The Commercial Appeal

Deaths from pain pills fell in 2017

- Brett Kelman USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

It’s a little hard to tell, but Tennessee may be turning a corner on prescripti­on pill abuse.

Although fatal opioid overdoses continue to rise throughout the state, deaths attributed specifical­ly to prescripti­on painkiller­s dropped for the first time in five years. The 12 percent decrease in 2017 is a rare sign of progress in a state ravaged by addiction.

The shrinking painkiller death toll likely is the result of opioid prescripti­ons gradually becoming weaker and less common throughout Tennessee over the past five years.

“I think that this is where it begins,” said Dr. Manny Sethi, co-founder of Healthy Tennessee. “If you have less prescripti­ons and less of this stuff out there, then less of it can be stolen and less of it can be sold on the illegal market. But I also worry about the scourge of fentanyl and how that market has changed.”

Decreasing prescripti­on overdoses but growing fentanyl deaths illustrate­s the evolution of Tennessee’s opioid crisis, as doctors and lawmakers crack down on prescripti­ons and addicts transition to more dangerous illegal drugs.

Opioid overdoses killed 1,268 people in Tennessee in 2017, according to new state overdose statistics. The mix of drugs that caused those deaths changed in a way that increases risk for current addicts, but may prevent future addictions altogether.

For this story, USA TODAY NETWORK - Tennessee interviewe­d opioid epidemic experts from the state and Davidson County government, the nonprofit Healthy Tennessee and the Sycamore Institute, a Nashville health care

think tank. All agreed that new statistics showed Tennessee was gaining ground on prescripti­on pill abuse, but the experts were tepid in their celebratio­n because of skyrocketi­ng deaths attributed to fentanyl. Fentanyl deaths rose 74 percent in 2016, killing 294, then another 70 percent in 2017, killing 500.

Still, the experts said it was likely that progress on prescripti­on pill abuse will prevent future addicts from being snared by the epidemic in the first place. Most opioid addictions begin with prescripti­on opioids, then addicts switch to heroin when they either lose access to pills or need stronger drugs.

Therefore, as prescripti­on opioids become less common in Tennessee, fewer people will have the opportunit­y to become addicted to pills and then later transition to heroin, which could be laced with fentanyl.

“Hopefully, this will stop a whole new stream of addiction from coming into play,” said Trevor Henderson, an opioid expert with the Nashville Metro Public Health Department.

“But, for those who are already on these opioids, the big question is what happens with them?”

So far, nobody has found that answer, said Mandy Pellegrin, policy director of the Sycamore Institute.

Fentanyl is a synthetic, cheap-toproduce, incredibly potent opioid that was once barely known outside of hospitals. Now it is on the front line of the opioid epidemic. Drug dealers often smuggle fentanyl across the border from Mexico or through the mail from China, then mix it into weak heroin to maximize profits. Nationwide, law enforcemen­t have struggled to stop the influx in part because fentanyl quantities are so small. A lethal dose is no larger than two grains of sand.

“I think that if there were a magic answer, it would have been adopted by some other state, or Congress or our own state at this point,” Pellegrin said. “Congress is looking at literally dozens of bills right now, which gives you an idea of how complex this problem is.”

Opioid prescripti­ons: Fewer, weaker and less deadly

The progress on prescripti­on pill abuse can be measured by three statistics – number of prescripti­ons, prescripti­on strength and overdose deaths:

❚ The number of opioid prescripti­ons in Tennessee has fallen steadily the past five years, and the speed of the descent is increasing. Prescripti­ons fell from 7.5 million in 2016 to 6.8 million to 2017, the single largest drop since the state began to count. If the trends continues, 2018 will be the first since the opioid crisis began that people outnumber opioid prescripti­ons in the state of Tennessee.

❚ The strength of the prescripti­ons also is decreasing at an accelerati­ng rate. The total strength of Tennessee prescripti­ons, measured in morphine milligram equivalent­s (MMEs), fell from 6.9 billion MMEs in 2016 to 6 million MMEs in 2017, according to statistics from the Tennessee Department of Health.

❚ Finally, the number of overdose deaths attributed to prescripti­on opioids fell in 2017 for the first time in five years. Pain relievers killed 644 people in Tennessee last year – still the most of any drug – but decreased from a 2016 total of 739.

A similar trend has been seen within the membership of BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, the largest health insurer in Tennessee. Total prescripti­ons and prescripti­on strength among members have dropped by 15 and 19 percent respective­ly since 2015, according to the company.

BlueCross announced recently it would stop covering OxyContin, one of the most prescribed painkiller­s in the country, at least in part because of decreasing demand for opioid prescripti­ons.

Opioid database stopping ‘doctor shopping’

Generally, the opioid experts said the single largest contributi­on to preventing prescripti­on abuse came from Tennessee Controlled Substance Monitoring Database Program, which was created in 2012 to curb over-prescripti­on and doctor shopping. Since then, the database has dramatical­ly reduced redundant prescripti­ons, which stymied abuse and likely contribute­d to decreasing prescripti­on overdoses.

Sethi, a Vanderbilt trauma surgeon, said the database has become a “very powerful” tool for keeping both doctors and patients “honest.”

“Just from my own experience, I have started to write less prescripti­ons based on the utilizatio­n of the (database), and I’m sure others have too,” Sethi said. “It’s also stopped doctor shopping – it’s killed doctor shopping.”

Doctor shopping is a practice where patients go to multiple doctors simultaneo­usly so they can receive redundant opioid prescripti­ons, providing them with enough pills to abuse or re-sell to addicts. The practice ran rampant in Tennessee for years – leading prescripti­ons to outnumber people – and fueled the opioid crisis in its early stages.

But the database prevents this tactic by creating a watchdog for both patients and doctors. Doctors are now required to log all patients who receive opioid prescripti­ons in the database, and other doctors can then cross reference the database if the same patient attempts to get another prescripti­on.

Pharmacist­s also check the database whenever an opioid prescripti­on is filled, which means they can spot patients with redundant medication or flag doctors who do not appear to be using the database as required.

Tennessee Health Commission­er John Dreyzehner credited the success of the database to foundation­al support from the medical community, which acknowledg­ed early that it had “some responsibi­lity” for the state’s opioid epidemic.

Instead of opposing this new form of oversight, doctors generally supported lawmakers’ efforts to create one of the first opioid databases in the country, Dreyzehner said

“Kentucky made that law a few days ahead of us, but what we had in Tennessee was agreement and buy-in by our health care partners, and I think that’s made all the difference,” Dreyzehner said.

Brett Kelman is the health care reporter for the USA TODAY NETWORK Tennessee. He can be reached at 615259-8287 or at brett. kelman@tennessean.com.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States