The Fight To Criminalize Opioid Prescribing
Over 88 percent of opioid overdose deaths now involve either heroin or fentanyl. Targeting prescriptions is not an efficient way to address mortality.

As Americans continue to die from drug overdoses at an increasing rate, policy makers are seeking interventions to reduce reckless medical practices that put patients in danger of addiction. Many of these proposed laws seek to limit the extent to which patients can access prescription opioids from their physicians. But as our new study, published this week in the Yale Law & Policy Review Inter Alia, argues, prescription opioids are not to blame for today's crisis.
Laws that arbitrarily set duration or quantity restrictions for opioid treatment regimens are premised on the belief that increased access to prescription opioids has led to an increase in addiction and, ultimately, overdose deaths.
However, while opioid deaths continue to soar, opioid prescribing rates have decreased every year since 2012. Further, nonmedical use of prescription opioids has remained relatively stable over the past two decades. As we point out in our study, the popularized spike in reported nonmedical opioid use rates between 1998 and 2002 was most likely caused by major changes in survey methodology. And if there was a true increase in nonmedical opioid use, it would have been due to codeine, not the overprescribing of common pain relievers like OxyContin. The claim that the introduction of OxyContin in 1996 "fueled" prescription opioid use is simply not supported by the data.
Such claims about Purdue Pharma, however, were echoed during last week's House Energy and Commerce hearing on combatting fentanyl overdoses. Rep. Tony Cárdenas (D–Calif.) prefaced his questioning with "Purdue, the Sackler family, and crime pays—still one of the richest families in the world…who was a big part of where we are today." Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R–Iowa) shared a similar sentiment: "As we know, a lot of opioid addiction has started through post-operative care and pain management, pain relief."
But it is illicit opioids like heroin and fentanyl, not prescription pain relievers, that are primarily to blame for today's opioid crisis. By decreasing access to legal channels of prescribing, laws restricting the use of prescription opioids only increase the likelihood that a pain patient will need to turn to the black market to meet his demand for opioids with dangerous illicit drugs.
And yet, academics and policymakers continue to pursue reforms that would only exacerbate this issue. For example, Loyola Marymount University law professor Rebecca Delfino proposed that Congress adopt the Prescription Abuse and Prevention Act (PAPA), a law that would make it easier to prosecute physicians for violating the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). No legislation has yet to be introduced that cites PAPA, but policy makers have shown an appetite to criminalize doctors for prescribing opioids in the past.
Under the CSA and regulations pursuant to it, it is illegal for a physician to "knowingly or intentionally" prescribe a controlled substance unless the prescription is "for a legitimate medical purpose…in the usual course of his professional practice." Like the CSA, PAPA offers an intent or knowledge mens rea standard, but also allows a "presumption of knowledge" to be established by a "doctor's expert knowledge, practice experience, and specialized medical training."
Simply put, if a patient overdoses on a medication that was prescribed by a physician, the event itself might be sufficient to convict the prescriber of second-degree murder. This is because the doctor's expertise should have prevented the patient from being in such a vulnerable situation in the first place.
Although it shouldn't be expected that prosecutors would go after every physician whose patient overdoses under PAPA, the fact that such an event would likely lead to an automatic conviction after a charge would worry many physicians. Moreover, PAPA could grant prosecutors the arbitrary authority to incarcerate any physician whose patient overdoses while under his care. Such potential liability would lead to further reductions in prescribing across the country, which would only increase illicit opioid deaths.
Last term, the Supreme Court clarified in Ruan v. United States that in order to be liable under the CSA, a physician must have "knowingly or intentionally acted in an unauthorized manner," rather than merely intended to or known that he was prescribing some controlled substance. While the CSA regime is not perfect, the ruling in Ruan provided much-needed clarity to the standard of liability under the CSA and shielded physicians from facing prosecution for simply doing their job as authorized.
Criminalizing doctors is not the path to ending the opioid crisis. As much of the literature indicates, opioid prescriptions rarely lead to addiction when treating either acute or chronic pain. Given that over 88 percent of opioid overdose deaths now involve either heroin or fentanyl, targeting prescriptions is not an efficient way to address mortality. The way forward is to expand access to both addiction and pain patients, so that those who are in most need of a safe environment to consume opioids can do so legally.
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"Many of these proposed laws seek to limit the extent to which patients can access prescription opioids from their physicians. "
Chris McFattyfat (R-NJ) did this. Death rates went up. Then he did it again. Death rates went up again.
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He did, and his policy was mistaken. It cost lives. Hopefully, Gov Christie learned from his policy errors.
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You need to read up on correlation and causation. Actually, this isn't even correlation, it is coincidence.
The law Christie signed was bipartisan and limited opioid prescriptions to 5 days, which is more than reasonable.
What makes it reasonable?
What makes it reasonable is that opioids are a bad choice for long term pain management, both due to tolerance and due to the danger of addiction.
When opioids are given on an out-patient basis, they are given for short-term post-operative pain, and five days is enough for that.
And even in the rare cases where opioids are taken over a longer period, patients need to be closely monitored and see a physician frequently.
So why does the government need to get between the patient and physician?
5 days was an arbitrary number picked by politicians. Government has no business being involved.
When opioids are given on an out-patient basis, they are given for short-term post-operative pain, and five days is enough for that.
Which med school did you attend, and why do you know what the best course of treatment is for everyone?
Because obviously many physicians are not behaving responsibly.
No, 5 days is a number based on scientific studies.
I'm a scientist, not a medical doctor.
In our system, medical doctors make treatment decisions based on scientific and clinical studies and government regulations; doctors do not get to go outside those bounds based on their experience or intuition.
As an Anesthesiologist with 30 years of experience, I can tell you that 5 days is not sufficient.
Maybe for a minor surgery like a carpal tunnel or even breast augmentation.
For Major surgery like knee and shoulder replacements a large proportion of patients need more than 5 days of post op pain pills.
I see many patients in tears over inadequate post op pain treatment.
It is a huge scandal that there is so much hysteria over another week of oral pain pills.
These laws don't limit opioid prescriptions to 5 or 7 days, they merely limit initial opioid prescribing to a 7 day supply for acute pain. If your patient is in pain after that, you can give them another prescription: Upon any subsequent consultations for the same pain, the practitioner may issue, in accordance with existing rules and regulations, any appropriate renewal, refill, or new prescription for an opioid.
https://www.health.ny.gov/professionals/narcotic/laws_and_regulations/
Well, and you give that portion of patients another prescription. I mean, heaven forbid you should have to talk to your patient again five days after surgery!
Patients who don't need it won't ask for another prescription and won't have unneeded opioids around. Win-win.
Yes, and instead of taking the time to carefully evaluate, discuss, and weigh the tradeoffs between pain and risks of opioids, you just want to send your patients home with a couple of weeks of supply of opioids and not be bothered. And that's why we need regulations: many American doctors are evidently irresponsible and lazy.
I have been offered opioids by US doctors probably half a dozen times; I have never been offered opioids by any European doctor.
I was in the ER last Saturday. I injured my left ankle, bad. The Doctor asked if I wanted pain medication and I told her "No". I didn't tell her no because it didn't hurt, it does. I told her no because to go to the pharmacy, I'd have to get out of my car and go in on crutches because I'd have to pick up the prescription in person, I couldn't send someone to get it and it wasn't worth the pain that would cause.
It’s all just more people who don’t know better than me, telling how it has to be.
Yes, that's the way our medical system works: the government regulates the medical profession and drugs and makes tradeoffs.
The tradeoff we're discussing here doesn't restrict you in any way compared to any other prescription. Your doctor can stuff you to the gills with opioids if you want to and he agrees. At worst, a few people need to make a phone call after 5 days.
Actually, checking the NJ regulation, the 5 day limit doesn’t even apply to post-operative opioid prescriptions.
Apparently, as “as an Anesthesiologist with 30 years of experience”, you have no idea what these opioid regulations are even about, yet you accuse people of "hysteria".
A pretty poor showing for someone who claims to be a professional in this area.
So when my back goes out on me, and I’m in constant excruciating pain for 2-3 weeks, WTF am I supposed to do? 5 days is idiotically arbitrary.
So... does this cause-and-effect sequence converge on any useful information? Prohibition causes deaths and crashes, over and over again, yet Republican claim to believe that laws against trade and production build strong economies 12 different ways. Was Ayn Rand was right about death being altruism's standard of value?
Wow, I said it in a thread yesterday, it becomes an article today.
If I were a conspiracy theorist.
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I'm guessing coincidence. I linked the St. Louis transgender clinic story at The Free Press yesterday, and amazingly, it shows up in ENB's Roundup today.
It's absolutely a coincidence. I'm just making jokes.
Reason staff are here. Could be a coincidence but they read the comments…and possibly participate.
Oh boy, they must HATE me.
It's not so much what they don't know as it is how much they know that just ain't so!
"The Fight To Criminalize Opioid Prescribing"
Truth in headlines: The Fight To Control Every Damn Aspect of Your Life
That's what happens in a social welfare state financed by the top 20% of income earners.
You want freedom? Abolish the social welfare state, lower taxes, spread them more evenly.
You will not get your freedom until you stop enslaving other people: it is both politically impossible and morally wrong.
But narcotics prohibition seems to be most severe in the least socialistic of polities, rather than the most. This is not just some manifestation of kleptocracy. It's sadism, not slavery. They don't want to whip people and make them work for them; they just want to whip people.
That is bullshit. Socialist countries have been virulently opposed to any form of drug use, viewing it not only as a crime against society, but also associating it with reactionary Western tendencies.
If by "socialistic polities", you're trying to refer to Western Europe, opioid addiction is much less of a problem in those nations due to cultural and social differences. Opioids certainly aren't legal, drug use is socially unacceptable, and doctors are much more reluctant to prescribe opioids.
I've heard the opposite: that doctors in countries with socialized medicine have no problem giving opiates and opioids.
What engendered the social and cultural differences in preferences for opioids?
There are "no problems with giving opioids" in the US either; doctors can prescribe them and they do so with abandon. The only "restriction" is that the first prescription for acute pain is limited to 5-7 days in some states.
The NHS sees a similar dynamic to the US, with overprescribing creating an opioid epidemic, and they are trying to curb that as well. They don't need legislation because the NHS can just change its rules internally.
The majority of opioid prescriptions in Germany are for Tramadol, which is much weaker and has less potential for addiction.
You can research other countries yourself.
Most countries with socialized medicine aren't "socialist".
Why do the French make good food and the Germans make good cars? They are different cultures and histories.
Experiencing occasional acute pain is something many Europeans just seem to view as normal and live with, whereas Americans seem to think that doctors need to make them as comfortable as possible at all times, at any cost. I suspect the civilian experiences of WWII may have something to do with that difference.
No, I don't think that's what's at work here. Instead, I think it's the work of a small number who have been strongly motivated to cause pain — in this case literal pain — in a swath of the population that's not specifically targeted except as being unlikely to organize in opposition. They don't care to control much of most people's lives, they just want to hurt as many people as possible for as long as possible, while appearing beneficent enough to be allowed to keep doing that.
Opioids are not a good choice for long term pain management due to tolerance and the risk of addiction. That's why a 5-7 day limit on prescriptions is reasonable.
In the few cases where they are used for long term pain management, patients need frequent doctor visits, both because they suffer from some serious underlying disease and to manage tolerance and adjust dosage.
The situation where you can reasonably give a patient a 60 day supply of opioids and send them on their merry way does not exist.
Why can't management of a condition go on despite tolerance? Anticonvulsant therapy can continue for a lifetime despite tolerance.
For two reasons.
First, opioids do a lot more than just pain relief; they change your brain's reward system, and you do not want to be in that state the rest of your life.
Second, opioids have many effects on many different systems and they develop tolerance to different degrees. The dosage you need for pain relief may cause serious problems in other systems.
Among other things, half of people receiving opioids for any significant amount of time have serious GI side effects.
I’m guessing you don’t suffer from serious, recurring chronic pain.
I’m guessing you don’t suffer from chronic recurring pain, otherwise you wouldn’t be so ignorant and glib about it.
And, again, nobody is trying to stop anybody from taking opioids for chronic pain. All these laws do is limit the amount people are prescribed the first time for acute pain. That’s all.
Well, after all, to admit fentanyl is involved is to admit failure on several fronts; drug war, law enforcement, border control, etc.
Better to just attack citizens trying to live with chronic pain.
If grandma dies, it will be Trump's fault anyway.
No one mentioned Trump but you.
Nobody is attacking people living with chronic pain. Your doctor can still prescribe opioids for chronic pain.
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The only people who couldn't get their hands on opioids were those who had legally taken them as prescribed.
A bitter pill to swallow.
Hoooooooo Boy.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/technology/disinformation-group-secretly-blacklisting-right-wing-outlets-bankrolled-state-department
The State Department was giving grants to a foreign company that would compile lists of “Risky” sites that traffic “disinformation”. That company then reaches out to Big Tech demanding that these sites be demonetized.
And….Reason is on the list of “Most Risky” websites.
I have noted a few years back that Reason made some changes to their comments section. Many may remember that at a certain point, links to comments broke: Some point in late 2020 or early 2021, comment links went from “#comment-1234567” to “?comments=true#comment-1234567”. Not only did all our links break, but shortly after, Reason’s comment pages stopped being indexed. You could search the contents of articles, but not the contents of Comments.
This adds weight to my theory at the time that in the midst of COVID disinformation hysteria, Reason was being demonetized and de-indexed from Google’s search. Their changes meant that their articles could still be indexed for organic search, while google refused to index the comments sections.
This of course doesn’t prove my theory. But it certainly seems more likely these days.
No longer indexing comments may have been ok due to the link that the Soros rocket polisher dropped.
What is the significance of not indexing comments? I plead ignorance, Chumby.
Because this is where the real COVID dissent was happening.
Ahhhhhhh.....ok.
And….Reason is on the list of “Most Risky” websites.
Only due to the comment section.
Why address mortality at all? We believe in suffering the consequences of your actions don't we?
Opiods are greatly overprescribed; US doctors hand them out like Aspirin. In fact, US doctors overmedicate greatly, to the detriment of patients.
No, they are premised on the fact that opioids are not suitable for most long term pain management, and that usage for more than 5-7 days carries a high risk of addiction. These numbers are not "arbitrary", they are rooted in observable facts.
Furthermore, the restrictions are not usually on “treatment regimens”, they are on the amount that may be prescribed and dispensed at a time.
It isn’t “pain patients” who switch to illegal drugs, it is people who have gotten addicted to opioids for short term pain management and became addicted. They don’t switch to street drugs for pain management, they switch to street drugs because they have become addicted.
The law isn’t “criminalizing doctors”, it is limiting harmful uses of medications, the same way government does for many other drugs and treatments.
Do you know of more effective drugs?
The treatment of chronic pain depends on what is causing it. There isn't a simple magic pill you can give people.
Of course there's no panacea, but are there not conditions for which opioids are the most effective?
Opioids are very effective for short term acute pain management. The risk of addiction is low during the first week, and you can tolerate the altered mental state and other side-effects for that period.
Opioids are less effective but a drug of last resort for terminal patients.
And nobody is outlawing opioids, or even "criminalizing opioid prescribing". That is the usual Reason nonsense. All these laws do is prevent doctors from just giving people an initial prescription for a 30 day supply at once, because most people don't need more, and those who do can come back and get whatever prescription the doctor wants to give them.
Bullshit. In the current climate it’s incredibly difficult to get a prescription for ANY opioids. A few years back I had an argument with a doctor over prescribing Celebrex, which isn’t even pain medication. Another reason most doctor’s office visits are a waste of time.
The fact that your doctor was reluctant to prescribe an NSAID undermines your argument that they are particularly reluctant to prescribe opioids.
And I have been offered opioids “in the current climate”.
It’s not just my doctor. It’s a lot of doctors. I hear the same thing from people I know, people, they know, people on the net, etc.
If the government stayed out of everyone’s shit, then the heroin epidemic, which lead to the fentanyl epidemic would never have happened
If that were the case, countries like Singapore and many European nations would have much worse drug epidemics. In fact, they do much better than the US.
Drug use (and gun violence) are rampant in America because of American culture and history, and neither prohibition nor legalization can fix that.
But sensible regulation of opioid prescriptions can at least protect some groups of people from accidental addiction due to careless medical providers.
What does “addicted” mean, and why is it a bad condition? Or is it only bad depending on what the addiction is?
For opioids, addiction means a combination of tolerance and dependence. Dependence means that if you fail to take opioids, you experience withdrawal (excruciatingly painful physical and psychological symptoms). Tolerance means that the longer you take opioids, the large the dosage is that is required to prevent withdrawal and achieve pain relief. Eventually, people require dangerously large doses of opioids yet experience less and less pain relief.
Doesn't tolerance make those doses less dangerous?
No, tolerance means that you need to increase the dosage to get the same pain relief because the pain pathways adapt. At those higher dosages, side effects and risks tend to get worse because other opioid pathways adapt differently from the pain pathways. And the more tolerance you develop, the worse it gets.
In the 90’s I was staying some pretty strong pain medication for my back. After about three months my osteopath worked out a regimen of anti inflammatory medication that enabled me to function without the pain meds. So I stopped taking the opiates. I got sick for about four days. Unpleasant, but no more so than a moderate flu. So I just rode it out and then I was fine.
My life would hav been a nightmare if I was limited to 5-7 days of pain medication.
Nobody is limiting you to 5-7 days of opioids. All these laws do is limit the initial prescription to 5-7 days for acute pain. That is, if you walk into your doctor’s office and complain of sudden severe pain. And on the second prescription, the doctor can prescribe more. They don’t apply to chronic pain at all.
And many people indeed don’t get addicted when they take opioids. Many other people do. It’s a high risk, not a certainty.
It also shouldn’t be MY problem.
You didn't have a problem. You got all the opioids you needed, and none of these laws are changing that.
Look at the bright side. Colonial Britain used to monopolize and charge a salt tax, and wax indignant when their collectors turned up beheaded. Gandhi taught the poor to gather their own salt and as branded a terrorist by said Brits. When the plucky lawyer organized boycotts of British opium and liquor stores, the shrieks were audible over the horizon. Nowadays folks outside of dictatorships can shop around for salt and liquor. Libertarian spoiler vote progress, like evolution or continental drift, is slow. This is mainly because of infiltraitors bearing moronic platform planks.
If American bureaucrats are using confiscated fentanyl as a denaturant, would they admit it? Since 1908 The Kleptocracy has been adding poisonous wood alcohol to untaxed ethanol to blind and kill folks who drink it. Yet they repeatedly deny the fact. Politicians also deny that government agents kill people to enforce superstitious vice laws, then protect them from prosecution when the murder becomes too blatant to dissemble. So why not use fentanyl as a proxy for methanol and lie about that too?
To figure out how to fix this problem, we need to get at the root cause of narcotics prohibitionism. I concluded decades ago, and haven't seen enough evidence to change my mind, that the problem is sadism. That is, there are people who seek to cause suffering — not of everybody, it'd be too hard to get away with that, but of enough people to make it worthwhile for the sadist, yet not to arouse an organized opposition. They got into position where they could do so, then they figured out a way to disguise their malevolence so as to get the assent of benevolent folks.
This being the case, the problem is very difficult to solve, because in effect it requires convincing enough benevolent people that certain benevolent-seeming people are motivated by malevolence. Trying to convince them the policy is wrong is hard because they've trusted people who've risen to positions of authority apparently by demonstrating both expertise and good will. And nobody suspects sadism, because it's so alien to their own experience.
Anybody have any suggestions?
Yeah, you concluded that because you are ignorant. Opioids are a god-sent for severe, acute pain. But opioids can’t be more than a temporary fix because they don’t just stop pain from a specific cause, but they cause widespread effects and changes in both the brain and the body, changes you can’t function with long term. Attempting to control chronic pain with opioids is similar to trying to control it with a lobotomy.
Gosh, that might very well describe you, advocating irresponsible and ineffective use of opioids and not giving a damn about the consequences. Are you a sadist, Roberta?
Are opioids unique in that capacity? Usually for chronic conditions, drugs are given chronically.
Almost all drugs when taken chronically have risks and cause harm. That's true for statins, aspirin, antivirals, insulin, cortisone, testosterone, etc. So, it's always a tradeoff.
Opioids have serious side effects even in the short term when working as intended. That's acceptable for acute pain and in terminal patients, but it isn't usually a good solution for chronic conditions. And opioids only mask the pain, they don't treat the underlying condition. For chronic conditions, the focus should be to achieve pain relief by more specific means.
In any case, nobody is trying to "criminalize opioid prescribing". All these laws/rules say is that "A prescriber may not issue an initial opioid prescription for acute pain in a quantity exceeding a five day supply." This doesn't apply to chronic pain, it doesn't apply to post-operative pain, or anything else. And even when it applies, the second prescription can be for whatever the physician deems necessary.
You are incredibly misinformed. I am approaching 20 straight years of having to use medical opiates. I have never sold, offered to share or given away medicine. I need every microgram that I am prescribed. Before the DEA decided that it had the right to criminalize the practice of pain management, I was steady on the exact same dosage of medical opiates for just under seven years. Since the DEA decided that they could regulate the practice of medicine, which they have no authority over, (they were established to stop the flow of illegal drugs into the country, something they have failed at repeatedly). They absolutely do not have the right to dictate the legal medical use of legal opiate medication, prescribed by a licensed medical professional.
I have a genetic condition, inherited from my father, that mirrors, almost exactly, the destruction of his life that I witnessed from the age of 12, up until his passing. I didn’t ask for it, I didn’t want it, but I got it. I am not repairable. They tried 3 different surgeries, all of which only made the situation worse. I found out just after this past holiday season that my condition has advanced. No one is cutting me open again. So my only option is having the pain controlled by opiates. They have always worked for my pain, and they still do.
How dare you presume to dictate the treatment that my doctor and I both agreed on. You obviously have no experience with long term use and effectiveness of properly prescribed opiate medication. Wherever you get your information from, and then haughtily spew into this comment section is WRONG. I would have ended my own life years ago without the help of compassionate medical professionals.
Please educate yourself properly, before you come here and dictate that everyone but yourself are wrong. YOU ARE MISINFORMED. PERIOD.
I’m not dictating anything and neither is the DEA or the FDA. I was explaining why opiates are usually avoided for chronic pain pain management.
The only thing these laws do are to protect people who don’t need opioids long term from irresponsible and lazy medical professionals, a real problem in the US. They don’t apply to cases like yours at all.
And your unfortunate medical condition doesn’t give you license to behave like a jerk. Cut it out.
It's you that's behaving like a jerk - or more precisely, like a sadistic fascist. You have given precisely zero suggestions for relief of severe chronic pain (and ignored questions about that from other posters in many places), but you don't want people with chronic conditions to use the most effective pain relievers.
...
Perhaps we can all agree that 1) we’ve spent billions of dollars for the so-called War on Drugs since 1970; 2) the “forces” we’ve tasked with fighting this war did not prevent the popularization of cocaine use in the 1970’s; 3) these forces did not prevent the introduction during the 1980’s of crack cocaine into poor and minority inner cities nor the increases in violent crime, morbidity, and mortality these communities suffered; 4) these forces did not prevent the popularization of methamphetamine in the 80’s and 90’s in many rural areas with attendant increases in violent crime, morbidity, and mortality; 5) the forces did not prevent dramatic increases in heroin and opioid addiction, morbidity, and mortality since circa 2000 in most parts of the country; and 6) these forces did not prevent the introduction of illicit fentanyl into illicit heroin, cocaine, and opioid supplies since circa 2010 with attendant dramatic increases in lethal and sub-lethal overdose events. To put it simply, what has the DEA done for us in the past or recently, despite all the money we’ve pumped into that misbegotten and ineffective agency? Unfortunately, discussions of drug policy and policy reform are plagued with widely divergent interpretations of available evidence that lead to intentional or inadvertent misuse of that evidence in the service of core beliefs and competing agendas. My discussion here cannot, of course, be totally immune to this problem. For a very helpful analysis of the interpretation problem, see https://kar.kent.ac.uk/29901/1/Hughes%20%20Stevens%202012.pdf
OK, so here are the New Jersey rules (the NY rules are similar). The title and article are complete nonsense. Nobody is "criminalizing opioid prescribing":
1. Q: What is the 5 day rule for initial opioid prescriptions for the treatment of acute pain?
A: A prescriber may not issue an initial opioid prescription for acute pain in a quantity
exceeding a five day supply. In addition, the initial prescription shall be for the lowest
effective dose of an immediate release opioid drug.
3. Q: What is acute pain?
A: “Acute pain” is defined as “pain, whether resulting from disease, accidental or intentional
trauma, or other cause, that the practitioner reasonably expects to last only a short period
of time.” Post-operative pain is considered acute. “Acute pain” is distinguishable from
chronic pain, pain being treated as part of cancer care, hospice or other end of life care,
or pain being treated as part of palliative care.
4. Q: What is meant by the “initial prescription?”
A: An “initial prescription” means a prescription issued to a patient who:
Has never been issued a prescription for the drug or its pharmaceutical equivalent; or
was previously issued a prescription for, or used or was administered the drug or its
pharmaceutical equivalent, but not within one year of the date of the current prescription.
5. Q: If someone is administered an opioid pre- or peri-operatively for surgery, is a
prescription for post-surgical pain limited to 5 days?
A: No. Since the administration of an opioid pre- or peri-operatively occurred within one
year of the current opioid prescription for post-surgical pain, the current prescription
is not deemed an “initial” prescription, and therefore, is not subject to the five day rule. In
this scenario, the post-surgical pain prescription is a subsequent prescription. See FAQ
11, to read about practitioner’s responsibilities when issuing subsequent prescriptions
for acute pain.
11. Q: Can I issue subsequent prescriptions for the treatment of acute pain?
A: Yes. No less than four days after issuing the initial prescription, and after consulting with
the patient, you may issue subsequent opioid prescription(s) for continued treatment
of acute pain. That consultation need not be an in-person visit and can be accomplished
via a telephone call. The consultation, however, must be with you or a covering prescriber,
not office staff. In determining whether to issue another prescription, the prescriber, in the
exercise of his or her professional judgment, is obligated to consider and document the
following factors in the patient record:
(1.) The rationale for the additional “days’ supply” of the prescribed opioid drugs, why
it is necessary and appropriate to the patient’s treatment needs; and,
(2.) That it does not present an undue risk of abuse, addiction, or diversion.
https://www.njconsumeraffairs.gov/prescribing-for-pain/Documents/FAQ-for-Practitioners-Licensed-by-BME.pdf
So… does this cause-and-effect sequence converge on any useful information? Prohibition causes deaths and crashes, over and over again, yet Republican claim to believe that laws against trade and production build strong economies 12 different ways. Was Ayn Rand was right about death being altruism’s standard of value?
Or in typical English syntax: The fight to criminalize prescribing opioids or the fight to criminalize the prescription of opioids or opioid prescriptions.
But free speech is racist.
And violates section 230.