Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Las Vegas Dr Gregory Talks about Opioids with I-Team Reporter George Knapp

WEB EXTRA: Dr. Maurice Gregory talks about opioid

LAS VEGAS - Las Vegas physician Doctor Maurice Gregory talks with I-Team reporter George Knapp about his concerns regarding the anti-opioid movement and how it's impacted the quality of life for patients who need long-term pain management.

Please let George Knapp ( gknapp@lasvegasnow.com) and Ian Russell, Producer,  (irussell@lasvegasnow.com)
know how much you appreciate their extraordinary efforts in bringing the pain patients plight into the light.  The patients on opioid pain meds and their doctors face ever mounting challenges to helping their patients to have a quality of life.
best,
Rick Martin,  Pharmacist

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Heading to Phoenix to Talk to Legislators about Syringe Service Programs


I'm heading to Phoenix today to speak to legislators about HB 2148 Syringe Service Programs

Dirty needles are a problem that impacts all first responders including law enforcement, firefighters, and EMS personal. I live in Mohave County where we have a serious problem with illicit opioid use.

Syringe Service Programs take dirty needles off the streets keeping our police officers, firefighters, EMS personal safer, and the community as a whole safer. Syringe Service Programs are shown to reduce an officer’s chance of a needle stick reducing their chance of being exposed to communicable diseases like Hepatitis C, HIV, and AIDS.

People who inject drugs dispose of syringes in places like dumpsters, on the street, or in bushes. These can result in accidental needle sticks for law enforcement. This is especially a problem in Arizona where possession of a syringe can mean arrest and serious charges.

According to a recent report by the CDC, one in three officers may be stuck with a needle during their career. This puts officers at risk of contracting one or more of the communicable diseases associated with drug abuse.

A study of Connecticut police officers found that needle stick injuries were reduced by two-thirds after implementing Syringe Service Programs. 

These programs not only provide intravenous drug users a place to safely dispose of dirty needles. It allows us to reach those in our communities that are hardest to reach allowing us to offer lifesaving services like treatment, housing, food, and other social services diverting them away from criminal activity.

I spent 12 years working undercover, not one drug dealer ever asked if I had a drug problem or wanted to get help, they only ask if I wanted to buy more drugs…

If we want to reduce drug use, keep our communities safer while keeping our police officers, firefighters, and EMS personal safe from needle sticks and communicable diseases a Syringe Service Program is a good way to start.


Thank you for your time.....


Saturday, February 16, 2019

Why Counting Prescription Pills DOESN’T WORK The Headlines Always Sound Bad BUT....


The headlines sound really bad… “4 Mohave County doctors’ prescribed 6 million opioid pills in 1 year” https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona-health/2017/11/09/four-top-15-opioid-doctors-prescribed-14-million-opioid-pill-prescriptions-1-year/822802001/

Imagine 6,000,000 pills in one county with a population of 200,000 people, WOW… We should have DEA throw them in prison for life, right… But wait…

Most pain medications like morphine, Vicoden, Percoden are all 4 hour medications requiring 6 per day, 180 month or 2160 per year.

Studies tell us 100,000,000 Americans suffer chronic pain at any one time. That’s around 1/3 of the US population. Mohave County’s population is 200,000 1/3rd is around 66500.

If only 1/10th of Mohave County’s estimated pain patients require an opioid that’s 6,650 patients. 2160 pills per year TIMES 6,650 patients = 14,364,000 pills per year. Fourteen Million Pills

If only 1/5th of Mohave County’s estimated pain patients require an opioid that’s 3,325 patients…2160 pills per year TIMES 3,325 patients = 7,182,000 pills per year. Seven Million Pills

So actually if these pain specialists are writing the majority of schedule II medications 6,000,000 is only enough for 2777 of the estimated 6,650 pain patients in Mohave County, and nowhere near the estimated 66,500 (1/3rd of MC’s 200,000) pain patients.

That’s why counting prescription pills sounds really bad... 
So always check the numbers....



Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Woman in cot testifies to Congress on opioids, chronic pain managemen

NBC News
By Frank Thorp V and Jane C. Timm
WASHINGTON — A woman with a severe chronic pain condition testified before Congress from a cot set up in the hearing room Tuesday, calling for more research and a smarter approach to pain management amid efforts to curb opioid abuse.
"The opioid crisis has only underscored our failure to provide adequate, safe, accessible treatment options for pain relief," Cindy Steinberg, the national director of policy and advocacy at the U.S. Pain Foundation, told members of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions.

LINK to STORY

Nevada Pain Physicians Fight for Patients.... Arizona Not So Much

I work with a group of pain management physicians in Nevada to fix the damage the CDC Pain Guidelines did to pain management. I find it sad that every Arizona pain physician I've talked to didn't understand the CDC Guidelines and failed to follow the Opioid Epidemic Act.

Update from a Friend to Patients
 The other day a hearing was held in D.C. of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pension Committee specifically to discuss “Managing Pain During the Opioid Crisis.” The panel, which includes Nevada Senator Jacky Rosen, heard from Cindy Steinberg, National Director of Policy and Advocacy for the U.S. Pain Foundation and Policy Chair of the Massachusetts Pain Initiative;  Helen Gazelka, M.D., Chair, Mayo Clinic Opioid Stewardship Program; Andrew Coop, PhD University of Maryland School of Pharmacy; and Anuradha Rao-Patel, M.D.,  Lead Medical Director for Blue Cross-Blue Shield of North Carolina. 

The primary question of the meeting was – should the federal government get into the business of determining maximum dosages for opioids -  and the answer was a resounding “no.”  Senator Murkowski from Alaska noted that her constituents are being denied legitimate prescriptions by their pharmacists, and others noted that the CDC guidelines are having severe unintended consequences in the form of primary care docs no longer prescribing at all, and many states not having adequate numbers of pain docs.  

There was lots of discussion regarding coverage for “complementary treatments” like acupuncture, PT, OT, aquatic therapy, injections, etc. but an acknowledgement that opioids can and should be available to those who need them.  

There were several statements to the effect that “there’s no evidence that opioids are effective for long term pain management” and those were summarily rejected by both Senators and two panelists (Ms. Steinberg and Dr. Coop).  Senator Bill Cassidy from Louisiana, a gastroenterologist who noted that there’s also “no evidence” that the epidural injections he received for his cervical issues were effective yet they were in fact effective for him.  So in other words – absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

At the the end of the hearing - the panel was asked what should be done with the CDC guidelines - and while the Mayo Clinic representative stated that she used them extensively, all agreed that they have been mis-applied and should be revised.  I take that as very good news indeed.

Monday, February 11, 2019

The CDC Quietly Admits It Screwed Up Counting Opioid Pills

The CDC Quietly Admits It Screwed Up Counting Opioid Pills or "We at the CDC Really Screwed Up and Here is Our Pathetic Attempt to Disguise it"


Once again, it is apparent that deaths from opioids occur from abuse, not use.
The more you dig the more the numbers change, and it's always in the same direction - the number of overdose deaths from prescription opioid medications, when used properly, is far less than the bogus numbers that have been used by the CDC. Based on all these adjustments, it would not surprise me in the least if 90% of opioid overdose deaths were a result of illicit fentanyl and its analogs, heroin, and the combination of pharmaceutical opioid drugs with other drugs of abuse. Maybe more.
It should be entirely clear that pain patients who use these painkillers correctly and responsibly are not the people who are dying from overdoses. But they are dying - slowly - from having to live in misery that we wouldn't allow for our pets as the medicines they need to (barely) function are being forcibly taken away. 
It is 2018 and this is the United States. How did we ever get here?

Pain Patients and Your Civil RIghts

This week the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice (DOJ) signed a formal agreement with Selma Medical Associates, a large primary care practice in Virginia, that may open the door for people with chronic pain to regain their full access to medical care.
Selma Medical refused to schedule a new patient appointment for a man who was taking the addiction treatment drug Suboxone. He filed a civil rights complaint asserting that his rights were violated because has a disability.
According to the complaint, Selma Medical “regularly turns away prospective new patients who are treated with narcotic controlled substances such as Suboxone.”
The DOJ and Selma Medical settled the complaint out-of-court. The full agreement can be READ HERE
If you feel your rights have been violated as a disabled person, please file a complaint with the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice

https://www.painnewsnetwork.org/stories/2019/2/1/civil-rights-case-gives-hope-to-pain-patients