Southern Maryland News

Hogan announces tactics against opioid addiction

- By JACOB TAYLOR

ANNAPOLIS — Gov. Larry Hogan and Lt. Gov. Boyd Rutherford announced Tuesday they are rolling out new legis- lation that would counter Maryland’s growing opi- oid addiction crisis.

The Prescriber Limits Act would prevent doctors from prescribin­g more than seven days worth of opioid painkiller­s during a patient’s first visit or consultati­on. The law exempts patients going through cancer treatment and those diagnosed with a terminal illness.

The Distributi­on of Opi-

oids Resulting in Death Act would introduce a new felony charge carrying up to 30 years in prison for people convicted of illegally selling opioids or opioid analogues that result in the death of a user. Rutherford said the law would carry protection­s for people who were selling to support their addiction.

And the Overdose Prevention Act authorizes the collection of and review of non-fatal over- dose data and would make it easier for people to fill prescripti­ons for naloxone, a drug that can counteract the effects of an opioid overdose.

Hogan and Rutherford, whom the governor has direct- ed to focus on opioid addiction, announced the legislatio­n in a press conference at Anne Arundel Medical Center on Tuesday.

Rutherford also announced that the governor would sign an executive order that will create an Opioid Operations Command Center — a “virtual” task force charged with organizing training and funding for local anti-addic- tion teams as well as collecting data on opioid use and abuse.

Hogan said that he did not fully appreciate the scope of the opioid epidemic until he began crisscross­ing Maryland during the early phases of his guber- natorial campaign. He said he asked people in different parts of the state what their community’s biggest problem was and that, regardless of whether they were from a rural, urban, wealthy, or poor community, “the answer was always the same: heroin.”

Both Hogan and Rutherford appeared optimistic but ac- knowledged that the problem of opioid addiction is worsening in Maryland. Anne Arundel County Executive Steve Schuh said that, at the start of his tenure a couple years ago, there was one overdose per day and one death per week from opi- oid abuse in his county. He said those figures have risen to two overdoses per day and two and a half deaths per week.

At the press conference, Anne Arundel State’s Attorney Wes Adams (R) spoke about the re- cent death of his brother-in-law, who he said died of an opioid overdose.

Adams said his brother-in-law became addicted to opioids af- ter being prescribed them following a surgery about eight years ago. He said he moved in and out of rehab centers and pe- riodically became clean, only to relapse later.

Adams lamented the obstacles from the medical and insurance industries that he and his family faced as they tried to keep his brother-in-law in treatment.

He also expressed consternat­ion over recently being prescribed a substantia­l supply of Oxycontin, an opioid pain-killer, following a medical procedure, despite telling his doctor that he was only experienci­ng moderate pain.

He said angrily that the only major side-effect his pharmacist warned him of was constipati­on, despite the well-documented risk of addiction that use of the drug carries.

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