San Francisco Chronicle

California needs tougher action on opioid epidemic

- Dan Walters is a columnist for CALmatters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters.

When Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed Assembly Bill 715 last week, he closed the book on even token legislativ­e efforts to confront California’s epidemic of opioid abuse.

Last year, California doctors and dentists wrote 23.7 million prescripti­ons for opioids, supposedly to relieve their patients’ pain, but overprescr­iption, misuse by patients and/or back-channel diversion of the drugs are rampant, and California recorded 1,966 opioid-related deaths last year, 44 percent more than its gunrelated homicides.

State medical authoritie­s have made some efforts to curb abuse through advice and education for prescriber­s. However, the epidemic continues and the data indicate that through either stupidity or cupidity, too many are blithely prescribin­g too many doses.

Last year, the Medical Board of California, which licenses physicians, published a first-person account of overprescr­iption in its newsletter, written by a doctor’s wife. The anonymous author described how physicians and dentists repeatedly wrote prescripti­ons for Vicodin for her family, even for relatively minor pains.

“If I had filled a prescripti­on for each of these visits, which averaged one every two years, we would have a dangerousl­y ample supply of the drug in our house, and our children’s brains would have had a disturbing level of repeated exposure to a highly addictive narcotic. It causes me to wonder how many Vicodin pills are on my street or in my children’s dormitorie­s,” she wrote.

Even more disturbing­ly, she said that when medical providers offered Vicodin, “not one of them or their staff asked if there were any issues of addiction in our family history ... nor were risks and the impact of addictive substances on the adolescent brain discussed, even when I inquired about them and asked specific questions about risks.” Even if the prescribed drugs were not used, “we should have it on hand in case the pain was bad,” she was told.

That’s pretty damning, and a report from the state Department of Public Health underscore­s her concern.

“In the past, prescripti­on opioids (such as hydrocodon­e, oxycodone, morphine and codeine) were prescribed for relieving short-term (acute) pain,” says the report by the Statewide Opioid Safety Workgroup. “Today, they are increasing­ly being used to treat chronic, non-cancer pain, such as back pain or osteoarthr­itis, despite serious risks and the lack of evidence about their long-term effectiven­ess.”

It also points out that “one of the unintended consequenc­es of this prescripti­on drug epidemic has been the increase in heroin addiction and overdoses, in part due to the transition from prescripti­on opioids to less expensive heroin street drugs.”

There are definite socioecono­mic and geographic aspects to California’s version of the problem. Sacramento Bee reporter Jim Miller delved into official reports to reveal that overall, 15 percent of California­ns were prescribed opioids in 2016, but the concentrat­ions were heaviest in rural, lowincome counties, topped by 27 percent of Lake County’s residents.

Three bills on opioids were introduced this year, but two of them — a measure creating a public-awareness campaign and another levying a fee on opioid manufactur­ers for treatment and prevention — died before final votes.

The one survivor, AB715 by Assemblyma­n Jim Wood, D-Healdsburg, a dentist and chairman of the Assembly Health Committee, would have directed the Department of Public Health to convene a panel of experts to study use and abuse of painkiller­s.

Brown, in rejecting the measure, acknowledg­ed a “national epidemic that has been devastatin­g for many California communitie­s,” but described the bill as “unnecessar­y” because the department­al working group was already establishe­d.

That’s probably true, but a more aggressive effort is still needed. The key to curbing the epidemic is to curb the eagerness of too many medical providers to write too many prescripti­ons without fully weighing the consequenc­es.

They should face consequenc­es themselves for contributi­ng to the epidemic.

 ?? Robyn Beck / AFP / Getty Images 2016 ?? Fans hold a candleligh­t vigil in Los Angeles for Prince after the pop star died from an overdose of painkiller­s last year.
Robyn Beck / AFP / Getty Images 2016 Fans hold a candleligh­t vigil in Los Angeles for Prince after the pop star died from an overdose of painkiller­s last year.

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