Arthritis Pain Varies Widely Across States

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

People living in West Virginia are three times more likely to have moderate or severe joint pain from arthritis than those in Minnesota, according to a comprehensive new study that highlights how disparities in education and access to social services contribute to chronic pain.

“Very little research has examined the geography of chronic pain, and virtually none has examined the role of state-level policies in shaping pain prevalence,” says co-author Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk, PhD, an associate professor of sociology at the University of Buffalo. “We were excited to identify state characteristics that reduce residents’ risk of pain.”

Grol-Prokopczyk and her colleagues looked at data for over 400,000 adults who participated in the 2017 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, along with data from all 50 states on social assistance and anti-poverty programs such as the Earned Income Tax Credit, Medicaid and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), more commonly known as food stamps.

Their findings, published in the journal PAIN,  show the risk of joint pain was significantly higher in states in Appalachia, the Mississippi Valley and the South, compared to states in the Upper Midwest and West.

Nearly one in four adults in West Virginia (23.1%), Alabama (21.6%) and Arkansas (21.4%) had moderate to severe joint pain. States with the lowest risk of joint pain are Minnesota (6.9%), Hawaii (7.5%) and Utah (7.7%).

SOURCE: PAIN

Digging deeper into the data, researchers found that educational disparities are also associated with pain frequency. People who did not complete high school in West Virginia (31.1%), Arkansas (29.7%) and Alabama (28.3%) were far more likely to have joint pain compared to those with bachelor degrees in California (8.8%), Nevada (9.8%) and Utah (10.1%).

People with less education are more likely to have blue-collar jobs requiring manual labor that may contribute to joint pain. They also have lower incomes and less access to healthcare.

“Education can function as a ‘personal firewall’ that protects more highly educated people from undesirable state-level contexts, while increasing the vulnerability of less educated individuals,” said first author Rui Huang, a sociology PhD student in the UB College of Arts and Sciences.

Researchers also found that states with higher levels of SNAP benefits, social support and community health services had lower levels of pain frequency.

“The increase in the generosity of SNAP benefits could potentially alleviate pain by promoting healthier eating habits and alleviating the life stress associated with food insecurity,” says Huang. “Social factors such as conflict, isolation and devaluation are also among the ‘social threats’ that can lead to physical reactions such as inflammation and immune system changes.”

Previous studies at the University of Buffalo have found that gender, poverty and education play a role in pain frequency and that the overall prevalence of pain is increasing in the United States, affecting virtually every age group, sex, ethnicity and demographic.

Federal Judge Rejects Opioid ‘Public Nuisance’ Claims

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

A federal judge in West Virginia has ruled that three major drug distributors did not fuel the opioid epidemic by shipping excessive amounts of opioid pain medication to pharmacies in Cabell County and the City of Huntington. According to one estimate, about 10% of people in the county are addicted to opioids.

“The opioid crisis has taken a considerable toll on the citizens of Cabell County and the City of Huntington. And while there is a natural tendency to assign blame in such cases, they must be decided not based on sympathy, but on the facts and the law,” Judge David Faber wrote in his 184-page ruling, which rejected claims that AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health and McKesson State acted in a way that made them a “public nuisance” under state law.

“To apply the law of public nuisance to the sale, marketing and distribution of products would invite litigation against any product with a known risk of harm, regardless of the benefits conferred on the public from proper use of the product,” the judge said. “The economic harm and social costs associated with these new causes of action are difficult to measure but would obviously be extensive. If suits of this nature were permitted any product that involves a risk of harm would be open to suit under a public nuisance theory regardless of whether the product were misused or mishandled.”

Judge Faber is the first federal judge to reject public nuisance claims in opioid litigation. State judges in California and Oklahoma made similar rulings last year.

The three drug distributors had previously agreed to multi-billion dollar settlements with dozens of states, but Cabell County chose not to be a part of those agreements, as did other counties in West Virginia, which has long been considered “ground zero” of the opioid epidemic.

“This case was always about holding these distributors accountable and providing our doctors, nurses, counselors, first responders and social workers with some of the resources needed to combat the opioid crisis. These companies were part of a powerful industry responsible for fueling the epidemic here in Huntington and across the country,” Huntington Mayor Steve Williams said in a statement.

Judge Faber acknowledged that prescription opioids were a “significant cause of drug overdose deaths” in Huntington and Cabell County. But he said the city and county failed to prove that drug distributors acted unlawfully or that the amount of opioids they shipped to pharmacies was unreasonable.

The three companies supplied retail pharmacies in Cabell County with over 51 million hydrocodone and oxycodone pills over an eight-year period. That works out to 67 pills annually for every man, woman and child in the county. It would be a month’s supply for a typical chronic pain patient, who might be prescribed 2 to 3 pills a day, depending on the dose and type of opioid.

“The volume of prescription opioids in Cabell/Huntington was determined by the good faith prescribing decisions of doctors in accordance with established medical standards,” Faber said. “Defendants shipped prescription opioid pills to licensed pharmacies so patients could access the medication they were prescribed.”

Public Health Problems   

Judge Faber also pointed out the poor state of public health in West Virginia, which has high rates of disability, arthritis, cancer, obesity and other health conditions that contribute to pain.

“The West Virginia population is relatively older and has relatively higher levels of obesity as well as a higher than average number of disabled persons, all of which tend to generate more needs for pain treatment,” Faber wrote. “Manual and physical labor is a significant component of the West Virginia economy and tends to generate more needs for pain treatment.”

In 2018, West Virginia became one of the first states in the country to impose hard limits on opioid prescribing, limiting first-time opioid prescriptions to 7 days’ supply and requiring refilled opioid prescriptions to be limited to 30 days’ supply.  

Sixty-four weeks after the law was adopted, opioid prescriptions overall dropped by 22% in West Virginia, similar to how prescribing trends have changed nationally.  The reduced prescribing, however, has failed to reduce drug overdoses, which have risen to record levels.

According to a new CDC database, West Virginia has the second highest overdose rate in the country and leads the nation in drug deaths involving illicit fentanyl, prescription opioids, stimulants and methamphetamine. In 2020, only 5.2% of the overdose deaths in West Virginia involved a patient being treated for pain.   

Prescription Opioid Use Fell Nearly 7% in 2021

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Prescription opioid use in the United States fell by 6.9% in 2021, the tenth consecutive year the volume of opioid pain medication has declined, according to a new report by the IQVIA Institute, a healthcare data tracking firm.

The decline in opioid consumption came even as prescription drug use overall reached record levels in 2021, fueled in part by new COVID-19 vaccines and therapeutics. Spending on medicines rose 12% to $407 billion last year, according to IQVIA, with 194 billion doses of medication dispensed.

While longer opioid prescriptions were written in the early stages of the pandemic to accommodate patients who didn’t see their doctors as often, prescribing quickly returned to its decade-long downward trend.

“Prescription opioid use has fallen by 48% over the past five years and is now at levels last seen in 2000, reflecting efforts by many stakeholders to limit and manage appropriate prescription opioid use,” IQVIA said in its annual report on medicines in the U.S.      

IQVIA tracks opioid prescriptions in morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs). The company estimates that per capita opioid use fell to 309 MME last year (about 0.84 MME per day), down from a peak of nearly 800 MME in 2011.

Some providers have reduced their opioid prescribing more than others. Since 2016, surgeons, anesthesiologists, dentists and general practitioners have cut their opioid prescribing by over 50 percent, while nurse practitioners and physician assistants have reduced their prescribing by 27 percent.

Prescription Opioid Use and by Prescriber Specialty

Opioid consumption by Americans has fallen so sharply in recent years that Canada, Australia and several European countries have overtaken the U.S. and become the highest consumers of opioid medication. A recent study ranks the U.S. as 8th globally in per capita opioid sales.

The decline in U.S. opioid prescribing has failed to stop the surge in overdoses. The CDC estimates that 106,854 people died from drug overdoses in the 12-month period ending November 2021, with drug deaths more than doubling in the last six years. Synthetic opioids – primarily illicit fentanyl – were involved in about two-thirds of fatal overdoses in the past year.

Patients Blamed for Diversion 

Despite the historic decline in prescription opioid use, some politicians continue to blame opioid medication, prescribers and even patients for the nation’s overdose epidemic.

In comments recently submitted to the CDC on its revised opioid guideline, West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and 10 other state attorneys general said the agency needs to do more to prevent the diversion of prescription opioids.

“Diversion must remain a key consideration of any prescribing guideline,” said Morrisey.

“Although drug dealers and unethical physicians are responsible for much of the opioid diversion nationwide, legitimate prescriptions remain a prime source of diversion, too. Diverted opioids most commonly reach drug abusers through friends and family members who filled a legitimate prescription.

The amount of opioids prescribed in recent years has been excessive and far beyond the amount necessary to support legitimate medical need.
— Patrick Morrisey, West Virginia Attorney General

“Indeed, the amount of opioids prescribed in recent years has been excessive and far beyond the amount necessary to support legitimate medical need. And over-prescription allows legitimate prescriptions to fall into the hands of patients’ family and friends.”

How common is it for prescription opioids to be diverted? Not common at all, according to the DEA’s National Drug Threat Assessment, an annual report that estimates less than 1% of legally prescribed opioids are diverted.  “The number of opioid dosage units available on the retail market and opioid thefts and losses reached their lowest levels in nine years,” the DEA’s 2020 report found.

Despite this, Morrisey puts the onus on pain patients to prove that they’re not abusing or selling their prescriptions. He and the other attorneys general called for routine drug testing of pain patients – rejecting evidence that fraud is common is the drug testing industry and that widely used point-of-care urine tests often give false results that lead to patient abandonment.

“The given reasons that toxicology screenings might lead to ‘stigmatization,’ encourage ‘inappropriate termination from care,’ or be ‘misinterpreted’ are unsatisfactory,” Morrisey wrote. “First, what stigma would the patient face? Diagnostic results are private information. The only people who would know that the test is performed are the patient and the prescriber. The prescriber is already familiar with the patient’s prescriptions, so this process would not reveal any new information -- unless, of course, the patient had lied or not followed the prescriber’s directions.”

Remarkably, the 7-page letter from Morrisey never acknowledges that most drug deaths involve street drugs, not prescription opioids, and makes no mention of fentanyl. The most recent overdose data from West Virginia – Morrisey’s home state – indicates nearly 3 out of 4 drug deaths involve fentanyl.    

Morrisey’s letter was co-signed by the attorneys general of Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, Mississippi,
Nebraska, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, Kentucky and Virginia.

I’m a POW in the Opioid Crisis

By Douglas Hughes, Guest Columnist

If you can hear the muffled sound of champagne being uncorked by lawmakers viewing my image, it’s no mistake. They have ignored my cries for help for a number of years, along with those of millions of other intractable pain sufferers.

I am 69 years old and have lost over forty pounds since August 2018. I am 6’2” and weigh 139 pounds, less than I did in eighth grade.

I cannot get anyone to care for me medically. I eat all the time, something else is wrong.  I had to change my primary care provider just to get a simple eye exam, the kind you do in a hallway. When tested, I could only see the top "E" with one eye. I had rapid-advancing cataracts.  

My picture is reality!  We have been so stigmatized and basic medical treatment denied to us, while the opioid pain therapies which kept us alive were abruptly taken away to profit from our deaths. 

Does my image impart distress? If not, you may hold the fortitude and inhumanity required for public office today. In West Virginia, elected officials still believe the opioid crisis is a due to a single drug -- prescription opioids -- diverted from a single source: pain clinics.

DOUGLAS HUGHES

DOUGLAS HUGHES

We have done nothing morally or legally wrong to deserve the horrendous lack of basic civility that you would show a wretched animal. I frequently relate my desire to be treated as a dog. Not in humor, but for the compassion that a dog would get if it was suffering like I am. 

The federal government has gone to extraordinary measures to brutalize the functionally disabled for personal enrichment and fiduciary windfall for programs like Medicare, Veterans Affairs, Workers Compensation, Medicaid, private retirements plans and others.

The largest windfall is to health insurance companies, which reap immense savings by curtailing the lingering lives of their most costly beneficiaries, the elderly and disabled. 

You May Be Next

Since the Vietnam War, there have been many advances in emergency medicine. More people are saved each year, yet left in constant pain. In the blink of an eye, you could become one. A car wreck, botched surgery or numerous health conditions can leave you with chronic or intractable pain.  

My image is a warning. I didn’t become the person you see until the government intervened in the pain treatment I was getting for 25 years. This was under the guise of a well-orchestrated effort by many state and federal agencies. 

The Drug Enforcement Administration has been the most prolific in this coordinated, decades-long effort.  In 2005, I witnessed them investigate and close a pain clinic where I was a patient.

My doctor was at the top of his field, a diagnostic virtuoso of complicated pain conditions.  He himself suffered from one pain condition of which I was aware.  No drug seeker could ever pass themselves off as a legitimate pain sufferer in his practice, yet he was harassed and forced to close because of assumptions of opioid overprescribing asserted by medically untrained law enforcement.      

It was my great fortune to have him diagnose the crushing injury in my torso and hips after twelve years of suffering.  He and two other pain specialists said I was “one of the most miserable cases” they had ever seen.

The loss of this and other outstanding professionals has repercussions even today. New doctors being trained are misled to believe the doctor-patient relationship is nonexistent. It was sacrificed to special interest greed and the conflagration of a drug crisis that will never end until that relationship is restored.

How easily has the public been misled to believe all physicians became irresponsible at the same time by treating pain conditions incorrectly with opioids? Now we have law enforcement dictating what pain treatment is appropriate. It is nonsensical at best and unimaginably inhumane at its heart.

My picture is the culmination of this government-standardized pain treatment and its consequences.  If heed is not taken immediately by the medical profession, lawmakers and society at large, you may be next to choose between suicide or emaciation.

Killing functionally disabled intractable pain sufferers like me, or non-responsive elderly in hospitals, will not stop opioid addiction, drug diversion or overdose deaths. It will however leave you a skeleton, praying for help like a prisoner of war.

Only the hearts of tyrants and fools see anything redeeming in that.

Douglas Hughes is a disabled coal miner and retired environmental permit writer in West Virginia. He recently ended his candidacy for governor due to health issues.

PNN invites other readers to share their stories. Send them to editor@painnewsnetwork.org.

How West Virginia Became the Epicenter of the Opioid Crisis

By Douglas Hughes, Guest Columnist 

Aggressive promotion by the distributors of OxyContin, the best pain medication ever formulated (when properly used), led to excessive prescribing by West Virginia doctors. 

This caused a methamphetamine drug problem in the state to morph into a prescription opioid epidemic, mostly due to unused opioids squirreled away in medicine cabinets.  Adolescents ignored by their guardians had complementary party favors of these excess opioids. This is why so many families were affected. 

After a few years of this, once the addiction problems were exposed, the excess prescribing stopped. Those desiring to misuse OxyContin went to pain clinics and lied to receive more.  Since we don’t have tachometers on our foreheads to gauge real subjective pain, lying to doctors was effective for many to get drugs to abuse.  

Not wanting to assist pain specialists and willing to deny legitimate intractable pain treatment, the West Virginia legislature passed the “Chronic Pain Clinic Licensing Act.”

When implemented on January 1, 2015, the goal to deny licenses to a dozen new and existing pain clinics was achieved. This left only pills being hoarded in medicine cabinets, which were quickly depleted.  

OxyContin distribution was suspended to pharmacies in most of West Virginia in 2015. 

These two efforts stopped most OxyContin prescribing and decimated legitimate disabled intractable pain sufferers in West Virginia, the state with the highest incidence of industrial and worker compensation injury cases. 

For the sake of argument, let’s estimate pain clinic patients were 50% legitimate pain sufferers and 50% abusers lying in order to get opioids.  Each of those twelve pain clinic closures turned a thousand or more patients onto the streets.  Some wanted to abuse, while others desperately sought to replace critical pain treatment denied to them by state law.  Some turned to street drugs as their answer. 

In 2015, West Virginia police departments reported that pain pills seized from drug arrests fell a remarkable 89 percent. The opioid crisis was shifting rapidly to heroin, as the drug sub-culture always does when a drug source changes. The prescription opioid epidemic in West Virginia essentially ended in 2015.  There was no memo from the CDC.

Those thousands of good and bad patients from pain clinics were both naive to the strength and use of heroin.  Dosing, once regulated by prescription, now was more lethal. Learning how to prepare and inject heroin without becoming infected, overdosing and dying was problematic. There were record overdose deaths in 2015, even though there were fewer pain pills. 

Counterfeit medication and heroin laced with illicit fentanyl appeared and record overdose deaths continued in 2016 and 2017 because there were so many inexperienced street drug users.  

Since 2015, West Virginia has wasted millions of dollars annually chasing imaginary diversion and investigating and prosecuting good physicians. This satisfied everyone except legitimate pain patients, who were left suffering and dying in their beds.  A suicide epidemic ensued.

West Virginia lacks a prevention component to their drug crisis response, which insured the re-occurrence of another epidemic. Apparently, we are satisfied with this catastrophe. May we have another?   

Douglas Hughes is a disabled coal miner and retired environmental permit writer in West Virginia.

Do you have a story you want to share on PNN? Send it to: editor@painnewsnetwork.org.

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.

West Virginia Moves to Stop Opioid Madness

By Kenny Brooks, Guest Columnist

When most people think of West Virginia, they think about mountains, coal mines and miners.  The number of coal miners in West Virginia suffering from black lung, cancer and other chronic illnesses plays a significant role in the state's high rate of disability, estimated at nearly 20 percent of the population. 

Many military veterans in West Virginia also suffer from lifelong pain and disability, as do injured public safety employees, police, firefighters and paramedics. I was severely injured as a paramedic in a work related accident and now live with arachnoiditis, a painful inflammation in my spine that will never go away.

All of this pain and disability has a significant impact on our state. The per capita income of West Virginia is only about $37,000 a year, making it one of the poorest states in the union.  About 23% of West Virginians live below the national poverty line.  We rank 5th highest in suicide and have the highest overdose death rate in the country.

West Virginia was one of the first states to crackdown on pill mills and doctors who overprescribe opioids, but opioid overdoses continue rising, especially from heroin, illicit fentanyl and addicts taking pain medication.

The CDC’s opioid prescribing guidelines only made things worse for real pain patients, causing many to be under treated or abandoned by doctors who took an oath to relieve pain and suffering.

West Virginia lawmakers have seen enough of this suffering. In an unprecedented move, the legislature this month passed Senate Bill 339, with the goal of restoring the integrity of chronic pain management in the state.

The bill was introduced by State Senator Tom Takubo, DO, a pulmonary physician who specializes in treating patients suffering from lung and breathing problems.  Dr. Takubo understands the ethical duty to act, and to help alleviate chronic suffering and pain from incurable chronic conditions.

Senate Bill 339 was approved unanimously by both the House and Senate, and was signed this week into law by the governor.  It recognizes that regulations have caused “patients seeking pain treatment to suffer from a lack of treatment options” and that “prescribers should have the flexibility to effectively treat patients who present with chronic pain.”

The bill also establishes a commission -- called the Coalition for Responsible Chronic Pain Management -- to advise the legislature if a “less cumbersome” manner exists to regulate pain care in the state.

The Coalition will consists of the following members:  The Dean of the School of Public Health at West Virginia University, a physician board certified in pain management, three physicians licensed to practice in West Virginia, a licensed pharmacist, a licensed chiropractor, a licensed physical therapist experienced in the area of chronic pain, and a consumer of healthcare services directly impacted by pain clinic regulations – in other words, a pain patient.

We have about a month before the appointments are made and I am hopeful that I will be appointed as the patient representative. I hope to bring to the Coalition not only my experience as a pain patient, but my experience as a paramedic.  I spent many hours in school years ago learning about medical and legal issues, and believe I have a unique perspective to bring to the table.

My goals are simple: to change the regulations and prescribing guidelines back to individualized patient centered care, not addiction centered algorithms. I am also concerned about doctors being afraid to treat pain patients due to legal reprisals.

I hope to bring a voice of reason to the Coalition, and to help other states look at what we are doing in West Virginia to stop the opioid madness.  

Kenny Brooks is an arachnoiditis survivor and former career firefighter in Montgomery County, Maryland.  He loves his family, his church, his dog, his friends, and he feels very blessed to have a great team of medical doctors and pharmacists who understand quality of life medical care. Kenny became more involved in politics following the sad consequences he witnessed in other arachnoiditis patients due to the CDC guidelines. 

Pain News Network invites other readers to share their stories with us.  Send them to:  editor@PainNewsNetwork.org

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.

West Virginia Admits Pain Patients Suffering

By Pat Anson, Editor

As Ohio, New Jersey and other states move to put further limits on opioid prescribing, West Virginia is acknowledging that its own efforts may have gone too far.

This week the West Virginia House of Delegates unanimously passed a bill that would create a commission to review state regulations on opioid pain medication and report back to the legislature on ways to make them “less cumbersome.”

Senate Bill 339 calls the abuse of pain medication in West Virginia “a nearly insurmountable plague,” but recognizes that efforts aimed at curbing abuse and overprescribing have “resulted in unforeseen outcomes often causing patients seeking pain treatment to suffer from a lack of treatment options.”

“Effective early care is paramount in managing chronic pain. To that end, prescribers should have the flexibility to effectively treat patients who present with chronic pain. However, there must be a balance between proper treatment for chronic pain and the abuse of the opioids found most effective in its treatment,” the bill states.

The legislation calls for the Dean of the School of Public Health at West Virginia University to serve as chair of the commission, which is to be known as the Coalition for Responsible Chronic Pain Management. Other members of the panel will include a board certified pain specialist, three physicians, a pharmacist, a chiropractor and a pain patient. 

The coalition will meet quarterly to review regulations on physicians and pain clinics, and will advise the legislature on ways to “further enhance the provider patient relationship in the effective treatment and management of chronic pain.”

Because the bill was amended in the House, it now returns to the West Virginia Senate for approval.

In many ways, West Virginia was ground zero for the nation’s overdose epidemic, and was one of the first states to crackdown on pill mills and the overprescribing of pain medication. Fewer opioids are now being prescribed, but West Virginia still leads the nation with the highest overdose death rate in the country.

At least 844 people died of drug overdoses in the state in 2016, a record number, compared to 731 in 2015. As in other parts of the country, addicts in West Virginia have increasingly turned to heroin and illicit fentanyl, which are more potent, dangerous and easier to obtain than prescription painkillers. Over a third of the overdose deaths in West Virginia last year were linked to fentanyl. Most of the deaths involved multiple drugs.   

Ohio Tightens Opioid Regulations

In neighboring Ohio, Gov. John Kasich last week announced new plans to limit opioid prescriptions to just seven days of supply for adults and five days for minors. Doses are also being limited to no more than 30 mg of a morphine equivalent dose (MED) per day.

The new regulations, which are expected to take effect this summer, are more than just guidelines – they are a legal requirement for prescribers. Although only intended for acute pain patients, many chronic pain patients are worried they will lose access to opioid medication.

"Doctors are already feeling this pressure not to prescribe pain medications," Amy Monahan-Curtis told NBC News. "What I am hearing is people are already being turned away. They are not getting medications. They are not even being seen. "

Ohio has been down this path before. In 2012, it began a series of actions to restrict access to pain medication. By 2016, the number of opioid prescriptions in Ohio had fallen 20 percent, or 162 million doses.

As in West Virginia, however, the number of drug overdoses continues to soar. Ohio led the nation with over 3,000 drug overdoses in 2015, with many of those deaths linked to illicit fentanyl and heroin. The situation is so bad that some county coroners are storing bodies in temporary cold storage facilities because they’ve run out of room at the morgue.

Next month new regulations will go into effect in New Jersey that will limit initial opioid prescriptions to just five days of supply. Only after four days have passed can a patient get an additional 25 day supply.

That law is primarily intended for acute pain patients, but many chronic pain patients are worried they’ll be forced to make weekly trips to the doctor and pharmacy for their prescriptions, or not be able to get them at all.

“You can imagine my alarm and fear when I was told yesterday that I will likely have to have the dosage of my medications reduced soon,” said Robert Clayton, a New Jersey man who suffers from chronic back and neck pain.

“This is LUNACY. As a nurse who treats individuals with chronic pain and addiction issues, I can tell you these new laws are going to have catastrophic results. Most of the people abusing opiates and dying are the addicts who abuse heroin and other prescription drugs like benzodiazepines, not the chronic pain patients like myself and the other unfortunate souls who have a genuine need for these drugs through no fault of our own.”

According to a recent survey of over 3,100 pain patients by PNN and the International Pain Foundation, one in five pain patients are hoarding opioid medications because they fear losing access to them.