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White House Targets Painkiller Abuse

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  1. #1
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    White House Targets Painkiller Abuse

    White House Targets Painkiller Abuse

    Obama Administration Releases National Anti-Abuse Plan for Prescription Drugs

    By KRISTINA FIORE, MedPage Today Staff Writer
    April 19, 2011

    WASHINGTON -- Responding to what they say is an epidemic worse than the crack cocaine problem in the 1980s and the heroin epidemic of the 1990s combined, public health and law enforcement officials in the Obama administration have released a national anti-abuse plan for prescription drugs.

    "We are in the midst of a public health crisis driven by prescription drug abuses," Gil Kerlikowske, White House Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) said at a Tuesday morning press conference at the National Press Club.

    In 2007, there were 28,000 deaths from prescription drug overdoses -- five times the number in 1990, Kerlikowske said. Those deaths were driven largely by the abuse of prescription painkillers.

    One of the main goals of the plan is to cut the rate of abuse of these drugs by 15 percent within five years.

    As part of the plan, the FDA announced it will enact a risk-mitigation strategy to educate patients and doctors on proper use and prescribing of extended-release prescription pain pills, such as oxycodone (Oxycontin).

    The overall plan -- called "The Administration's Epidemic: Responding to America's Prescription Drug Abuse Crisis" -- supports state-based prescription drug monitoring programs; take-back programs that safely dispose of prescription narcotics; and an education program aimed at patients and healthcare providers.

    Administration officials at the press conference said a bill would be introduced in Congress that would require physicians to undergo training provided by drug companies in order to write prescriptions for extended-release prescription narcotics.

    But they were mum on who would introduce the bill and when. Kerlikowske said he wouldn't be touting a sweeping plan to combat prescription drug abuse if he wasn't confident Congress would pass such a bill.

    read the rest of the article...

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    I would like to know what kind of gifts the pharmaceutical lobbyist hand out to politicians.
    " A cookie without sugar is just a cracker" ~ ancient voodoo proverb

    "A man with infinite patience is never left waiting."~ROID's past incarnation

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    my step-dad gets kick ass pain pills and pot still relieves his pain better.

    Don't look back ~ You're not going that way!






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    Thing is, if the patient is on PRN pain meds, they get em as soon as they verbalize that they have severe pain.

    So many nurses have gotten their asses into a bind because the narcotic they were supposed to give, didn't get documented....

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    Idiots need to get their other shit straight before tackling something that is none of their damn business anyway.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Zaphod View Post
    Idiots need to get their other shit straight before tackling something that is none of their damn business anyway.
    THIS!
    They have to find ways to divert attention off of the real problems...

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    I feel safer already.
    So many cries of inequality stem from one of group
    of people doing little or nothing and then bitching
    about another group that actually does something
    to improve their lives.

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    anytime some one takes a poke at big pharma, I'm happy....just in spite, lol

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    Quote Originally Posted by Prince View Post
    White House Targets Painkiller Abuse
    WASHINGTON -- Responding to what they say is an epidemic worse than the crack cocaine problem in the 1980s and the heroin epidemic of the 1990s combined, public health and law enforcement officials in the Obama administration have released a national anti-abuse plan for prescription drugs.
    I didn't realize the crack and herion problem went away in the 80s and 90s.
    I'm pretty sure these drugs are still quite abused today as they were then.
    Don't tread on me!!
    Quit Bitching, Start a Revolution

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    Health Buzz: America's Most Popular Drugs

    Health Buzz: America's Most Popular Drugs
    By Angela Haupt
    Posted: April 20, 2011

    Generics Were Most Popularly Prescribed Drugs in 2010

    Americans are aching, aging, and overweight—or so prescription drug sales suggest. The top 10 most commonly prescribed drugs in the United States include painkillers, anti-diabetes pills, statins used to treat high cholesterol, and blood-pressure-lowering drugs. That's according to the latest report on U.S. medication use, published Tuesday by the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics. More than 131 million prescriptions were dispensed for hydrocodone, the generic form of the painkiller Vicodin, last year, making it the best-selling drug. For the first time, all top 10 drugs were generics; these medicines, which are cheaper than brand-name drugs, now make up 78 percent of dispensed prescriptions. That shift contributed to a slowdown in drug spending, which increased only 2.3 percent in 2010, compared to 5.1 percent in 2009. At the same time, the number of patients starting new drug treatments for chronic conditions declined by 3.4 million. "This has the potential to impact patients' health," Michael Kleinrock, the institute's director of research development, told the Associated Press. "If they're delaying necessary care, that could be pretty bad for their health."
    Click here to find out more!


    A Doctor's Practical Guide to Prescription Drugs

    A study of nearly 200,000 outpatient electronic prescriptions published last year in the Journal of General Internal Medicine drew a stunning conclusion: nearly 3 in 10 new prescriptions were never filled at the pharmacy. To make matters worse, patients who pick up their medications frequently find the instructions difficult to understand, family physician Kenny Lin writes for U.S. News. There is little consistency in how pharmacies format their prescription labels, which can lead to confusion if a patient uses more than one pharmacy. Taking several medications is even more challenging. According to a recent report in the journal Archives of Internal Medicine, only 15 percent of older adults were able to correctly consolidate a 7-drug regimen into 4 doses per day, and adults with lower literacy or less formal education were even less capable of doing so.

    The good news is that efforts are underway to design standard prescription labels that are easier to read and follow; the bad news is that these commonsense changes probably won't be coming to your pharmacy any time soon. So what can you do to make sure that you and your doctor are on the same page regarding your prescriptions?

    First, don't be afraid to ask how much a new medication costs. If you can't afford it, chances are you won't take it. A previous Healthcare Headaches post discusses several options for saving money on medications, including substituting older medications or generics. Also, make a point to communicate concerns about unwanted side effects; your doctor can usually manage these by lowering the dose or switching to a different drug. [Read more: A Doctor's Practical Guide to Prescription Drugs.]


    Overmedication: Are Americans Taking Too Many Drugs?

    Socrates once declared that medicine "acts as both remedy and poison" and that "this charm, this spellbinding virtue, this power of fascination, can be*—alternately or simultaneously—beneficent or maleficent." Modern America clearly appreciates the benefits. Today, a full 61 percent of adults use at least one drug to treat a chronic health problem, a nearly 15 percent rise since 2001. More than 1 in 4 seniors gulp down at least five medications daily. The trend has multiple causes: a spike in diabetes, heart disease, and arthritis related to obesity; revised medical guidelines that treat high blood sugar, hypertension, and high cholesterol sooner; and a multibillion-dollar push by pharmaceutical companies to speak directly to consumers about the payoff in trusting our hearts to Lipitor, say, or taking Boniva to help stop bone loss.

    Therapeutic advances have, no question, proved lifesaving for many. Heart disease deaths have dropped steadily over the past 15 years, for example, thanks in large part to cholesterol-lowering statins and clot-busting drugs administered during heart attacks and strokes. But a growing chorus of experts worries that one unintended effect of all the pharmacological success is that many people may be blithely taking drugs they don't need, potentially setting themselves up for severe consequences. Clinical trials that prove a medicine safe and effective may demonstrate nothing about long-term risks or whether it benefits elderly folks or people with multiple health issues; usually new drugs are tested for just three or so years in a few thousand middle-age adults with a single particular problem. Given that a drug's serious side effects might show up only after months or years on the market, someone whose dangerous heart disease can't be controlled by existing meds has a much clearer incentive to try a new drug than people with a mild condition.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Little Wing View Post
    my step-dad gets kick ass pain pills and pot still relieves his pain better.
    I requested low dose methadone, it's the only pain med that lasts all day and I'm not tempted to take more than the dose my doctor recommends, for some reason most doctors would rather give out euphoria inducing, short lasting opiates that people can get easily addicted to, but have some taboo against methadone, even the general public think it's only for heroin addicts. My GF told a doctor she was waiting on at the hotel she works at that I take methadone for pain and he actually told her "I thought they only give that to people addicted to heroin or morphine...."

    I think the best management for chronic pain is methadone and marijuana for break-through pain.....
    Coarse edged youth, the irish pendants string from their smiles
    not yet plucked as to slacken the seams
    and drag down the features of age,
    no folds or creases from unkempt wear
    eyes of tranquilty, crystalline-beads
    no sign of despair in their hair, nor their hearts
    but oh they have yet to be experienced and that makes aging so very worth it...ML circa2012

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    NICE POST (Just trying to get my post count to 50 so I can PM... SORRY!)

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