Sunderland Echo

Concerns over painkiller use

- James Harrison james.harrison@jpimedia.co.uk @sunderland­echo

Doctors must be willing to have “difficult conversati­ons” with their patients if they hope to wean them off the strongest painkiller­s.

Mood swings, drowsiness and ultimately addiction are among the risks for patients who become dependent on medication­s to manage long term conditions.

But health boss es are starting to fight back after figures showed Sunderland and County Durham were among the top areas of the country for the rate of prescripti­ons.

“It’s an issue across the North-East ,” said E wan Maule, head of medicines optimisati­on at NHS Sunderland Clinical Commission­ing Group (CCG).

“Although the North East is at the sharp end it’s a national and an internatio­nal issue. There’s been a lot of media coverage of the opioid crisis in America, but we’re not at that stage yet.

“It’ s an internatio­nal problem, closely linked to issues like deprivatio­n and poverty, which is one of the reasons the North East is at the sharp end of things and it’ s something which has been building for a number of years.”

According to a study by Formula te Health, a nutrition firm, more than two million prescripti­ons for pain medication­s were issued in Sunderland between July 2015 and June 2020 – a rate of 120 per 1,000 patients.

This was only slightly ahead of County Durham, which issued 119 pain killers per 1,000 people over the same period.

All seven of the North East’s CCGs made it into the top 10, although it was Blackpool, in the North-West, which took the top spot, just ahead of Sunderland.

According to M au le, a previous history of heavy industry in the region, as well as high levels of poverty and deprivatio­n, is at least partly to blame the number of patients’ chronic pain. But doctors have also struggled to get to grips with long-term conditions and patients’ needs at times too.

He added :“For along time a lot of people have suffered with chronic pain and there hasn’t been any effective treatment other than to try and mask the pain through opioids and other medication­s like them.

“They have been prescribed a lot [in the past] because there weren’t really any alternativ­es, but also because there is an expectatio­n that people can take something and the pain will go away.”

He said while an immediate short term problem, such as a broken rib or fractured hip, might be dealt with very effectivel­y by medication­s such as Codeine and Tramadol, use of opioid painkiller­s for longer than about three months can lead to ‘problemati­c’ side effects.

But, after managing to slash prescripti­ons by a third in Sunderland and almost a fifth in County Durham in less than a year, there is hope NHS chiefs in the North East may be on the right path to lowering overall use.

Maul es aid :“We don’ t want people to just stop taking them – have a conversati­on with your doctor or pharmacist first.

“We’ re offering more training for GPs on how to have these conversati­ons and we’re making it a significan­t focus for general practice that these things should be reviewed.”

 ??  ?? Experts have said there are other ways of managing pain.
Experts have said there are other ways of managing pain.

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