The Commercial Appeal

How top-tier candidates for governor will tackle opioids

- Joel Ebert Nashville Tennessean USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

Tennessee’s top-tier gubernator­ial candidates all agree the ongoing opioid epidemic is among the most critical issues facing the Volunteer State.

But, for the most part, that’s where their commonalit­ies end.

❚ U.S. Rep. Diane Black, who believes in the value of the overdose-reversal drug naloxone, is skeptical about making it widely available in public. Overwhelmi­ng evidence indicates it prevents deaths and top health officials recommend it be almost ubiquitous as fire extinguish­ers.

❚ Williamson County businessma­n Bill Lee thinks making the penalties for drug traffickin­g stiffer will stop dangerous drugs like fentanyl from entering Tennessee. He also thinks the government alone can’t solve the opioid crisis.

❚ House Speaker Beth Harwell emphasized education and prevention, citing the efforts of the current Miss Tennessee title-holder in criss-crossing the state to educating children about the dangers of drug addiction.

❚ Knoxville entreprene­ur Randy Boyd, who has a multi-faceted plan to address the opioid crisis, thinks Tylenol can often “do the same thing if not better” than prescripti­on pain-killers.

❚ House Minority Leader Craig Fitzhugh says expanding Medicaid will help solve the opioid crisis.

❚ And former Nashville Mayor Karl Dean thinks the legislatur­e and Gov. Bill Haslam should be ap-

plauded for their most recent actions on the issue, but more needs to be done.

The top four Republican­s and two Democrats, respective­ly, outlined their individual plans to address the opioid crisiswith the USA TODAY NETWORK Tennessee.

Tennessee ranks second in the nation for the number of opioid prescripti­ons per person, and drug overdoses have risen sharply in the past decade. The deadly drug epidemic now claims more lives than car accidents.

Where they stand on lawsuits against drug companies

Five of the six candidates agree that lawsuits against pharmaceut­ical companies and drug distributo­rscould play an important role in fighting the epidemic. The lone exception is Black. “I think the answer is sitting down with Pharma and saying, ‘Hey, you all don’t want this kind of reputation.What can we do to work to address and solve these problems?’” Black said in a May interview with the USA TODAY NETWORK - Tennessee.

In a July interview, Black said she would support a lawsuit against manufactur­ers if it can be shown that they misled consumers.

“I don’t think that, necessaril­y, lawsuits always solve problems unless you can show that there has been a misleading,” she said.

The other candidates wholeheart­edly endorsed suingmanuf­acturers and distributo­rs. Boyd referred to the drug companies as “perpetrato­rs.”

More access to overdose reversal drugs?

When it comes to naloxone — the life-saving overdose reversal drug that federal health officials recommend be made available to the public — Black also stands out.

Black said she is concerned that making Narcan — a brand name for the nasal spray version of naloxone — readily available in places like college dorms will send the wrong message.

“In those dorms and places such as that, I think (Narcan) needs to be more controlled with whoever is in the dorm, that’s overseeing the dorm, but I don’t want it to be an excuse where, well, it’s OK if we use the drug because we have a reversal,” she said. “I think that’s something we have to evaluate.” According to U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams, naloxone is a “safe antidote” that can save lives.

Views on the Haslam administra­tion’s actions

Tennessee’s opioid crisis dates back to 2012, when officials began recognizin­g that pill abuse was rampant.

Since then, overdose deaths have steadily increased, peaking in 2016, when at least 1,631 Tennessean­s died as a result of a drug overdose. Experts believe that is an undercount.

None of the six candidates offered criticism of Haslam’s work on the issue. This year, Haslam dedicated $30 million — including $25 million toward treatment and recovery programs — toward fighting the epidem-

ic.

“The governor requested more treatment dollars,” Dean said. “I don’t know how much net gain that actually was, but it seems to me that that is a start.”

Praising the governor’s efforts, Harwell said, “It’s really easy for somebody on the outside to be negative, but the bottom line is we balance our budget every year and he did as much as he could given our limited resources.”

Haslam also created a 19-member commission on pain and addiction education.

Harwell, like her competitor­s, said education about the dangers of opioids plays a key role.

“We have Miss Tennessee, a beautiful young lady going across every part of this state in our high schools saying, ‘Don’t get started on this,’” she said, referring to Caty Davis, who lost her brother and father to opioid abuse.

“The bottom line is let’s get people not addicted.”

Likewise, Boyd said educating the public about the dangers of pain medication is imperative.

“Oftentimes you can take Tylenol and do the same thing if not better and yet unfortunat­ely doctors are prescribin­g them when they don’t need to and patients are taking them when they don’t need to,” he said.

While not offering open criticism of Haslam, some of his potential successors have veered close.

“I think he did all that he was able to do at that time, but we need to do more,” Boyd said.

Boyd has said on his first day in office he would declare the opioid crisis a state of emergency and appoint a cabinetlev­el “epidemic officer.”

Fitzhugh said the best way to “jump start” the fight against the epidemic is to expand Medicaid.

“In the states that have expanded, they’ve seen on the average, a 16 percent reduction in the opioid problem,” he said.

Several states that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, including West Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky and Pennsylvan­ia, had the highest drug overdose death rates in 2016.

Combat problems from Fentanyl

As prescripti­on opioids have become harder to access, Tennessee has also seen a rise in fentanyl, a potent synthetic opioid that has flooded the illegal drug market.

Last year, in Davidson County, fentanyl killed more people than heroin. It is cheaper to make than heroin and significan­tly more potent.

Lee said enhanced penalties is how he would work to halt the flow of fentanyl into Tennessee.

“I would make the penalties for drug traffickin­g in this state so stiff and there’s no penalty off the table for me ... that trafficker­s want to go to another state besides Tennessee,” he said.

Harwell and Boyd said they’d like to provide more money to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion to fund additional agents.

Black said keeping drugs out of Tennessee is a challenge given its geography.

“It is a challenge for us because we have a lot of border,” she said, vowing to work with law enforcemen­t.

A balance with patient needs

Even as the state has tried to fight the epidemic, some patient advocates have expressed concern about an over-correction in prescribin­g habits that could prevent people with legitimate needs for opioids from obtaining them.

This year, the Tennessee Medical Associatio­n expressed concern that Haslam’s plan would interfere with the patient-doctor relationsh­ip. Haslam’s plan, signed into law this year, limits the amount of opioids doctors can prescribe in certain circumstan­ces.

“We have to make sure if an opioid is the only thing that will take this person out of pain on a short-term basis or whatever it is, we have to make sure that they have the ability to get that,” Fitzhugh said.

Boyd said it is important to have doctors and medical associatio­ns at the table when deciding which policies and limitation­s on access to medicine to adopt.

“We’ve got to be mindful that we are not restrictin­g access to the people that need them,” he said.

“It’s a balance and that’s part of what the legislatur­e struggled with and what the medical associatio­n struggled with,” Dean said. “Obviously people do need pain relief but then there’s this danger of abuse. You have control the medication.”

Anita Wadhwani and Brett Kelman contribute­d to this report.

Reach Joel Ebert at jebert@tennessean.com or 615-772-1681.

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 ?? GEORGE ?? The top-tier candidates for Tennessee governor are, clockwise from the top: House Minority Leader Craig Fitzhugh, U.S. Rep. Diane Black, Knoxville entreprene­ur Randy Boyd, House Speaker Beth Harwell, former Nashville Mayor Karl Dean and Williamson...
GEORGE The top-tier candidates for Tennessee governor are, clockwise from the top: House Minority Leader Craig Fitzhugh, U.S. Rep. Diane Black, Knoxville entreprene­ur Randy Boyd, House Speaker Beth Harwell, former Nashville Mayor Karl Dean and Williamson...

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