Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Opioid battle

Medical providers in Wisconsin have been prescribin­g fewer drugs to patients, new data shows.

- Sophie Carson

Medical providers in Wisconsin have been prescribin­g opioids to fewer patients, according to new state data.

The dispensing of opioids and all prescripti­on drugs continued a downward trend in 2019 amid the nationwide addiction epidemic, a report from the Wisconsin Prescripti­on Drug Monitoring Program found.

From 2015 to 2019, providers gave out 23.6% fewer prescripti­ons to drugs considered legal controlled substances. Those numbers have steadily decreased each year since their peak in 2015.

The biggest drop was a few years ago when Wisconsin providers handed out nearly a million fewer prescripti­ons in 2017 than in 2016.

Researcher­s tracked three types of prescripti­on drugs: opioids, with brand names such as Vicodin and OxyContin; benzodiaze­pines, such as Xanax and Valium; and stimulants, such as Adderall.

The only category to see a boost? Stimulants. Within 2019, the number of stimulant prescripti­ons fluctuated quarter to quarter. But overall, providers handed out 2.4% more in 2019 than the year before, and 7.5% more than in 2015.

Opioids have seen a substantia­l dip in four years: researcher­s cataloged 33.8% fewer prescripti­ons last year than in 2015.

As with overall prescripti­ons, opioid doses have consistent­ly declined from more than 5 million prescripti­ons statewide in 2015 to about 3.5 million last year.

Benzodiaze­pines, sedatives that are often used to treat anxiety, are also highly addictive. Wisconsin doctors have been handing out 24% fewer prescripti­ons for the drugs in 2019 compared with 2015.

But drug addiction remains a pressing issue in Wisconsin. Last year Milwaukee County was set to break its record for overdose deaths, with the medical examiner’s office expecting to reach 425 once pending investigat­ions were complete. It surpassed the 2017 record of 401 deaths.

Many of the deaths involve a combinatio­n of fentanyl and cocaine found in victims who either knowingly or unknowingl­y ingested both drugs, according to Karen Domagalski, operations manager at the office.

The state’s report also documented the top drugs doctors dispensed. The No. 1 drug on the list, hydrocodon­e, with more than 1 million prescripti­ons, was down 9% from 2018. Across the list, the drugs with the biggest drops were all opioids.

And the No. 2 drug, a stimulant known by its brand name Adderall, is up slightly. There were 1.1% more prescripti­ons of the drug used to treat attention-deficit/hyperactiv­ity disorder in 2019 than the previous year.

The drug that saw the biggest bump? Naloxone, known by its brand name Narcan. It combats opioid overdoses, and prescripti­ons of the

life-saving drug were up nearly 23% from last year.

Milwaukee officials announced last week that the city is joining a sprawling federal lawsuit against opioid drug manufactur­ers and distributo­rs that are accused of fueling the opioid epidemic.

The city asserts that manufactur­ers of the painkiller­s “drasticall­y” expanded the market for the drugs and their own market share using a “massive false marketing campaign” and that manufactur­ers and distributo­rs “reaped enormous financial rewards by refusing to monitor and restrict the improper distributi­on of those drugs.”

As part of that lawsuit, Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion data were released showing that across the U.S., drug companies distribute­d 76 billion prescripti­on oxycodone and hydrocodon­e pain pills between 2006 and 2012.

More than 310 million of those pills were supplied to Milwaukee County pharmacies in that time, enough for 47 pills per person, every year, according to DEA data analyzed by the Washington Post.

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