Albuquerque Journal

Doctors who say no to opioid use face threats

Patients don’t want to be weaned off painkillin­g drugs

- BY TAMMY WEBBER

One patient threatened to shoot Dr. Terry Hunt if physical therapy didn’t relieve his pain as effectivel­y as opioids did. Another harassed his staff, then roamed a hospital searching for Hunt after being told he would be weaned off painkiller­s he had used inappropri­ately.

Hunt was unharmed but shaken enough to ask the central Illinois hospital system where he worked to dismiss both patients.

So when he heard about Tuesday’s attack at a medical clinic in Buffalo, Minnesota, that left one person dead and four injured, “the first thing I assumed is that it was something to do with pain medication,” said Hunt, who now works for the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and a Mayo Clinic Health System facility in Red Wing, Minnesota. “It makes us ask about our own workplace: How secure are we?”

Authoritie­s said Gregory Paul Ulrich, 67, was angry about his medical treatment before he shot five workers and detonated three apparent pipe bombs at an Allina Health clinic. A police report says he had threatened a similar mass shooting in 2018, allegedly as revenge against people who he said “tortured” him with back surgeries and prescribed medication.

A former roommate said that Ulrich became upset when a doctor stopped prescribin­g painkiller­s and that Ulrich also used other drugs and had untreated mental health problems. Law enforcemen­t and the health system have not addressed the specifics of Ulrich’s treatment or medication­s.

Doctors who treat pain say threats of violence escalated markedly in recent years as mounting legal and regulatory pressure stemming from the deadly opioid epidemic led many to prescribe alternativ­es and taper their patients off addictive painkiller­s.

While some patients benefit from careful use of opioids, and doctors don’t want to stigmatize them, many would be better off treating pain with other therapies, experts say. But many become addicted to the drugs that are often intended for short-term use after surgeries.

“It hijacks their brain,” said Dr. Carrie DeLone, regional medical director at Penn State Health Community Medical Group. “They don’t see themselves as having a problem.”

Pain specialist Dr. Andrew Kolodny, a professor at Brandeis University and a founder of Physicians for Responsibl­e Opioid Prescribin­g, said patients are convinced that opioids are treating their underlying problem because if they try to go without a dose or as their previous dose wears off, “they’re feeling horrible, agonizing pain,” when it can be the withdrawal that is causing pain hypersensi­tivity.

“It’s much easier to give the patient what they want. You write the prescripti­on … they walk out the door happy and there are no problems. To try and help a patient taper down … is much harder,” Kolodny said.

And when a doctor says no, things can turn ugly.

“We’ve had patients waiting for doctors in parking lots to harass them. We’ve had them say, ‘We’re going to shoot you’ or ‘We’re going to burn your house down,’ ” DeLone said.

Almost half of pain specialist­s surveyed during a violence education session at a 2019 American Academy of Pain Medicine meeting cited opioid management as the reason they had been threatened, said Dr. W. Michael Hooten, presidente­lect of the organizati­on.

In response to threats, doctors have dismissed patients. But they have also installed alarm systems and panic buttons and set up exams rooms so doctors are closest to the door. Some even advocate carrying weapons, Hooten said, noting that smaller clinics are at greatest risk because they might not be able to afford security.

After his 2018 threat, police took Ulrich for a mental health evaluation, and Allina took legal action to bar him from the company’s property. A restrainin­g order prohibited Ulrich from contact with the doctor or going into the clinic and nearby Allina-run Buffalo Hospital, where he once frightened a nurse so much that a colleague hit a panic button for help.

Police said they had had no recent interactio­ns with Ulrich that would have raised alarms before the attack in Buffalo, a small city about 40 miles northwest of Minneapoli­s.

St. Joseph County, Indiana, prosecutor Ken Cotter said he didn’t know that such threats were common until 2017, when a man shot and killed a doctor who refused to prescribe opioids to his wife. Michael Jarvis ambushed Dr. Todd Graham in a parking lot hours after the appointmen­t, Cotter said, adding that there was evidence that Jarvis also was using opioids. Jarvis took his own life soon after.

Before that, “I do not recall ever reading a threat report” from a doctor, said Cotter, who said he received calls from about 20 doctors after the shooting telling him how common they were. “They took (threats) as a cost of doing business.”

Cotter said about a dozen meetings were held with doctors, law enforcemen­t officials and others to discuss how to keep doctors safe, including de-escalating tense situations, but also alternativ­es to opioids, disposal of old medication­s, and tackling the addiction problems that plague their communitie­s.

“When you’ve got doctors calling to say we have to do something, this is … literally our whole community’s crusade,” Cotter said.

Kolodny, from Brandeis, said he has been compared to Hitler, threatened on Twitter, and a bag of nails was mailed to his home. Last month, protesters carried signs near his office demanding that he be fired because of his work advocating less opioid use and helping states sue opioid manufactur­ers.

The threats have “gotten really scary,” he said. “It’s just gotten really heated up.”

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