The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Protect Ga. families from opioid overdose

- By Tom Frieden Tom Frieden, M.D., MPH, was director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from 2009 until January, 2017.

The United States — and Georgia — is in the midst of a horrific epidemic of opiate overdose. Every day, a Georgian dies of an opiate overdose. Most of those who die are young adults. Their deaths are tragic for their families and communitie­s, and all of us are poorer because they can no longer contribute to our society. And it could get much worse. Other states have twice Georgia’s rate of opiate overdose.

The opiate epidemic was one of the hardest challenges I faced as Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Since 2000, more than 300,000 of our sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, mothers, fathers, and friends have been killed by opiates. In 1999, approximat­ely 6,000 Americans died from an opiate overdose — including both prescripti­on pain medicines (such as OxyContin, Vicodin, and Percocet) and heroin. By 2015, that number increased to more than 33,000 — more than five times the number of deaths in 1999.

Overprescr­ibing of opiates — which are no less addictive than heroin — has driven this devastatio­n. Sales of prescripti­on opioids in the U.S. nearly quadrupled from 1999 to 2014, but there has been no change in the amount of pain Americans report. Prescripti­on opiates are a gateway drug — the great majority of those addicted to heroin got started with opioid medication­s. This is one reason CDC released opioid prescribin­g guidelines for chronic pain a year ago.

Reversing this epidemic won’t be simple, and won’t be quick — but the sooner we take effective action, the more lives will be saved. To their credit, Georgia’s political leaders are working to do so by improving Georgia’s Prescripti­on Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMP). PDMPs collect informatio­n on controlled substance prescripti­ons so doctors can review the data before making the decision to prescribe an opiate or benzodiaze­pine. PDMPs help doctors avoid writing overlappin­g prescripti­ons or prescribin­g drugs with potentiall­y harmful interactio­ns — as when a patient takes both opiates and benzodiaze­pines. PDMPs are among the most important statelevel interventi­ons to address the opiate epidemic. In states with laws regulating pain clinics and requiring PDMP checks, deaths from opioids have decreased.

In Georgia today, the PDMP isn’t used consistent­ly. This past Thursday, the Senate Health Committee approved House Bill 249 that would require doctors to check our state PDMP before prescribin­g all opioids and all benzodiaze­pines. It also sensibly allows for delegates to do so, saving our doctors time.

Unfortunat­ely, this version of the bill has too many loopholes. The Senate version of the bill had sensible exemptions, including opiates prescribed for palliation, endof-life care, and addiction treatment. The current draft includes exemptions that would endanger public safety and result in avoidable overdoses and deaths of Georgians.

First, it’s understand­able that when doctors prescribe three days of medication they not have to check the PDMP - but only if this is a one-time, non-renewable prescripti­on.

Second, there is no reason to exempt outpatient surgery from PDMP checking: many people become addicted after receiving opiates for surgery. Just last week, new research found that surgeons had been prescribin­g six times as many pills as patients took following outpatient surgery. After five different types of outpatient surgery, patients took an average of only two to 11 pills — well within the first exemption in the PDMP legislatio­n for three days of medication.

Third, the exemption from checking for patients in intermedia­te care homes, nursing homes, and personal care homes means that patients in these facilities would be at greater and avoidable risk for duplicate or dangerous prescripti­ons.

Fourth, patients being treated for cancer should benefit from the PDMP, as they do in other states with PDMPs. Nearly 1.7 million Americans, including nearly 17,000 Georgians, are diagnosed with cancer each year. An exemption already exists for palliative, hospice, and end-of-life care. Thankfully, cancer patients are surviving longer. There are 15 million cancer survivors in the US, and they deserve the same level of protection from addiction and overdose every other American, and Georgian, deserves.

Let’s be clear: checking the PDMP isn’t about reducing access to needed pain medicine, it’s about making prescripti­ons safer. Patients can still receive the medication­s their doctor deems necessary.

Of course, getting the right PDMP in place is only part of the solution. The legislatur­e must provide funds to actively manage the system so prompt action is taken to protect patients. And both doctors and patients need to do more, together, to improve the management of both pain and addiction. For patients with chronic, non-cancer pain, opiates should be a last resort — for chronic pain, there’s no proof that they work and some evidence they can make pain worse.

Too many Georgians have already been killed in this epidemic. A final bill in the coming days that includes only the specific and well-worded exemptions included in Senate Bill 81 is safer for patients and will save lives. Families throughout Georgia are counting on our elected officials to do the right thing and make our PDMP work for doctors and protect patients.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON / AP ?? More than 33,000 people died of opiate overdoses in 2015, according to the CDC, which is more than five times the number that died from the same cause in 1999. Opiates include prescripti­on pain medication­s such as OxyContin, Vicodin and Percocet, and...
ELAINE THOMPSON / AP More than 33,000 people died of opiate overdoses in 2015, according to the CDC, which is more than five times the number that died from the same cause in 1999. Opiates include prescripti­on pain medication­s such as OxyContin, Vicodin and Percocet, and...
 ??  ?? Tom Frieden
Tom Frieden

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