Comprehensive report calls for mandatory
prescription monitoring programs, expanded naloxone access, tamper-resistant
drug packaging, among other measures
Newswise, November 16, 2015 — A group of experts, led by
researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, today
issued recommendations aimed at stemming the prescription opioid epidemic, a
crisis that kills an average of 44 people a day in the U.S.
The report calls for changes to the way medical students and
physicians are trained, prescriptions are dispensed and monitored, first
responders are equipped to treat overdoses, and those with addiction are
identified and treated.
The report grew out of discussions that began last year at a
town hall co-hosted by the Bloomberg School and the Clinton Health Matters
Initiative, an initiative of the Clinton Foundation.
The recommendations were developed by professionals from
medicine, pharmacy, injury prevention and law. Patient representatives,
insurers and drug manufacturers also participated in developing the
recommendations.
The call to action comes at a time of heightened awareness
about the prescription opioid epidemic. More than 16,000 people died in the
U.S. from overdoses related to opioid pain relievers in 2013, four times the
number who died in 1999, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC). Prescription opioid sales have increased 300 per cent since
1999. The CDC estimates that two million Americans were dependent on opioid
medications in 2013.
“What’s important about these recommendations is that they
cover the entire supply chain, from training doctors to working with pharmacies
and the pharmaceuticals themselves, as well as reducing demand by mobilizing
communities and treating people addicted to opioids,” says Andrea Gielen, ScD,
ScM director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy at the
Bloomberg School and one of the report’s signatories.
“Not only are the recommendations comprehensive, they were
developed with input from a wide range of stakeholders, and wherever possible
draw from evidence-based research.”
Carefully used, opioids provide important pain relief for many
patients with acute or post-surgical pain. Up until the late 1990s,
prescription opioids were prescribed primarily to cancer patients.
They became more widely used as new products were developed
and aggressively promoted for wider use. In addition, their addictive potential
was substantially underestimated.
Another complicating factor is so-called diversion–use by
friends and family rather than those actually prescribed the painkillers.
According to the CDC, in 2012, health care providers wrote 259 million
prescriptions for opioid pain relievers, enough to supply every adult in the
U.S. a four-week, round-the-clock supply.
The report, titled “The Prescription Opioid Epidemic: An
Evidence-Based Approach,” breaks its recommendations into seven categories:
• Prescribing Guidelines
• Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs)
• Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) and Pharmacies
• Engineering Strategies (i.e., packaging)
• Overdose Education and Naloxone Distribution Programs
• Addiction Treatment
• Community-Based Prevention Strategies
• Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs)
• Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) and Pharmacies
• Engineering Strategies (i.e., packaging)
• Overdose Education and Naloxone Distribution Programs
• Addiction Treatment
• Community-Based Prevention Strategies
“This is a complex epidemic with no simple solutions,” says G.
Caleb Alexander, MD, MS, co-director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Drug
Safety and Effectiveness at the Bloomberg School and another of the report’s
signatories.
“We tried to identify as many windows as possible, and to tie
together as much research as available, to inform these recommendations which
together we believe provide the best chance of turning this steamship around.”
The report calls for stricter oversight of clinical
prescribing and more comprehensive training of medical students, who presently
receive very little instruction on the subject.
The signatories also recommend expanding the role of pharmacies
and Pharmacy Benefits Managers, both of which stand between the prescribers and
the patients who receive the medication.
For example, increased use of electronic prescribing to
identify high-risk patients and prescribers, along with expanded availability
of drug take-back programs, would give pharmacies a greater role in reducing
opioid misuse and abuse.
The authors also call for mandatory use of Prescription Drug
Monitoring Programs (PDMPs), state databases that include controlled substance
prescriptions from in-state pharmacies.
Every state but Missouri has a version of a PDMP, as do
Washington, D.C., and Guam. At present, PDMPs are voluntary in many states and
actual use varies – many prescribing providers are not aware of them – and
their design varies from state to state. In addition to making PDMPs mandatory,
the report recommends making them more accessible to law enforcement when
warranted.
The report calls for expanding the availability of naloxone,
which can reverse the effects of an overdose if administered promptly.
Among the recommendations to address addiction, working group
members call for providing funding for treatment programs to communities with
high rates of addiction and educating prescribers and pharmacists on ways to
prevent addiction.
Among the report’s other recommendations: develop more secure
and tamper-resistant packaging through design contests and other approaches
and, as noted above, expand “take back” programs that allow patients to return
unused medication to pharmacies to reduce chances that the pills might be taken
by potential abusers.
The report will be among topics discussed at a forum hosted by
the Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Clinton Health Matters Initiative
on Nov. 17, 2015 at the Bloomberg School.
Participants include Michael Botticelli, MEd, Director of the
White House Office of National Drug Control Policy; Christopher Jones, PharmD,
MPH, director of Science Policy, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services;
and Bloomberg School faculty Joshua Sharfstein, MD, and Shannon Frattaroli,
PhD, MPH. (Sharfstein and Frattaroli are signatories to the report.)
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