Stamford Advocate

Balance pain needs, risks of opioids

- Keith Roach, M.D.

Dear Dr. Roach: The new laws concerning prescripti­on of opioids, especially the requiremen­t of threeday or seven-day prescripti­ons, has caused quite a disruption in our area, causing some doctors to take early retirement. Doctors should decide how long to treat patients. There are people who could get liver failure taking Tylenol or overusing aspirin. The drug overdoses are young people using street drugs like heroin or fentanyl. What do you say?

C.G.

Answer: There is absolutely a risk that people who need opioids for long-term chronic pain are having increased difficulty getting them. Not everyone benefits from long-term use of opiates, but there are people who use them appropriat­ely and effectivel­y. An expert should be consulted in these cases.

Prescripti­on opioids are the cause of roughly 25% of fatal overdoses. Reducing UNNECESSAR­Y prescribin­g of these drugs is likely to reduce the number of people becoming dependent on the drugs. A 30-day prescripti­on for a painful condition expected to last only a few days is a mistake with potentiall­y profound consequenc­es. However, excess restrictio­n on prescripti­ons for the subset of people with chronic pain who benefit from long-term opiates could cause the difficulti­es you mention in addition to letting terrible pain go unrelieved.

Since 2015, the largest single cause of overdose deaths has been illegal synthetic opioids, especially fentanyl. Many of those using illegal opioids got their addiction from legal opioids, which is why casual prescribin­g of large amounts needs to stop.

Policies on prescripti­on opioids require flexibilit­y to allow physicians to prescribe long-term opiates appropriat­ely while still cutting down on unnecessar­y prescripti­ons. Physicians who prescribe these drugs are obliged to do so safely and effectivel­y.

We need to work together to reduce all overdose deaths, whether they are from prescripti­on or street drugs.

Opiate addiction is preventabl­e and treatable in most cases.

Readers may email questions to: ToYourGood­Health@med .cornell.edu or mail questions to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

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