The Shady Statistics Behind the War on Painkillers
The government has doubled down on failed policies, citing deeply flawed studies and misrepresenting data.
HD DownloadAbout twenty-three years ago, public health officials began to notice increases in what would later be called "deaths of despair," referring to suicides, deaths from alcoholism, and drug overdoses. Public health officials and legislators responded by seeking to limit opioid prescriptions for non-cancer chronic pain. Their tactics included violent raids and criminal charges against doctors deemed to overprescribe pain relief. Opioid prescriptions for non-cancer chronic pain fell dramatically.
The war on pain drugs turned out to be a colossal failure. So-called deaths of despair rose even faster, and millions of Americans with chronic pain have had trouble obtaining prescriptions that would ease their suffering because doctors fear losing their licenses. Meanwhile, the government doubled down on failed policies, citing deeply flawed statistical studies and misrepresenting data.
Even the phrase "deaths of despair," coined by Princeton economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton, is woefully imprecise: Different types of deaths often get muddled statistically and even definitionally. Who can determine the intentions of drug and alcohol abusers? Who knows if social pressures, mental issues, or the substances involved were the ultimate cause of death? Moreover, many deaths officially ruled as accidental are likely either deliberate suicides or resulted in part from a lowered will to live.
The attack on opioid prescriptions for non-cancer chronic pain began to advance around 2010, and intensified thereafter. The crackdown coincided with—and perhaps caused—a rapid growth in heroin overdose deaths, and later, an explosion in illegal synthetic opioid deaths, primarily fentanyl, an illicitly manufactured substance added to or substituted for heroin to meet the increasing demand for illegal opiates. This pattern of events is illustrated in a graphic put out by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).

Indeed, overdose deaths from commonly prescribed opiates increased rapidly from 1999 to 2010, but the chart doesn't tell us how many of the victims legally obtained the opiates. The chosen scale also omits the fact that drug overdose deaths have been increasing at a fairly steady rate since 1979, with no obvious changes associated with the rise and fall of opioid prescriptions for chronic pain. The chart does show how overdose death rates from commonly prescribed opiates did not decline much after 2010, although legal prescriptions went down dramatically. This suggests that these deaths may have involved individuals who bought illegally manufactured opiates, or that the people who lost pain medication as a result of official actions were not the ones liable to overdose.
The increase in deaths of despair obviously merits some policy attention, but labeling it an "opioid crisis," as is common nowadays, profoundly misstates its nature, timing, and likely causes and solutions. To justify restricting opioids for non-cancer chronic pain patients requires specific evidence that people prescribed opioids for pain are the ones dying of overdoses. There's quite a bit of negative evidence on this score, but public health officials have seized on a few positive studies to support their claims.
One influential and heavily cited 2011 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, "Association Between Opioid Prescribing Patterns and Opioid Overdose-Related Deaths," uses a classic prohibitionist tactic. The authors use a sample of 750 Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients who received opioid prescriptions for pain and later died of opioid overdoses, and compare them to a random sample of 155,000 other VHA patients who received opioid prescriptions and did not die of overdoses.
Since all subjects in the study were prescribed opiates for pain, this analysis can't tell you anything about whether those prescriptions are associated statistically with an increased risk of overdose death. Determining that connection would require comparing patients with similar pain diagnoses and matching them for factors such as age, sex, and prior substance abuse. But doing so might not be very informative anyway. Forty percent of the patients who died of overdose had been diagnosed with substance abuse disorders in the 12 months before getting an opiate prescription. Sixty-six percent of them had been diagnosed with some psychiatric disorder. These individuals were more likely to die from overdose or suicide than other patients in the sample. If someone is at risk of overdosing or committing suicide and has opiates, they are more likely to use them than someone without opiates. Thus, suggesting that many opioid overdose deaths might be substitutes for other methods of overdosing or suicide.
The authors did find that patients who were prescribed larger amounts of opiates were more likely to die of overdoses than patients with lower doses. This discovery was used to support CDC guidelines strongly discouraging larger doses. However, the evidence should be interpreted cautiously since the study does not use any controls: The patients prescribed higher doses presumably were in more pain than lower-dose patients, and may well have differed in other ways, such as type of pain or the length of time they had suffered from it. Controls matched as closely as possible to subjects are a basic requirement of good science.
The study has an even more fundamental gap in its analysis: It did not account for quality of life increases in the 99.96 percent of opioid patients who did not overdose, or the bad things that might have happened to the many patients with chronic pain who were denied opioid prescriptions, or given doses too small to control the pain.
Another influential study was "Opioid Prescriptions for Chronic Pain and Overdose: A Cohort Study," which was published in the Annals of Internal Medicine. Almost comically, it had nine authors but only six patients who died of opiate overdoses—a sample size too small to reach any broad conclusions. The study was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (another comic note is the article mislabels its sponsor as the National Institute of Drug Abuse, suggesting it is made up of junkies rather than researchers). While sponsors do not dictate methods or results, patient treatment issues should be the province of health researchers (like the Veterans Affairs Health Service Research department that funded the previous study), not people focused on fighting drug abuse.
The article begins by rejecting prior work in the field: "The association between prescription opioid exposure and overdose risk has been inferred from uncontrolled case series of autopsies subject to selection bias or from ecological time series studies in which individual-level associations cannot be examined." It criticizes studies like the prior one, which fails to use controls, and statistical analyses like the CDC's claim that if opioid prescriptions and opioid overdose deaths are simultaneously rising, the prescriptions must be causing the deaths.
Despite the small sample size, the authors claim statistically significant results after adjusting for smoking, depression, substance abuse, comorbid conditions, pain site, age, sex, recent sedative-hypnotic prescription, and recent initiation of opioid use. This is logically impossible. There are not even enough observations to estimate the adjustments, much less make any conclusions with statistical confidence. In any event, the authors conclude that whether their results, "were due to patient differences or direct effects of higher doses was not established."
Despite being a decade or more old, these studies continue to be cited by public health officials and policymakers. For example, the 2017 President's Commission On Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis relied on studies published before 2014—usually with data collected before 2011—to claim that opioids prescribed for chronic pain led to abuse. The reason is simple: as the war on opiate prescriptions for non-cancer chronic pain caused prescriptions to decline 60 percent, the number of deaths from opiate overdoses—and also from deaths of despair in general—continues to grow. Moreover, careful, controlled research showed clearly that medically supervised opiate pain management was both safe and effective. The prescription-opioids-caused-the-crisis narrative can only be sustained by relying on old studies.
The cockeyed logic of the President's Commission is illustrated by its section, "Pathways to Opioid Use Disorder (Including Heroin) from Prescription," which references a 2017 article, "Psychoactive substance use prior to the development of iatrogenic opioid abuse: A descriptive analysis of treatment-seeking opioid abusers," that studied people who had sought treatment for opioid abuse. The study's main conclusion was that "only 4% of those who experienced their first opioid via a physician's prescription were truly drug-naive. Rather, more than 95% had significant psychoactive drug experience prior to being prescribed their first opioid." In other words, people who were prescribed opiates and later sought treatment for abuse had almost always begun taking drugs before their prescriptions.
Instead of interpreting the study as evidence that prescription opioids are not the source of drug abuse, the President's Commission claimed that the study "highlights the need for clinicians to screen patients for prior drug use histories." Essentially, the commission would refuse opiates for pain relief to people who have used drugs in the past. To draw such a conclusion would require an entirely different study—one that compares drug-using patients with non-cancer chronic pain who were prescribed opiates versus those who were not prescribed opiates.
The only article cited that supports any claim that opioid prescriptions led to opioid deaths was the 2012 article "Opioid Epidemic in the United States," which summarizes the results of a 2010 drug survey in overheated blustering language. Literally, the only evidence presented that opioid prescriptions for chronic pain were responsible for opioid overdose deaths was this figure:

The CDC also cited the same figure in 2016—although they prettied it up with colors—to justify new "guidelines" which have since been scaled back. The underlying argument was that the simultaneous rise in all three lines—opioid prescriptions, opioid treatment admissions, and opioid deaths—must have been caused by opioid prescriptions. Of course, this pattern rapidly reversed when opioid prescriptions fell dramatically and the other two measures continued to increase, but that didn't stop officials from using it.
Even back in 2009, before the reversal, this chart did not support the contention. It only shows that the three things are correlated, but does not demonstrate causation. Moreover, it only shows that the three things increase in time—lots of things increase in time without any causal interaction: world population, consumer prices, my age, etc. The chart suggests that the rates of increase are about the same, but that's due to choosing units—all three lines are measured in different units. The chart shows treatment admissions and death both increased by about 4 percent from 1999 to 2009—but that's 4/10,000 for treatment admissions, ten times the 4/100,000 for deaths.
Although there are still many things we don't know about pain management and drug abuse, we do know that long-term pain management is possible with opiates and that the benefits are extraordinary for people suffering from non-cancer chronic pain without unacceptable levels of addiction and abuse. Opiate overdose deaths are very infrequent among people given prescription opiates and have no prior history of drug abuse or psychological problems. The rise in opiate overdose deaths seems to be part of a general deaths-of-despair pattern that began at least a decade before increases in opioid prescriptions for pain management and has not been affected by the decline in those prescriptions.
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"The DEA maintains 23 domestic field divisions with 222 field offices and 92 foreign offices in 70 countries. With a budget exceeding $3 billion, DEA employs 10,169 people, including 4,924 Special Agents and 800 Intelligence Analysts."
And that's just the DEA; consider how many State and local law enforcement agencies have drug task forces; I imagine it could easily be tens of thousands, at least.
And now you want to go and shut down those agencies and cost all of those honest cops their jobs? Drug control is an industry unto itself.
Yes. Shut it down.
That's my main concern too. Compared to the wage and budget requirements of the DEA and other law enforcement agencies, what's a little death and torturous lives among our most useless and oldest citizens? C'mon now!
I have friends who were clearly hooked on opioids for years prior to 2010. They went to their doctor once a month, the doctors would taper them periodically to see if they could get by with less, then re-calibrate as necessary. Now those same friends call acquaintances who recently had surgery, and beg them to sell unused pain pills. And they go out on the black market to buy whatever drano-laced fen-fen they can get their hands on.
The war on opioids is more than a failure- it is a national disgrace. What's worse is that it was caused by the people who ostensibly knew better- who would be first to lecture you about the wrongs of the Drug War. It is a problem caused 100% by the Obama administration and lefty social meddlers that figured they could optimize the healthcare of the human soul. Thousands of overdose deaths are on Obama's hands, and in a just world he would be reminded of this everytime he dragged his sorry ass out for his monthly tongue bathings by the media.
And this is all true REGARDLESS of The Science! (tm). Once again, we see that Reason is myopically focused on scientific studies. Prohibition is not wrong because some paper was sound or unsound, Prohibition is wrong because it robs every person of their free agency, and forces them to a black market for consumption. You don't need The Science!(tm) to prove that. It is axiomatic.
It isn't that I disagree with this takedown of The Science! (tm). Obviously it was cooked- just as every "Science Based" Policy is always backed by biased, agenda-driven studies.
The problem is that THAT is the message that should be put out by Reason. Not that *this* science was flawed, but that The Science! (tm) will never be a substitute for morality. Whenever you yield to silly studies in order to justify an immoral choice, you are making a mistake. And that includes drug prohibition, abortion policy, vax mandates, mask mandates and climate policy. All these subjects require a moral case first.
You can say that about "the war on drugs". But decisions about medical treatments are made based on scientific studies. And scientific studies say that opioids (1) pose a high risk of addiction when used for an extended time, and (2) are ineffective in many people for controlling chronic pain. That's why opioids should not be prescribed for chronic pain except as a last resort.
Now, personally, I'd be happy with letting every opioid addict sue every doctor who prescribed them opioids for millions in damages as an alternative to "prohibition"; that would take care of the problem too and put the fear of God into doctors when prescribing opioids. Either way, irresponsible and harmful prescription of opioids in a medical system needs to have consequences. That's an entirely libertarian point of view.
You are part of the problem instead of part of the solution. It's your wrong-headed thinking that has led us to this sad state of affairs. Seventy-eight thousand annual fentanyl deaths are on your head.
My wrong-headed thinking? Really? I'm saying that doctors should be held accountable in civil court if they prescribe opioids and their patients suffer adverse effects, like addiction. How exactly is that "wrong-headed"?
Ideology aside, blaming doctors for patients behavior is idiotic. Recklessness or violating standards are care is one thing, but blaming doctors for behavior that a.) may have existed before the patient received treatment, and b.) may have had nothing to do with the treatment received is among the worst ideas I’ve ever heard. For the sake of everyone in your life, I hope that was a poor attempt at satire.
Holy shit. You're so dim-witted I can see there's no point in clarifying your errors.
The fentanyl that's killing people (mixed with xylazine, it can cause your limbs to just rot right off!) was not PRESCRIBED. Nor is it entirely sought by "junkies". Often, people get started on that poison because idiots like you in gov't and the DEA have prevented their doctors from treating their pain symptoms properly. Go look at the many "street view" videos of Kensington Ave. in Philly, or Tenderloin in SF. Those bent-over zombies are not suffering the effects of controlled dosages of opiod pain killers under medical supervision. They are there because fucking idiots who don't know anything about drugs, pain or the streets have put them there. They start "self-medicating" and end up dying and it has nothing to do with doctors.
NONE of them are suffering from the use of diverted prescription medications, or "doctor-shopping".
Addiction itself is whole 'nother matter.
There are several issues here: (1) the fentanyl epidemic, (2) the war on drugs, and (3) irresponsible/overprescription of opioids. You are so dim-witted that you can't keep these three issues separate.
Reason puts up this strawman as if (3) is necessarily related to (1). The evidence for that is indeed weak.
I'm trying to tell you that (3) in itself is a problem that needs to be addressed, regardless of what fraction of the opioid epidemic it is responsible for or whether we have a war on drugs. Doctors in the US prescribe opioids out of ignorance and laziness and this harms patients. I have seen it personally, my family has experienced it, and it is clear from medical statistics. Again, whether this problem overlaps with the general opioid epidemic or not is irrelevant: this is a problem with widespread medical malpractice in the US.
Apparently, you didn't read the article, which was all about the poor "scientific" studies that the laws were based on.
I have chronic and flaring pain, first from a car accident and then later when the bottom of my back had to be all fused and locked together from spinal cord damage. I have had opiates available, as needed, for over 20 years now. I don't like them, but when I'm hurting enough that I can't think straight anyway I might as well not be also hurting. I was all the way up to methadone before the surgery and have gone back down to hydrocodone with one increase in strength. There are days I might need three of them. Other times I can go days without any.
It used to be that my primary care doctor would give me a year's prescription with my annual checkup. I moved and found a Dr there that also was willing to prescribe. Then he quit prescribing them. Sent me to another doctor. A year later he quit as well. Now I have to go into a "pain" clinic every other month. A lot of time (with the handicapped buses, any trip is usually a minimum of 5 hours) and money.
There has never been any danger of addiction. In fact, people prescribed opioids for chronic pain (of any kind) only have an addiction rate of about 2%. If some new treatment comes along and they don't need the pain pills anymore, few have any problem getting off of them. We're not taking them to get high, we're taking them to be able to function.
I have seen (or rather no longer seen) too many people in the pain forums that have been cut off or way down so far that they're almost useless, become suicidal and then disappear.
There are also genetic differences in how fast different people metabolize various drugs. A person with the genes for fast metabolism may need twice or even three times as much to get the same relief. For me, it's anesthetics, but not opioids. Almost every surgery (or dental procedure), they wear off very fast. Several nurses in recovery keep telling me I shouldn't have woken up for at least another half hour or so, and long dental procedures the same thing (even though it's not general anesthesia) with extra injections needed.
A Libertarian viewpoint is that it's up to the individual what they do with their property and the body is as self-owned as anything can be. No penalties should apply to what a person chooses to do with or put into their bodies. You shouldn't even need a prescription. Nor should any doctor be held responsible for what his patient does as long as he didn't fraudulently recommend something for his own personal gain.
"But decisions about medical treatments are made based on scientific studies. And scientific studies say that opioids (1) pose a high risk of addiction when used for an extended time, and (2) are ineffective in many people for controlling chronic pain. That’s why opioids should not be prescribed for chronic pain except as a last resort."
This is asinine and wrong. Which studies? And what risk? Are we talking about a 10% higher risk for the common man? What if the doctor is treating an uncommon man?
You are definitely part of the problem. Scientific Data is super important for individuals and their doctor to consider when mutually agreeing on the appropriate treatment. It is super evil when used to apply broad, nation-wide solutions BY FORCE upon the public.
Whether opioids are addictive or not is not the question. As I noted above, many of my friends were clearly addicted to pain pills. And that was the end of the story. They went to their doctor, got their pills and carried on normal, everyday lives. Now they run the risk of overdose and chronic addiction and abuse because their treatment occurs outside of physician care and outside the law.
But we need to convince non-libertarians of the rightness of our policies for non-libertarian reasons.
You will not convince non-libertarians of the rightness of your Science. I guarantee you the government has, and will get more studies than you can provide. And Statist drug warriors will find 1000 reasons why those studies are better than any data you can muster. Overnight the CDC decided it needed to "prove" Masks were useful, and whadya know, they found a dozen studies to "prove" that masks were effective.
Well Said +100000000.
Restrictions on prescription of opioids has nothing to do with "prohibition". Opioids could be entirely legal, yet doctors could (and should) still be held accountable for prescribing them or giving them in a medical setting where not appropriate.
Doctors have been overprescribing opioids, getting patients needlessly addicted. That is an issue of medical malpractice, and it needs to be stopped.
And I don't want to have friends or family to get hooked on opioids because doctors were needlessly prescribing them. Contrary to what you may think, long term opioid use is not harmless.
Contrary to what you think, opioid prohibition is not harmless.
Well, lucky then that I wasn't advocating "opioid prohibition". What I am advocating is that doctors do the same for opioids as they do for any other drug: weigh risks and benefits. I have no problem with you stuffing yourself with as much fentanyl as your heart desires. But when a doctor tells my parents to take any drug, including opioids, he ought to be accountable for the consequences.
This would be essentially malpractice, wouldn't it? Whenever a doctor causes harm through incompetence, that's actionable. If you could show that a doctor was mis-prescribing opioids and got someone addicted, what is currently stopping you from suing them for malpractice?
Maybe they are being shielded from liability in some way, I honestly don't know much about medical laws, but are they being shielded in some way that is specific to opiates?
Correct.
Several hundred thousand people are hurt or killed by doctors in the US every year. Less than 20000 malpractice lawsuits are brought, and physicians win most of them.
Several things. (1) People whose lives have been destroyed by addiction generally aren't in a position to even start a lawsuit or have the records to even identify the original opioid prescription. (2) Proving individual responsibility for a particular opioid prescription is going to be hard, since by the time they are an addict, a dozen doctors will have written prescriptions for opioids, (3) Expert witnesses are part of the medical profession as well and tend to avoid implicating their colleagues in many cases, (4) Medical malpractice lawsuits rarely succeed in other cases of negligence or malpractice as well.
Quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur.
But why bother?
"doctors could (and should) still be held accountable for prescribing them or giving them in a medical setting where not appropriate."
Look everybody, NOYB2 is here to tell us what is, and what is not appropriate. You wanna kill some cancer pain? Appropriate. Wanna kill some chronic pain? Maybe not appropriate. Wanna escape for a few hours, oh you sure as hell know that NOYB2 won't let that slide. Because NOYB2 is the end all, be all of what is appropriate. If NOYB2 doesn't think something is appropriate, then doctors ought to be investigated and held to account. Because the last thing we should ever do is allow people to do something that NOYB2 thinks is inappropriate.
No, I'm simply explaining to you why the government is doing what it is doing and why the arguments in the article are b.s.
You are arguing for complete freedom to take drugs in the presence of socialized medicine picking up all the costs, eliminating all price signals that would ordinarily keep people from harming themselves in a free society.
There is nothing libertarian about that view. But, hey, I'm enough of a cynic these days to say: America, go for it! Legalize all drugs, keep socialized medicine, and go to hell.
You know what else can possibly kill at a rate of 4/100,000 of users? G.D. anything under the sun. This has nothing to do with Karen's and has everything to do with Power-Mad obsession to monopolize the drug market with gov-gun forces.
The government would be on trial endlessly for fraudulent racketeering, defamation and propaganda (lying to its customers) spreading if it wasn't the almighty government itself. Instead it spends it's time censoring any reality knowledge. It is the Nazi-Empire of the 21st Century brought to the USA by Democratic [Na]tional So[zi]alist enemies.
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True. I just watched the four season run of ‘The Man in the High Castle’, and there are so many propaganda and coercive parallels between the American Reich and democrat governance.
Apparently, "My body. My choice" only applies in certain circumstances.
Congrats to Steve Scalise - just chosen as head wingnut in charge of the House.
Have I ever mentioned that when I mentally attach a face to your username it's usually James Hodgkinson's? You're practically twins: a couple of bitter old white cranks blaming an inept political party for all that's wrong in your lives.
From your favorite source Wikipedia.
On May 22, 2017, Hodgkinson wrote "Trump is a Traitor. Trump Has Destroyed Our Democracy. It's Time to Destroy Trump & Co." above his repost of a Change.org petition demanding "the legal removal" of Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence for "treason". He belonged to numerous political Facebook groups, including those named "Terminate the Republican Party", "The Road To Hell Is Paved With Republicans", and "Donald Trump is not my President."
Are you sure you two aren't related? Resemblance is uncanny!
Sandy baby, don't be silly.
Hodgkinson is a Bernie-Bro. You read everything I write here so you must recall how I have repeatedly said I would take Donnie's policies over Bernie's ANY DAY OF THE WEEK.
And it is more so than ever.
Buttplug quote "I prefer Trump policies over those of Bernie Sanders any time".
Catalog that, gurl.
Great. I hope he manages to have unrepentant pedophiles, like you, put to death.
This is just a lie from beginning to end. Opioids are not effective pain medicine for chronic pain in most people, and they have a high risk of addiction in most people. Yet, doctors overprescribe it and hand it out like candy, resulting in patients who otherwise never get addicted to drugs to become addicted. It's medical malpractice.
That would actually justify a ban. However, despite all this, opioids are not banned even for chronic pain, they just require writing an extra prescription once. That's it.
Is it going to stem the "opioid epidemic"? I have no idea. The number of non-medical opioid addictions may simply overwhelm anything in the medical system. But when my family goes to the hospital, I don't want them to come home with an opioid addiction because doctors and nurses were too lazy to engage in proper pain management.
There is no problem that the government can not and will not make worse. Once they deem something to be within their purview [and what isn't?], they invariably fuck it up because agencies, bureaucracies, and wonks have their own baileywicks and agendas, that may or may not have anything directly related to the problem at hand.
This is a question of medical malpractice. Even in a libertarian society, doctors would be held accountable for overprescribing opioids.
In fact, that may still happen in our society. Multi-million dollar damage awards per patient would likely be much more effective in deterring overprescription of opioids by doctors than DEA enforcement.
This is a question of medical malpractice.
Which is already something you can sue for.
You can try to sue for it, but you're unlikely to win. See above.
That's why we have regulations of the medical profession, in addition to a legal system.
In a libertarian society, this would likely be handled through binding arbitration and/or liquidated damages. There would still be per-physician tracking of prescriptions, and consequences for physicians who appear to be at higher risk of damage awards.
In a Libertarian society, you wouldn't need a prescription to begin with. Nor could you sue doctors other than for fraud or lying.
That is unclear. Drug manufacturers would face liability, and they would be reluctant to sell to people without a clear medical need, as certified by a professional.
That is certainly incorrect. In a libertarian society, you still hire professionals and rely on their expertise and advice. If they give you bad advice, they are liable. If a doctor recommends the wrong drug, the doctor will be liable for that recommendation even if the drug is freely available.
"I have no idea"
Yes, this neatly summarizes the extent of your knowledge on this important subject. I would be curious to know what Medical School or graduate nursing school you graduated that could have possibly informed your blatantly ignorant opinion.
Well, this neatly summarizes the attitude of US medical professionals: credentialism, ad hominems, and no indication of any kind of understanding of the subject. It's people like you who hand out opioids like candy. With medical professionals like you, it's no wonder that Americans are fat, sick, and drug addicted.
Or retarded, as in your case.
I notice that you skipped over my assertion about your lack of knowledge however you might have gained it and skipped right to the credentialism thingie. Tacit admission that you really haven't studied the subject before posting your silly opinions.
I gained my expertise in several decades as a research scientist in statistics, big data, biology, and psychology. That means that, unlike medical professionals, I am actually qualified to comment on such matters. Thank you for asking.
That comment is incredibly silly and wrong-headed. Opioids are the most effective pain medicine for chronic pain. My wife would not be alive if she couldn't take them as needed to combat the pain of her rheumatoid arthritis. It's very sad that ignorant people like you who don't understand the first thing about pain have so much control over those who have to live with the excruciating pain your policies fail to treat.
You just described most people in positions to regulate things.
That is simply wrong.
Opioids can be used to control chronic pain in some patients (they also pose special risks in RA). But a drug that is unpredictably effective in a small percentage of patients and unpredictably causes harm in a large percentage of patients is not a good drug.
But despite your whining, opioids are not prohibited for chronic pain, they simply require a bit more care for prescribing. Yet, that safety measure is apparently just too much of a bother to you. Apparently, everybody else can just go to hell, right?
I have no control over anybody, I am simply worried about my family and relatives because pretty much every time they have significant pain, doctors try to give them opioids, at times even without telling them. But you don't care as long as you get your drugs, right?
That is simply wrong.
Setting aside the proper dose of skepticism regarding a government study that uses phrases like "silent epidemic," that paper doesn't say what you say it's saying.
Its logic for saying opioids aren't necessarily the best treatment for chronic pain (its empirical evidence being a presentation of the lack of empirical evidence - a sword that cuts both ways) is that the US prescribes a lot more opiates than other countries ergo other countries must have a better way of dealing with chronic pain.
But maybe they just don't.
The article rightly points out that opiates don't work for everybody - they don't work for me, for example - but I'd bet hard cash that the people they do nothing for don't get addicted to them.
The article suggests that in some cases something like physical therapy might be more desirable - i.e. addressing the underlying cause of the pain. But this is kind of a "well . . . obviously" moment. It's not unlike the Defund the Police argument that imagines a ready-made team of social workers who can skillfully deploy to prevent crime before they even happen.
The article is 100% correct that US doctors are way too quick to jump to prescribing drugs rather than treating underlying causes, but that's not specific to opiates. That's ADHD medication, anti-depressants, all kinds of things.
I have no control over anybody, I am simply worried about my family and relatives because pretty much every time they have significant pain, doctors try to give them opioids, at times even without telling them.
So mind your own family, then.
And it is also horseshit. I guarantee you that no doctor is trying to give NOYB2's family Opioids every time they have significant pain. They have not done this since 2010 for all the reasons highlighted in the article above.
Literally every time I or my family have been to the hospital in the last few years, we have been offered opioids. The problem isn't the initial use in the emergency room, the problem is that they just keep giving it to you long after.
We’re talking about the effectiveness of opioids for chronic pain here. In people who choose opioids for chronic pain, they do work very well initially, otherwise they wouldn't be using them in the first place.
But with long term use they develop tolerance and dependence. At that point, in many, the opioids “stop working” just like in you, and now they have a dependence or addiction to deal with in addition to their original pain.
This is a painfully ignorant comment. Opioids were prescribed for pain precisely because they are by far the most effective treatment available for pain. The point of this article, and several others, is that incidences of people receiving an opioid prescription and instantly becoming addicted and ruining their life are significantly overstated. And this scenario has been conflated (intentionally) with other types of drug abuse that in reality is, at best, tangentially related. Study after study purporting to demonstrate how addictive and dangerous opiates are to ordinary people suffer from fatal methodological problems. As the author points out, this is why even today, studies from 2010 continue to be cited as evidence. If your narrative were correct, it stands to reason that it would be confirmed by study after study after study. Why isn’t that the case?
Opioids *are* effective for pain in most people. Nor do they have a high rate of addiction when they are taken for pain, not for getting high. There is no *prescription* opioid epidemic. Opioid deaths from illicit opioids are climbing even as prescriptions have been dropping. In fact, fentanyl (which is apparently fairly easy to make) is being eclipsed by two even stronger street drugs hitting the market now that are not, as far as I can tell, ever been used on people. Amazing what modern chemistry can do.
No one, unless they are already an addictive personality that likes mind altering drugs to begin with, is going to come home addicted to anything from a few days in the hospital.
Nobody is disputing this. Giving opioids for acute pain in the hospital is perfectly fine and routinely done. The debate is about the effectiveness of opioids for chronic pain.
And as I pointed out above, that is a red herring. Whether the US has an opioid epidemic or not is not relevant to the question of whether doctors are overprescribing opioids. Even if opioids were completely legal, irresponsible usage by medical professionals would still be a problem.
There are also good studies that suggest that commercial drivers who take daily long-acting opioid analgesics for pain management or to prevent opioid "abuse" are at significantly higher risk of crashing.
That's not surprising. Every prescription bottle says *not* to drive or use heavy equipment when taking them. Whether the impairment is from alcohol, opioids, hallucinogens, or anything else that slows your reaction time significantly should not be on the road. That falls under legitimate wanton endangerment laws. We may have a long discussion about what level of impairment is significant, but there's no question that it is a legal issue.
And yet I am told frequently by providers who prescribe long-acting opioids for commercial drivers that it's safe for them to drive a twenty-ton tractor-trailer rig down the interstate at seventy miles per hour because they show no signs of impairment, and they haven't crashed yet. Demonstrating once again that having a license to practice doesn't ensure that you're scientifically informed or rational.
I agree. Yet you claim to be a "...doc", and you were asking for medical credentials in order to settle scientific questions.
Shady statistics are the backbone of the regime, the "science", regime media and academia.
Time for me again to post this humorous but accurate classic for anyone interested.
https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0393310728/reasonmagazinea-20/
The CDC also cited the same figure in 2016—although they prettied it up with colors—to justify new “guidelines” which have since been scaled back.
You know what else the CDC issued guidelines for, and subsequently scaled back?
And let's not forget the story of Opana, which was a safe and effective opioid used for pane management. After folks started illegally obtaining the drug and crushing pills to snort or inject, the FDA required the manufacturer to reformulate it so that wouldn't work. The manufacturer did so. And folks still continued to crush up pills to snort or inject -- so the FDA forced the drug from the market. Never mind all the folks who used the medication as directed under a doctor's care (like my wife) who now are forced to take pain medications that are not as effective.
And let us not forget that the war on pain medication has resulted in those patients becoming what I call "prisoners of war" because their doctors are limited in the dosages and quantities they can prescribe -- to the point that patients cannot even plan a trip out of town because they are unable to obtain their medication due to the fact that they can only get the exact number of pills for the exact number of days between appointments -- but never more than 30 days worth.
Oxymorphone has the same risk profile as other opioids, meaning addiction is a serious and common consequence of its use. And while brand name Opana has been withdrawn from the market, the active ingredient oxymorphone is still available.
Let's not forget that by requiring doctors to be more accountable for how they prescribe opioids, fewer people are getting addicted.
And more people are suffering from pain. Even if the restrictions you seem to favor are justified in some sense, you still need to show that they would improve things overall, and that requires consideration of people who can benefit from the medication as well as those who might suffer from addiction.
And people don't get addicted just because they were on opioids for some amount of time. Many (perhaps most) people will feel sick for a few days after stopping and then get on with their lives. Addiction is a pattern of behavior and is not the same thing as a chemical dependence that leads to withdrawal symptoms.
Maybe the FDA and DEA should stay out of it, let doctors make their best judgement and patients can sue if they are harmed.
And people have looked at that in extensive studies and found that opioids have a high risk of addiction and questionable effectiveness for chronic pain. That is why regulations have made it more difficult to use them for chronic pain.
The "best judgment of doctors" is clearly wrong; that is why so many patients become addicted from prescription opioids. The reason is simple: careful pain management takes time, and it's easier to just prescribe high dose opioids. American doctors have the wrong incentive structures, and on top of that, many are incompetent.
And another problem is that those lawsuits currently have been targeting the manufacturers because of incentives set up by the legal system, when they should be targeting the doctors.
But I agree: every patient that ends up addicted to opioids for conditions where opioids are not clearly beneficial should be able to recover a few million dollars in damages from their doctors. Overprescription would quickly end.
You’re literally citing “people” and “extensive studies.” You sound idiotic, not scientific. Why don’t you actually respond to the issues raised instead of pointing to vague generalizations without even an attempt to reference any type of authority.
Get a life and stop trolling a legitimate discussion about a serious issue.
If you think that I was "citing" anything, you obviously have never seen a citation.
The discussion here is highly unserious, starting with the fact that Reason and most of the faux libertarians here can't keep apart the war on drugs and the restrictions on prescription opioids. Your an idiot, and you're now muted because you obviously have nothing of substance to say.
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I don't know where you are that doctors are prescribing opioids willy-nilly. As far as I have seen underpresrcibing is more of an issue at this point. People who have been using them effectively for chronic pain for years are getting their doses cut based on one size fits all nonsense about what appropriate dosages are. Overprescribing may have been one factor in the present "epidemic", but it's really not the problem now. The problem now is that safer stuff is harder to get so people turn to what is cheap and availble.
Did you even bother reading this article before defecating your worthless opinions all over it? You wrote "fewer people are getting addicted". That is pure bullshit. More people are getting addicted to heroin and fentanyl because of your assholery. For example, my nephew who died of a fentanyl overdose last Saturday because his doctor wouldn't prescribe opioids for the debilitating lower back pain he suffered after injuring his back at work.
Well done article!
It has been known for years that US CDC was "cooking the books" in attempt to drive opioid pain relievers out of clinical practice. Last year, Larry Aubry and B Thomas Carr published "Overdose, opioid treatment admissions and prescription opioid pain reliever relationships: United States, 2010–2019" in the journal Frontiers in Pain Research. They demonstrated that there has been no cause and effect relationship between prescribing and either hospitalizations or deaths in which a prescription opioid has been a contributor -- since at least as far back as 2010! And CDC knew it when they published the 2016 prescribing guidelines.
An paper by Hawre Jalai, et al, “Changing dynamics of the drug overdose epidemic in the United States from 1979 through 2016”, published in Science in 2018 shows the same trends -- and was known to the DEA, which referenced it in a conference on drug diversion.
Taken in combination, these and many other papers demonstrate that US CDC deliberately and with knowledge of what they were doing, sought to deny opioid therapy to people in agony. This campaign is at the very least criminal fraud. Writers of the CDC opioid guidelines of 2016 and 2022 might reasonably be prosecuted as contributors to thousands of cases of negligent homicide among patients arbitrarily denied access to safe and effective pain relievers.
I have never quite understood the weird stance that Reason Magazine takes on drug addiction. My libertarian tendencies feel that most if not all drugs should be legal and that includes prescription drugs, but Reason acts as if there is not a real crisis in regards to Opioids in the country. It does not take a giant government study to notice that we have a huge segment of our fellow citizens hooked on heroin or oxy or fentanyl and now some mixture called "Tranc" This crisis does coincide with Pharma's big push on these types of drugs. Once the cat is out of the bag, putting it back in is not going to help. Something needs to be done, yet Reason walks around shouting,"Nothing to see here..move along!"
And a lot of the overprescribing was driven by earlier government policy promoting more treatment for pain.
The opioid crisis, such as it is, is happening in the context of prohibition and heavy restrictions on prescribing the drugs. So clearly that isn't working.
As with most things, the appropriate libertarian answer is more personal responsibility for the consequences of one's actions.
In a medical setting, it is the doctors that need to be held accountable. I have had doctors push opioid pain killers on both myself and my family for conditions that clearly did not warrant it and were easily controlled with non-opioid painkillers. That is severe medical malpractice and should be treated as such in terms of medical liability. Most patients are not in a position to make those decisions; that's what they see a doctor for.
That is severe medical malpractice and should be treated as such in terms of medical liability.
Why can't you do so now? Seriously asking - you seem very convinced that you can't, and there may be something I'm unaware of.
I tried to answer that above: proving responsibility of an individual doctor is particularly hard for opioids, people whose lives have been destroyed by opioids generally don't have it together enough to sue, and even in other cases, the statistics for legal remedies for medical errors are grim.
Look, I'm not making this out to be an apocalyptic problem, I'm just saying that Reason is barking up the wrong tree. Opioids are just one of many problems with the US medical system. I'm just saying that regulations of the medical use of opioids is perfectly reasonable given the risk that these drugs pose and given how we regulate drugs in general.
It's odd that you link heroin and fentanyl, which aren't commonly prescribed medications, with oxy, which is. Almost like a straw man argument.
You’re missing the entire point. Addiction to fentanyl, heroin, etc are serious problems. They just have essentially no connection to prescription opioids (other than the fact that US policy towards opioids has created the fentanyl crisis). But from a causal perspective, the connection just isn’t there. Read the studies for yourself. The government has conflated the two in order to push a narrative. Period. And it’s morally reprehensible.
”Nothing to see here..move along!”
The bad news: you really really need to work on your reading comprehension.
The good news: there's nowhere to go but up.
The various versions of "the war on drugs" have generally been politically motivated rather than "good health policy" motivated. It is never particularly difficult for an intelligent ideologue to skew data in order to justify a pre-conceived position regardless of what truths might e hidden in the data. The same is as true for Aaron Brown, the author of this article as for the authors of the studies he cites.
Reason.com has the bias that almost anything that the government attempts to do is faulty & we should return to the Laissez Faire policies of the 1890s as soon as possible in order to "fix the mess."
However, in the case of the iteration of the "war on drugs" focused on opioids, we should go back to the source:
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2017/06/16/533060031/doctor-who-wrote-1980-letter-on-painkillers-regrets-that-it-fed-the-opioid-crisi#:~:text=TED%20Radio%20Hour-,Sloppy%20Citations%20of%201980%20Letter%20Led%20To%20Opioid%20Epidemic%2C%20Researchers,term%20opioid%20use%20was%20safe.
Describes the regrets of Dr. Hershel Jick, who claims to have written the letter to the NEJoM in 1980 which was then used by companies s.a. Purdue Pharma to promote the sale of opioid prescriptions.
As was promoted by Goldman Sachs in a letter to investors in 2018
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/04/11/goldman-asks-is-curing-patients-a-sustainable-business-model.html
There is no profit in curing patients. Which pretty much sums up our system of medicine for profit. When the demand is essentially infinite (how much are you willing to pay to not die?), the provider can name their price. Our pharmaceutical industry knows that having customers who are addicted to your product is far more profitable than curing patients.
This isn't just the pharmaceutical industry. Giving patients lots of opioids, instead of proper pain management, makes life a lot easier for doctors and nurses, and saves money for hospitals.
"Proper pain management"? Exactly what is that? Quack meditations like "put your pain on a bus and wave bye-bye"?
Central nervous system depressants are proper pain management for many problems.
There are plenty of non-opioid options for pain management. You should inform yourself.
But like most Americans, you want a quick fix. It's why Americans are so much fatter, more diabetic, and drug addicted than other nations.
For short term, severe pain, they are. For chronic pain, they usually are not.
They've pretty well admitted now that Tylenol is useless. Naproxen and aspirin are hard on the liver. What other options are you claiming work as well or better than opioids for severe chronic pain? Specifics and references please.
This is the problem: Sometimes NOYB2 is right. Sometimes he is wrong. For some people Opioids are next to useless, for others they are great, and for many others, Opioids are an addiction waiting to happen.
But rather than trust people to make up their own minds, maybe make some mistakes, and ultimately be responsible for their own fate, NOYB2 thinks that here- for this one thing- people cannot be trusted to manage their own house. That millions of people denied managed care from their doctor turn to illegal drugs to their detriment doesn't matter to NOYB2- the fact that someone is "addicted' is all he needs to hear to condemn every person who might get use out of a drug.
Nobody knows whether they will end up with long term pain relief or pain and addiction ahead of time. How are you "going to make up your mind"? All you can do is to take the gamble, but...
Medical costs are socialized in the US. When you make a mistake, others are forced to pay for it. That is at the root of why hospitals and doctors are so careless in the first place: neither they nor their patients are responsible for the consequences of their choices.
The way “people manage their own house” is that they rely on professionals in areas where they aren’t experts. When professionals frequently give bad advice, there is a policy or legal issue.
And I’m simply pointing out that the premises and reasoning in this article and among libertarians on this issue are bullshit.
Neither you nor this article are arguing for the libertarian position, which would be fully privatized healthcare with price signals taking the place of regulations. Instead, you argue for deregulation in the presence of socialized medicine, which is nothing but adolescent left wing nonsense.
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Something still ignored how many suicides by any cause are people who've had their pain meds cut off? Suicides going up was around the same time as focusing the war on drugs against legit patients.
Who has had their pain meds "cut off"? Opioid prescriptions for chronic pain are perfectly legal, and the idea that you can't get opioids for legitimate medical reasons is ludicrously out of touch with reality.
Quite a few have had their meds severely tapered or even cut off due to the threats that the FDA and DEA were throwing around. Now confined to bed by intractable pain or forced to go to the black market getting who knows what just so they can move around. And more than a few have committed suicide because they can't deal with the pain. CDC's "recommendation" for the 90MME was even put into law by several states and the VA before they backpedaled and said they didn't mean that to actually be a formal limit. But none of those laws or limits have been repealed even though the CDC took back their recommendations.
"Opioid prescriptions for chronic pain are perfectly legal, and the idea that you can’t get opioids for legitimate medical reasons is ludicrously out of touch with reality."
This just shows how uncredible you are on anything related to this subject. From your claim that all your family is offered drugs like candy from their doctor to this nonsense that it is a myth that people get "cut off", we see that in fact NOYB2 is talking out of his ass about fantasies in his mind.
For the record, Doctors who prescribe Opioids are put in national databases, and their prescription histories are monitored by the federal government. A person who loses their bottle of pills, or messes up their intake, or doesn't check in with their doctor at the right time, or myriad other reasons is *in fact* in danger of getting cut off. And the doctor who is not extraordinarily strict in enforcing these rules is in danger of being fucked by the federal government with a sideways prohibition rake.
First off, STATE LAWS VARY plus there is federal law. IN Florida you need a specialist in pain management. Average doctors no longer prescribe any of a VERY long list of narcotic related drugs.
My brother had pancreatic cancer. His Rx was limited to 30 days. He had to physically visit the doctor every 30 days even though terminal. That Doctor was a total ass and impossible to feel comfortable around.
The cost of the medicines without any insurance was insanely high, Because his Rx was MONTHLY the pharmacies could not order in advance and it was nearly impossible to have an Rx filled at all for his pain meds. Sometimes he had to go without because of supply chain restrictions.
The Doctor visit was over $300 per month and that was almost 7 years ago.
The system is actually broken altogether, so don't tell me how available these drugs are now and that someone who needs them will get them at all. When a terminal patient needs them and has to go through what he went through the system is destructing.
Here is an article in Reason, that links to many others, showing some of the myriad ways patients are forced to jump through hoops to access pain medication. It is absolutely insane.
https://reason.com/2023/02/14/we-need-new-laws-to-protect-people-in-pain/
My wife had emergency surgery and was in acute pain. Her doctor prescribed pain pills and I went to the pharmacy with the prescription. In order to fulfill that prescription, they had to call the doctor after hours to get verbal approval. And then I had to sit at the CVS for an extra hour (all while my wife was sitting home in agony) because all opioids are locked in a safe with a one our time-lock. That's just one little point of friction among many others that are added onto pain medication.
This is why NOYB2's stories of Doctors handing out opioids like candy is so absurd. Doctors, patients and other providers must jump through dozens of hoops to legitimately prescribe and use pain pills- and one wrong step can mean delay, or denial, or even prosecution.
Yes, and for long term opioid use, that is a reasonable policy.
And in a libertarian society, they would be "fucked sideways" by insurance companies.
One of the biggest issues is the lack of actual statistical review in peer reviewed publications.
My Brother is a statistician and we have discussed MANY peer reviewed articles that anyone with mathematical knowledge and understanding of the rules in developing statistics can prove that the "researcher" actually had a predefined result in mind and directed the numbers to that result.
Sometimes even the rules of exclusion in a study are designed to create a specific result. Instead of allowing these kinds of things to happen we need actual peer reviews that look for design of experiment issues and predetermined (planned) results in methods.
Two things need to happen when it can be shown that a researcher consciously or even unconsciously created desired results.
1. The paper needs to be removed from circulation
2. The researcher needs to be cut from all future funding forever.
The big issue is that people have accepted a lie that you can use The Science! (tm) to tell you what is right or wrong. Whether some people abuse drugs or not does not make prohibition right or wrong. That adding a bunch of friction might reduce some level of abuse doesn't say whether it is acceptable to force that friction on people who wouldn't abuse the drugs.
I agree with you that there is a lot of scientific malpractice out there. But this wouldn't be a problem if people didn't constantly use The Science! (tm) as a substitute for clear moral thinking. A single study has the power to drive massive legislation or regulation that impacts tens or hundreds of millions of people: that is an incentive for more statistical malpractice and bias.
If people used science as a tool to inform their personal decisions and solve discreet problems, the incentive to pervert science with bias would not be nearly as substantial, and it would lead to much better outcomes for humanity.
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The US currently has socialized medicine. That is, if you make bad health choices and become indigent, the government “fucks everybody sideways with a rake” in order to pay for your medical care. And since such a system doesn’t have price signals, government regulations need to be used as a poor substitute, and it uses whatever government scientists tell it to.
I wish it wasn’t so. I wish we had fully private medical insurance and healthcare. That way, people would be getting price signals in response to their bad choices and many problems could be avoided.
But “I want to make my own medical decisions” in the context of socialized medical costs is a literal pipe dream, the kind of nonsense addicts dream up in their opium dens. No society can function that way. Either regulations or price signals, take your pick.
Thank you for writing about the reality of what has happened to the people in the US because of the war on drugs. Now that it has been taken to the doctors office, patients are grossly undertreated for pain. It is a shame what has been done to doctors and patients alike, because of the incorrect data and "facts" presented to everyone in this country. Sanity has left and zealotry and bigotry taken over. Pain medications do work for many people's chronic pain, yet doctors are no longer allowed to prescribe them. Many people have taken their lives because of untreated pain. That should never happen in a country like ours. That people die because others think they are helping the 'opioid crises' by keeping pain medications from being prescribed. They die because all they know is pain, and a simple, effective medication helped them but is no longer prescribed for them to take. How is that considered better by anyone's standards? People die because they no longer can access pain medications, they kill themselves. Who benefits from that?
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