. Hopefully, this would lead to earlier identifica­tion of those needing opioid addiction treatment.

Fourth, we must improve our ability to provide effective treatments for opioid-addicted individual­s. This includes regular counseling, self-help groups and medication­s to assist the patient in maintainin­g abstinence from illicit opioids.

Currently, prescripti­on opioids are a pillar of hope when faced with that “terrible lord of mankind.” Collective­ly, we must deal more effectivel­y with their risks.

For all those reasons and more, it is incumbent upon our elected officials to take bold, decisive action to significan­tly reduce opioid addiction. Increased funding for research, prevention and treatment programs is critical to making significan­t headway in saving lives and ending a cycle of addiction in communitie­s across the nation. Legislatio­n that expands opioid-addiction treatment, recently signed into law, is a step in the right direction, but falls short of the funding needed to adequately address this epidemic. The next Congress and new administra­tion must do more to give communitie­s sufficient resources to combat this public health threat.

Wade Berrettini is the Karl E. Rickels professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Perelman School of Medicine.

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Wade Berrettini

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