Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rallygoers decry federal opioid guidelines

- TESS VRBIN

LITTLE ROCK — Jo Ellen Stodola’s legs started shaking during her speech on the front steps of the Arkansas State Capitol on Tuesday morning.

She sat down on her walker with the help of Jerri Lynn Ramsay, the administra­tor of the Don’t Punish Pain group’s Arkansas chapter on Facebook. The group organized its sixth and final rally at the Capitol on Tuesday to speak against the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines that some chronic pain patients say prevent them from receiving the opioid medication­s that have successful­ly managed their pain and allowed them to live normal lives in the past.

Stodola, the wife of former Little Rock Mayor Mark Stodola, continued her speech while seated on her walker as her left leg continued to shake from a neurologic­al condition.

“My back surgeon, the last time I visited him, my last visit consisted of him crying the entire time,” she said. “He said for the first time in his 40 years of treatment, he could no longer look his patients straight in the eye and say, ‘I can try to help you, I have something I know that works.’”

Tuesday’s rally coincided with this year’s Red Ribbon Week, a nationwide drug prevention program.

These chronic pain patients understand the need to address the nation’s prescripti­on drug abuse problem, but they see themselves as collateral damage. Guidelines meant to prevent opioid abuse have blocked their access to legitimate treatment.

The CDC released its guidelines in 2016 as part of its response to a rising death toll from opioid abuse and addiction. State-level guidelines and rules followed, including amendments to the Arkansas State Medical Board’s regulation­s concerning malpractic­e. Rules that took effect in 2018 define “excessive” prescribin­g and outline requiremen­ts for documentat­ion related to controlled-substance prescripti­ons.

The state and federal guidelines are not formal restrictio­ns, but patients said their doctors treated the guidelines as hard rules and reduced or canceled opioid subscripti­ons as soon as they took effect.

“[They] didn’t just change the way doctors medically treated their patients, but also changed their attitudes towards and general treatment of patients with never-ending pain,” patient Jennifer Shelton of Jacksonvil­le said.

Shelton’s doctor completely canceled her opioid prescripti­on, and physical therapy and injections have not helped, sometimes even increasing her pain, she said.

She was one of many speakers to assert that government has no place in the doctor-patient relationsh­ip and that opioid use for chronic pain does not contribute to addiction and death from opioids.

State Sen. Terry Rice, R-Waldron, also acknowledg­ed these issues in an interview Tuesday. He was not at the rally but has supported Don’t Punish Pain’s efforts in the past. He said he has experience­d some chronic pain but “kind of came out the other side.”

“[The guidelines] do what government tends to always do — they overcorrec­t the problem with a broad brush,” Rice said. “I’ve talked to people that have been in terrible car wrecks and have the scars to show for it, or that have had back surgeries like I have. I’ve talked to them every day, and they can get by and have a normalcy of life with what their doctor was willing to give them [before].”

Shortly after the guidelines were published, Don’t Punish Pain emerged as a national network of chronic pain sufferers who connected on Facebook in light of the changes in their prescripti­ons. The Arkansas chapter has 439 people in its Facebook group.

Lisa O’Cain, the rally’s moderator, said the group has testified at state legislativ­e and medical board hearings, met with Gov. Asa Hutchinson and Attorney General Leslie Rutledge and spoken on a panel at a drug abuse summit in Jonesboro.

Some of the signs at the rally said “DEA stop terrorizin­g my doctor,” referring to the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, “Government should not practice medicine” and “Untreated pain becomes statistics.”

Roughly 20 people attended Tuesday’s rally in person, although the rally was broadcast live on the Arkansas Don’t Punish Pain Rally Facebook page.

Stodola said in an interview that she expected a minimum of 25 people rather than “one of the lowest attendance­s.” Some members’ lack of computer access and some caution because of the covid-19 pandemic might have been contributi­ng factors, as well as the difficulty of traveling while in pain, she said.

“I was so surprised, but it just means that a lot of people are in pain right now,” she said.

‘WE ASK FOR FUNCTION’

In the 2016 CDC report, experts concluded that more than 50 morphine milligram equivalent­s a day — roughly two 15-milligram extended-released oxycodone tablets — increased overdose risks without offering pain-control benefits.

The maximum dosage that doctors proceeded to adopt “doesn’t even touch some people’s pain,” Rice said.

In 2019, the authors of the CDC guidelines published an opinion piece warning against “inflexible applicatio­n of recommende­d dosage and duration thresholds and policies that encourage hard limits and abrupt tapering of drug dosages, resulting in sudden opioid discontinu­ation or dismissal of patients from a physician’s practice.”

The same year, the American Medical Associatio­n published a memo stating that “some patients with acute or chronic pain can benefit from taking opioid pain medication­s at doses greater than generally recommende­d in the CDC Guideline … and that such care may be medically necessary and appropriat­e.”

National increases in opioid deaths have coincided with an all-time low of opioid prescripti­ons, so attributin­g the former to the latter is inaccurate, Stodola said.

“We don’t ask for drugs. We ask for function,” she said. “We want to do things with our families. We want to get out of bed.”

In November 2020, the Arkansas Department of Human Services establishe­d an online dashboard of opioid-related data, including prescripti­ons, arrests, overdoses and deaths.

As of May 19, the last time the death data was updated, there had been 17 opioid-related deaths in Arkansas this year. Last year saw 215 opioid-related deaths, 35 more than in 2019 and 25 more than in 2018. The website did not have death data before 2018.

Opioid prescripti­ons in Arkansas fell from 117.7 per 100 people in 2015 to 86.3 in 2020, according to the Department of Human Services data.

O’Cain said one of every 10 people who die by suicide is a chronic pain sufferer. Maria Hill, a breast cancer survivor from Mayflower and a co-founder of the Arkansas chapter of Don’t Punish Pain, said she lost her father to suicide after he suffered from chronic pain.

Stodola said chronic pain patients are “compliant” with their prescripti­ons and make them last as long as possible, while someone addicted to opioids would do the opposite and exhaust a bottle of pills quickly.

“We do not go after a high,” she said. “We have never gone after a high. We just want my leg to quit shaking while I’m sitting in this chair.”

 ?? ?? Jo Ellen Stodola tells her story of chronic pain Tuesday during the Don’t Punish Pain Rally at the state Capitol. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/ Thomas Metthe)
Jo Ellen Stodola tells her story of chronic pain Tuesday during the Don’t Punish Pain Rally at the state Capitol. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/ Thomas Metthe)

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