Docs Say More Drugs, Clean Needles Needed

needle

Fatal opioid overdoses jumped 42% across the nation during the COVID-19 lockdown. The nation’s leading organization for doctors thinks it knows how to solve the problem. Though some folks might have a hard time understanding their reasoning. They say the answer is easier access to prescription pain medication and the distribution of clean needles.

In a statement, the American Medical Association said, ” The AMA is greatly concerned by an increasing number of reports from national, state and local media suggesting increases in opioid-related mortality—particularly from illicitly manufactured fentanyl and fentanyl analogs.”

Forty out of fifty states reported a spike in opioid-related deaths. Medical professionals worried that the isolation caused by COVID-19 could worsen addiction and mental health problems.

The AMA said it was happy that the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) loosened the rules for providing buprenorphine and methadone to patients with opioid use disorder.  They’re also happy that states like Ohio loosened their telehealth rules to allow patients to be evaluated virtually.

But they still want more changes. The AMA is calling for states to remove regulations about dose, quantity, and refills on controlled substances prescribed for pain medication.

Opioid Prescription Regulations

Back in 2017, Ohio instituted these guidelines:

Safety Checkpoints

Ohio added additional prescribing guidelines for pain medication back in the fall of 2018. These rules were designed to combat the over-prescription of drugs by so-called “pill mills” and to offer guidelines to prevent well-meaning doctors from overprescribing.

Under the current rules in Ohio, doctors must re-evaluate patient opioid use at safety checkpoints.

The AMA also called on states to remove all barriers to sterile syringe and needle distribution programs.  While many say programs that distribute clean needles to drug addicts help prevent the spread of HIV and hepatitis C, results have been mixed.  Charleston, West Virginia shut down their needle exchange due to numerous problems.

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