The Day

U.S. attorney warns doctors about opioid prescripti­ons

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Boston (AP) — The top federal prosecutor in Massachuse­tts has sent letters to a number of doctors and medical profession­als in the state warning them that their prescribin­g practices have raised red flags in the state’s effort to combat opioid addiction.

The letters went to physicians and others identified as having prescribed opioids to a patient within 60 days of the patient’s death — or to a patient who subsequent­ly died from an opioid overdose, U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling said Thursday in a statement.

Lelling said his department has made no determinat­ion that the medical profession­als receiving the letters had violated the law. He did not say how many letters were sent.

The goal is to reduce overdose deaths by notifying doctors when their patients have died either as a result of — or close in time to — receiving an opioid prescripti­on, Lelling said.

The letters are meant to remind physicians that the law prohibits prescribin­g opioids “without a legitimate medical purpose, substantia­lly in excess of the needs of the patient, or outside the usual course of profession­al practice,” Lelling said. The department also hopes to reduce the risk of unused prescripti­ons being diverted for non-medical use.

“One source of opioids — used for both legitimate and illegitima­te purposes— is medical profession­als, who have an obligation always to act in patients’ best interests,” Lelling said in the statement.

A report released earlier this month by the Massachuse­tts Department of Public Health found there were 1,518 opioid-related overdose deaths through September of this year, a number that includes deaths confirmed to have been caused by overdose and others expected to be added to the list once an official determinat­ion is released.

In 2017, the state reported 1,538 confirmed and estimated overdose deaths.

Dr. Alain Chaoui, president of the Massachuse­tts Medical Society — a statewide profession­al associatio­n for physicians and medical students — said the group stands behind physicians providing “evidence-based care to the sickest, most vulnerable patients.”

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