Despite
wide use, broad support seen for policies to stem epidemic of opioid misuse and
abuse in U.S.
Newswise,
October 8, 2015 — More than one in four Americans has taken prescription
painkillers in the past year, even as a majority say that abuse of these
medications is a very serious public health concern, according to new Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health research.
Roughly
seven in 10 Americans have been prescribed the medications in their lifetime
and 17 percent say they have taken painkillers prescribed for someone else, the
researchers found in what they believe is the first national public opinion
study on this topic.
The
findings, published online Oct. 7 in the journal Addiction, suggest that the
public may be poised to support a number of policy measures designed to control
what has become an epidemic of abuse, including instituting better medical
training in controlling pain and treating addiction, requiring doctors to
ensure patients don’t receive multiple painkiller prescriptions from different
providers and requiring pharmacists to check identification before distributing
pain prescriptions.
Over
the past decade, there has been a sharp increase in the rates of prescription
painkiller abuse, misuse and overdose.
Drug overdose – the majority of which
involve opioid pain relievers – was the leading cause of injury death in 2012,
and among people between the ages of 25 and 64, drug overdose surpassed car
crashes as the leading cause of injury death.
“This
study shows that many Americans have had direct experience using prescription
pain relievers and a sizable share have misused or abused these medications
themselves or have close friends or family members who have done so,” says
study leader Colleen L. Barry, PhD, MPP, an associate professor in the
Department of Health Policy and Management at the Bloomberg School.
“The
seriousness of the issue has become salient with the American public.”
Fifty-eight
percent of survey respondents ranked prescription pain medication abuse as
either a very serious or extremely serious health issue, on par with other
public health problems such as gun violence and tobacco use, Barry says.
The
study, based on a web-based public opinion survey of 1,111 adults in the United
States in February 2014, was designed to understand attitudes about
prescription painkiller use and abuse.
Among the findings: Most people blame
those who abuse painkillers and the doctors who prescribe them for the current
public health crisis. A majority of respondents to the survey said doctors keep
patients on these medications for too long, that it is too easy for people to
get multiple pain medication prescriptions and that there is a lack of
understanding among patients about how easily they can become addicted.
Prescription
painkillers are involved in roughly 475,000 emergency department visits a year
and the economic costs of misusing these medications were estimated in 2006 at
$50 billion in lost productivity, crime and medical costs.
The
researchers say they found broad support for most policy recommendations put
forth by leading groups such as the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, the
American Medical Association and the Trust for America’s Health.
Except for
policies to expand distribution of medications such as naloxone that can
reverse opioid overdose which was supported by only 47 percent of respondents
and to increase government spending on addiction treatment which was supported
by only 39 percent of those surveyed, there was majority backing for all
policies in the survey.
Policy
proposals with the highest levels of public support were requiring pharmacies
to verify patient identification before giving out prescription pain medication
(84 percent), requiring medical school and physician residency programs to
provide training for physicians in how to detect and treat addiction to
prescription pain medication (83 percent) and requiring medical school and
physician residency programs to train physicians to treat chronic pain (82
percent).
“We
think this is the perfect time to work on passing policies that can truly
impact the crisis of prescription pain reliever abuse,” says study co-author
Emma E. “Beth” McGinty, PhD, MS, an assistant professor in the Department of
Health Policy and Management at the Bloomberg School. “The issue has not yet
been highly politicized like some public health issues such as the Affordable
Care Act, gun violence or needle exchanges, so we may have an opportunity to
stem this epidemic.”
“Understanding
Americans’ Views on Opioid Pain Reliever Abuse” was written by Colleen L.
Barry, Alene Kennedy-Hendricks, Sarah E. Gollust, Jeff Niederdeppe, Marcus A.
Bachhuber, Daniel W. Webster and Emma E. McGinty. The collaborating researchers
are from the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Minnesota School of
Public Health, Cornell University and the Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical
Center.
Funding
for this study was obtained through an unrestricted research grant from AIG,
Inc.
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