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posted by martyb on Monday September 25 2017, @12:59PM   Printer-friendly
from the addiction-sucks dept.

CVS is finally trying to do something about the opioid epidemic:

Drug-store chain CVS Health announced Thursday that it will limit opioid prescriptions in an effort to combat the epidemic that accounted for 64,000 overdose deaths last year alone.

Amid pressure on pharmacists, doctors, insurers and drug companies to take action, CVS also said it would boost funding for addiction programs, counseling and safe disposal of opioids.

[...] The company's prescription drug management division, CVS Caremark, which provides medications to nearly 90 million people, said it would use its sweeping influence to limit initial opioid prescriptions to seven-day supplies for new patients facing acute ailments.

It will instruct pharmacists to contact doctors when they encounter prescriptions that appear to offer more medication than would be deemed necessary for a patient's recovery. The doctor would be asked to revise it. Pharmacists already reach out to physicians for other reasons, such as when they prescribe medications that aren't covered by a patient's insurance plan.

The plan also involves capping daily dosages and initially requiring patients to get versions of the medications that dispense pain relief for a short period instead of a longer duration.

[...] "The whole effort here is to try to reduce the number of people who are going to end up with some sort of opioid addiction problem," CVS Chief Medical Officer Troyen Brennan said in an interview.

It appears this initiative is limited to initial filling of prescriptions — there is no mention of changes in the handling of refills.


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  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 25 2017, @06:08PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 25 2017, @06:08PM (#572731)

    The actual answer seems to be that there is no currently validated satisfactory way to deal with chronic pain.

    Or rather, there's no way to deal with chronic pain that works for everyone.

    In the account you replied to, the anecdote about the self-admining morphine feeling too good to resist... well, I bet most people are like that. When I was in the hospital and in quite a bit of pain, they gave me the morphine shot, and yes, it took the edge off the pain (rather, made me not notice it much), but when they came back and offered it again, I said no. Because for me it didn't feel that good, just a bit less bad.

    After that, I've been on hydrocodone for 10 years. Yep, ten years. Without it, I'd have long since blown my brains out. But it just takes the edge off the pain, enough to let me keep going. I have not sought an increase in dosage in any of those ten years, although I have asked for more pills for a given period, just this past year, because the days I can skip a pill are getting fewer. No, I'm not immune to pain or anything, it's just that the opiods don't work all that well on me -- which has helped me not become a junkie on them.

    If, though, the various moralizing agencies take these things away from me because other people can't or won't control themselves on them, then I might as well start dealing heroin or whatever the hell works. I don't mind trying within reason to make changes that help those people, just make it still possible for people like me who really do have chronic pain for real medical issues to get what we need to, literally, stay alive.

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