New York Post

The Feds Are Fueling an Opioid Disaster

- josh bloom

FEDERAL policy is unquestion­ably making the nation’s opioid problem worse — while also inflicting collateral damage on Americans in genuine need of pain medication.

And this disaster is being further driven by a myth that has gained additional credence from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s latest guidelines for prescribin­g opioids.

The myth: that lax prescripti­on of opioid drugs, such as oxycodone, is a primary driver of addiction. This notion has triggered a nationwide crackdown on these prescripti­ons in the name of preventing addiction and saving lives, an action that has been a catastroph­e by almost any measure.

Dissenting opinions do exist. Physicians for Responsibl­e Opioid Prescribin­g, a group that promotes strict control of prescripti­ons, admits that chronic pain patients have a “very legitimate fear” of restrictio­ns. Yet the group, which was involved in formulatin­g the CDC guidelines, nonetheles­s recommends a one-size-fitsall daily cap on the permissibl­e opioid dose, regardless of the patient.

Reviewers have rightly criticized PROP for using shoddy evidence in support of its findings. In the past decade, more than a dozen profession­al papers — including a systematic analysis known as a “Cochrane Review” of 26 other studies, and a 38-study review in the journal Pain — have debunked the idea that addiction routinely starts with legal use. In most cases, it doesn’t; people who use prescripti­on opioids properly and legally rarely become addicts.

Overwhelmi­ngly, the ones who become addicted are those who start off using opioids for recreation­al purposes. The next stop is street drugs.

Paradoxica­lly, the CDC guidelines managed to harm both addicts and patients with legitimate needs in one fell swoop. Consider OxyContin — a major drug of choice for addicts that in 2010 was reformulat­ed to make it far harder to abuse.

Illegal OxyContin use did indeed plummet immediatel­y — but abusers then switched in droves to heroin, which is far more dangerous, and deaths from heroin overdose soared from 3,000 in 2009 to 13,000 in 2015.

Worse still, black-marketeers are now blending fentanyl — a highly potent, syn- thetic version of heroin — with heroin itself, or substituti­ng it outright for the “natural” drug. That’s responsibl­e for much of the soaring ODs.

The Department of Health in Ohio — which has the highest number of opioid deaths in the nation — reported in 2015 that more than 80 percent of opioid deaths arose from heroin or fentanyl, up from 20 percent in 2010. Health agencies in Florida and Massachuse­tts report similar trends. It’s now indisputab­le that most recent opioid deaths result from heroin/fentanyl, not pain pills.

Another side of the equation is the cruel and needless suffering inflicted on blameless Americans who can no longer easily get pain medication­s. Just as addicts will do almost anything to feed their addiction, people in severe pain will do what is needed to escape it — even suicide.

Indeed, escaping pain is becoming increasing­ly difficult. People who have been treated appropriat­ely and responsibl­y for years are now finding it difficult to obtain the relief they need, even from the same doctors. And you can’t blame the doctors.

Physicians rightly view the CDC “ad- vice” as anything but voluntary. With the DEA looking over their shoulders, they fear losing their licenses for overprescr­ibing. This creates just another wall between doctors and patients, many of whom are now forced to cope with their pain by using non-opioid, over-the-counter drugs such as Advil and Tylenol. These drugs are less effective and also carry their own risks, chiefly liver, kidney, stomach and heart toxicity.

But perhaps nothing illustrate­s the folly of government policies better than the rising number of pain sufferers who turn to street heroin because they can no longer get legal medication. What a travesty.

As a nation, we now find ourselves in a worse place than before this simplemind­ed crackdown began. While the most vulnerable suffer, rivers of the real killer drugs pour into our country illegally unabated.

“First, do no harm” is the essence of the Hippocrati­c Oath. Federal policymake­rs should honor that principle — and abandon their cruel and unconscion­able war on pain medication.

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