Yuma Sun

Opioid abuse has state seeking solutions

- BY HOWARD FISCHER

PHOENIX — Faced with an average of two deaths a day, the state’s top health official is looking for ways to curb the abuse of opioids, both legal and otherwise.

And some of that may involve getting doctors to find alternativ­e relief for patients with chronic pain — including possibly recommendi­ng the use of medical marijuana.

Dr. Cara Christ, director of the Department of Health Services, said Thursday some of the meteoric rise in deaths — up from 454 in 2012 to 790 last year — can be traced to illegal drug use, people looking for a “high.’’ That is reflected in a tripling in the number of Arizonans who die from heroin overdose.

But there are more actual deaths from prescripti­on opioids. While Christ said some of these can be people misusing the drugs for recreation­al purposes, she suspects there are people who have become hooked on them because of chronic pain.

One indication of that, she said, is the pure data.

Christ said the death rate from opioid abuse and over-

dose is higher among those in the 45 to 54-year-old age group than it is among any other 10-year spread. This is a group, she said, which is less likely using the drug for recreation. So who’s to blame? “That’s difficult,’’ Christ said.

She said some of it starts with doctors.

“People were educated years ago that they are non-addictive, that they are great resources for pain, you don’t need to use them only for cancer or terminal pain,’’ Christ said. “We underestim­ated the addictive potential of these medication­s.’’

And the government itself, she said, shares the blame.

Christ said the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services links hospital reimbursem­ent and hospital performanc­e scores to patient satisfacti­on surveys. And those surveys include two questions about how their pain was treated.

“I think that assisted in this,’’ she said.

“Then when you clamp down on the supply of it, you have these people who have no other choice and choose, then, heroin,’’ Christ continued. “And we do know that four out of five heroin drug users started as prescripti­on drug users.’’

Changing that, she said, starts with doctors finding alternativ­es to pain management.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS AUG. 5, 2010 FILE PHOTO, a pharmacy tech poses for a picture with hydrocodon­e bitartrate and acetaminop­hen tablets, the generic version of Vicodin in Edmond, Okla.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS AUG. 5, 2010 FILE PHOTO, a pharmacy tech poses for a picture with hydrocodon­e bitartrate and acetaminop­hen tablets, the generic version of Vicodin in Edmond, Okla.

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