Frieden to Resign as CDC Director
/By Pat Anson, Editor
Dr. Thomas Frieden, who has headed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for nearly eight years and played a pivotal role in the agency’s opioid prescribing guidelines, plans to submit his resignation on January 20, the day of President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration.
Frieden disclosed his plans in a year-end interview with Reuters. The former New York City health commissioner did not say what he planned to do next.
Frieden’s resignation is not surprising, as incoming administrations usually do not retain the heads of federal agencies, most of whom are political appointees. Food and Drug Commissioner Robert Califf, MD, who has only been in office for 10 months, has not been contacted by the Trump transition team and is also expected to be replaced, according to The Washington Post.
President-elect Trump has not yet said who his nominee will be to succeed Califf or who he will appoint to replace Frieden.
Frieden has an extensive background in epidemiology and infectious diseases, and his tenure at the CDC was marked by major efforts to combat outbreaks of the Ebola virus, fungal meningitis, influenza and the Zika virus. He also doggedly pursued a controversial campaign to put prescribing limits on opioid pain medication, an area traditionally overseen by the FDA.
“One of the most heartbreaking problems I’ve faced as CDC director is our nation’s opioid crisis,” Frieden recently wrote in a commentary published by Fox News.
“This crisis was caused, in large part, by decades of prescribing too many opioids for too many conditions where they provide minimal benefit and is now made worse by wide availability of cheap, potent, and easily available illegal opioids: heroin, illicitly made fentanyl, and other, newer illicit synthetic opioids. These deadly drugs have found a ready market in people primed for addiction by misuse of prescription opioids.”
But Frieden’s campaign to rein in opioid prescribing has failed to slow the soaring number of overdose deaths, which continued to rise throughout his tenure at CDC, killing 52,000 Americans last year alone.
His repeated claim that the use of prescription opioids by legitimate patients is “intertwined” with the overdose epidemic is also not supported by facts. Only a small percentage of pain patients become addicted to opioid medication or graduate to heroin and other illegal street drugs.
Yet Frieden remains a staunch supporter of the CDC guidelines, calling them an “excellent starting point” to prevent opioid abuse, even though the guidelines themselves state they are based on scientific evidence that is "low in quality."
“There are safer drugs and treatment approaches that can control pain as well or better than opioids for the vast majority of patients. We must reduce the number of Americans exposed to opioids for the first time, especially for conditions where the risks of opioids outweigh the benefits,” Frieden wrote.
“We must not forget what got us here in the first place. Doctors’ prudent use of the prescription pad and renewed commitment to treat pain more safely and effectively based on what we know now about opioids—as well as healthy awareness of the risks and benefits among patients prescribed these drugs—can change the path of the opioid epidemic.”
Frieden undoubtedly had good intentions, but his agency repeatedly showed a penchant for arrogance and contempt for the public while drafting the guidelines. The CDC held no public hearings, and secretly consulted with addiction treatment specialists and special interest groups, but few pain patients or pain physicians.
The CDC finally unveiled the guidelines publicly in September 2015 to a select online audience. The agency didn’t make the guidelines available on its website or in any public form outside of the webinar, and allowed for only a 48-hour comment period. Only when faced with the threat of lawsuits and growing ridicule from patients, physicians and other federal agencies, did the agency reverse course and delay the guidelines for several months. They were released virtually unchanged in March 2016.
Although “voluntary” and meant only for primary care physicians, the guidelines have been widely adopted by pain specialists and other prescribers, and have even become law in several states. This was always the goal of the CDC.
Within a few months of their release, an online survey of nearly 2,000 pain patients found that over two-thirds had their opioid medication reduced or stopped by their doctors. Over half said they had contemplated suicide.
There have been anecdotal reports of suicides increasing in the pain community. A recent story we did about the suicide of a Vermont man who was cut off from opioids and abandoned by his doctor provoked quite a response from readers.
“This situation has got to be stopped before any more people commit suicide to escape the pain. I also suffer from chronic pain and my medications have been cut back so far they no longer work worth a damn,” Michael wrote to us.
“I'm facing the very same thing right now. I'm in utter agony,” said LadyV. “In my doctor’s office I was told I have to reduce you, wean you off. I through no fault of my own suffered a horrible spinal injury and now no one cares.”
“When I was forcibly weaned off my pain meds last spring, due to the push by the DEA and CDC, I wrote a letter to the White House,” wrote Judith Metzger. “I mentioned a need for them to be watching suicide statistics related to uncontrolled chronic pain. There was never any mention that I was suicidal. Still, I got several calls from a suicide crisis team in DC! Reading this tragic story makes it clear that my prediction was sadly correct. When will they ever listen?”
In his commentary for Fox News, Frieden said it was “important that we look upstream and prevent opioid use disorder in the first place.”
In his final weeks at the CDC, now may be a good time for Frieden to look downstream at the havoc his prescribing guidelines have created.