Opioid Prescription Guidelines Revised
It’s clear that inappropriate opioid prescription guidelines used by physicians have fueled the current opioid crisis. For years, Doctors have prescribed painkillers in a one-size-fits-all fashion even though some research has shown that up to 80 percent of the opioid prescriptions written to patients are not used, the Baltimore Sun reported.
A panel from Johns Hopkins Hospital believes opioids have a place in controlling debilitating pain, but
considering that half of the patients who don’t need opioid drugs for pain relief leave the hospital with a prescription anyway, it wants to promote other ways to fight pain instead, such as direct to site pain
relief and use of less addictive pain medications.
The hospital has developed new prescribing guidelines for at least 20 types of procedures. These new
recommended guidelines will be the default electrical medical system settings, replacing the current
default of a 30-day supply for surgical patients.
Opioid Scripts for 20 Procedures Reduced
30 pharmacists, pain specialists, surgical residents, surgeons, outpatient surgical nurse practitioners and patients made up the panel, which recommends that opioid prescriptions for procedures from
orthopedic surgery to ear, nose, and throat procedures be reduced to:
One to 15 pills for 11 procedures
16 to 20 pills for six types of procedures
No pills for three types of procedures
The hospital hopes the new guidelines will facilitate other hospitals and surgical associations to update
their own prescribing policies to reduce the number of opioids that patients are exposed to.
U.S. Government Wants Opioid New Prescription Guidelines
Prescribing guideline changes may be far more effective than recently proposed policies by the Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid which seek to restrict the number of prescription opioids patients have
access to, including by having insurers deny coverage for certain prescriptions.
The first proposal would have insurers deny Part D coverage for more than a 7-day script for first-time
opioid users. The second proposal would deny payment for opioid prescriptions through Part D that arelarger than the equivalent of 90 MME (milligrams of morphine). While patient’s whose scripts are
rejected could still have their prescription and Medicaid which seek to restrict the number of prescription opioids patients have access to, including by having insurers deny coverage for certain prescriptions.
The first proposal would have insurers deny Part D coverage for more than a 7-day script for first-time opioid users.
The second proposal would deny payment for opioid prescriptions through Part D that are
larger than the equivalent of 90 MME (milligrams of morphine). While patient’s whose scripts are
rejected could still have their prescription paid by Medicare, they would have to appeal the decision and provide an acknowledgment from their physicians that they qualify for an exception that allows for
higher doses, such as being terminally ill.
However, scores of physicians have spoken out against the policies saying they would harm patients
with chronic pain and would do little actually to reduce the addiction epidemic. In fact, when
prescriptions are lowered or denied, some stable patients may be forced to self-treat with street drugs.
Forcing patients into the black market and making cancer patients and the terminally ill wait for pain
relief or pay out of pocket isn’t a solution. Patients didn’t start the epidemic, and they shouldn’t be the
ones to suffer knee-jerk policies that offer no proof of being able to rectify the crisis.
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