Revised CDC Opioid Guideline a ‘Band Aid for a Stab Wound’
/By Emily Ullrich, Guest Columnist
After years of state sanctioned torture, people in pain have finally received a small reprieve from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in the form of a revised draft of the agency’s opioid prescribing guideline.
In the new draft, the CDC acknowledges some of the harm inflicted by its 2016 guideline, by adding language that gives doctors more flexibility in prescribing opioids and encourages them to practice “individualized patient centered care.”
While this perspective is a welcome departure from the original guideline, we need to go further. As a disabled chronically ill patient, I have personally experienced the stigma and misinformation that comes with being prescribed opioids. As a patient advocate, I’ve also watched in horror as an untold number of suffering patients deprived of opioids committed suicide.
There are four main issues that still need to be addressed by the CDC. The first is that many patients on long-term opioid therapy have rare diseases such as Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. Because these and other incurable illnesses aren’t even mentioned in the guideline, it is assumed that most pain patients have treatable conditions such as low back pain or acute injuries that will improve with time. This is not the case. There is a large segment of the patient population that cannot be cured. For them, symptom management with opioid medication is their only option.
Second, it’s important to emphasize that all patients are different. Individual factors like genetics, metabolism, tolerance and more can determine how opioids affect a patient. A dose that may be “a lot” for one patient might be very ineffective and too low a dose for others.
Third, because of the harms that have been imposed upon pain patients, it is extremely important that providers be advised to treat them with compassion and respect. Stigma, shame and puritanical morals-based thinking that paints people with pain as having “character flaws” only inflicts more harm and makes it more difficult for them to get help.
Finally, although the CDC has abandoned its previous recommendation that daily opioid doses not exceed 90 morphine milligram equivalents (MME), I can't help but notice new language in the guideline draft that cautions doctors about exceeding 50 MME, a dose that is low for many patients. I fear that 50 MME will be taken above all the other verbiage of the 2022 guideline and be enforced as the new hard limit.
The revised guideline is a small step in the right direction, but patients need more than a band aid for a stab wound.
Emily Ullrich lives with CRPS, Sphincter of Oddi Dysfunction, Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, endometriosis, Interstitial Cystitis, migraine, fibromyalgia, osteoarthritis and chronic pancreatitis.