The Painkiller That Saves Money But Costs Lives
Hugh Pickens writes "Over 2,000 patients have died since 2003 in Washington State alone by accidentally overdosing on a commonly prescribed narcotic painkiller that costs less than a dollar a dose and the deaths are clustered predominately in places with lower incomes because Washington state has steered people with state-subsidized health care — Medicaid patients, injured workers and state employees — to methadone because the drug is cheap. Methadone belongs to a class of narcotic painkillers, called opioids, that includes OxyContin, fentanyl and morphine. Within that group, methadone accounts for less than 10 percent of the drugs prescribed — but more than half of the deaths and although Methadone works wonders for some patients, relieving chronic pain from throbbing backs to inflamed joints, the drug's unique properties make it unforgiving and sometimes lethal. 'Most painkillers, such as OxyContin, dissipate from the body within hours. Methadone can linger for days, pooling to a toxic reservoir that depresses the respiratory system,' write Michael J. Berens and Ken Armstrong. 'With little warning, patients fall asleep and don't wake up. Doctors call it the silent death.'"
because of the way it works, junkies don't prefer it. so who cares if a bunch of people die needlessly, at least it prevents people from getting high. the drug war matters more.
As little as 100 years ago people were using perfectly legal opium compounds such as paregoric, with little or no social problems. The fact that people are dying and people are having their lives ruined by this failed "war on drugs" and the solutions are even worse than the problem just goes to show that government has no clue what it's doing.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
Doctors don't generally like to prescribe pain killers. They worry about addiction, they worry about the DEA auditing their prescribing habits and yanking their license, without which it's kind of hard to be a doctor.
When they prescribe methadone, is it really out of cost, or have they grown so fearful of prescribing Oxycontin that somehow methadone seems like a reasonable alternative? And how many of those fears are medical/pharmacological, and how many are "if I prescribe Oxycontin I'll get in trouble" or "gee, there's a lot of press about Oxycontin, I shouldn't prescribe it"?
Overdose isn't when you take more then prescribed, it's when you take more then what your body can handle.
As such most overdoses are accidental.
18 years ago I messed up my back, 8 years ago I did it again. The second time around didnt have the results of the first. I live with constant pain while awake unless laying down.
Pain is depressing, it ruins your attitude and life. I have learned to live with it, with pain pills to manage the pain. When sent to pain management every so often to get the pain medication adjusted methadone is always pushed, I am also low income. I have done a lot of study of pain drugs and will always tell the doctor that is one medication I want to avoid. At present I am on Percoset (oxycodone/acetaminophen). While it isnt as cheap as the methadone on my crappy insurance, my life is way more important than the $10 a month extra it costs me.
But the problem may not be the drug itself but the idea that some people in pain have that they can avoid pain completely. This isnt always the case when you are on these types of medication. You can control pain, you can moderate pain. But if you think that if I take a pill or two extra it will get rid of it altogether you are on a slippery slope. My brother tried that, he ended up taking more and more pills because over time your body starts resisting them. Thats where the danger lies. You take so many that you end up killing yourself by overdose, like my brother did at 36.
I trust Microsoft as far as I could comfortably spit a dead rat
Washington State is controlled by Democrats. The majority of both houses of the legislature there are Democrats, as is the current governor and the last two governors before her. I expect, though, that you're too busy hating Republicans to recognize the Democrats are no different.
Space game using normal deck of cards: http://BattleCards.org
Doctors are overpaid
Can we please stop this shit? Blaming doctors doesn't help you, and they are generally not overpaid. For the length and stress of their training, the debt they incur, and the difficult lifestyle many specialties must endure permanently, most doctors are actually underpaid - in overall salary, in compensation per hour, or both.
I know primary care physicians who've been forced quit the business after 30 years and had to go work somewhere else. How does a doctor who can't afford to be a doctor, and doesn't have enough savings to retire after 30 years, fit with your ignorant screed that doctors are overpaid?
I also know surgeons, many of whom do make $300,000 a year, and I've never seen one of them sit still for more than 15 minutes, to watch a movie or lecture, without passing out. They work a minimum of 60 hours a week and constantly get paged for surgery in the middle of the night, whether or not they're actually 'on call'.
So many types of doctor make so little that people are quitting left and right, while med students refuse to even consider the specialty, and many other types work so many hours with such a poor quality of life that their compensation per hour (not to mention per 3 am emergency call) makes engineering and business look like much better careers.
Many doctors are underpaid; many others are overpaid but massively overworked and overstressed. The cross-section of doctors who are both overpaid and live comfortable lifestyles is much, much smaller than you think.
Methadone's pharmacokinetics give it a long half-life, and therefore a long duration of action. This is an asset in managing chronic pain from cancer and some other diseases. Methadone has much less tendency to lose its analgesic effect through habituation. Morphine, for example, while an effective pain reliever due to its action on the mu-opioid receptor, has a metabolite that acutally upregulates perception of pain due to action on the NMDA system. This latter effect probably accounts for most of the often-observed dose escalation needed to maintain effective analgesia in patients treated with morphine. The primary danger of methadone is that physicians who are unaware of its comparitively slow pharmacokinetics overdose their patients because they escalate the dose too fast. It is critical to make changes (either increase or decrease) in methadone dosage *slowly* - when that is done, the drug can provide chronic pain relief with a much better combination of safety and long-term effectiveness than many of the other opiates. As always, ignorance seems to be the most deadly disease.
I can't believe the number of comments here about doctors being assholes, overpaid, incompetent, etc. You ungrateful, ignorant people need to wake up and realize that doctors are just as miserable under this system as the rest of you.
First, doctors hate the most expensive parts of medicine even more than you do; they'd be ecstatic to see that business go away. Patients incur as much as half of their lifetime medical costs in the last six months or year of their life. Doctors who know it's simply time for someone to die are forced to keep them alive for a few last weeks or months by whining families who can't accept death and by stupid laws that require extreme intervention to the very end. Many people won't sign DNR orders until they've already hung on far too long, if ever; the families rarely sign them for someone too far gone to sign themselves. It's gotten so bad there's even a phenomenon called the Silent Code, when the physician running an emergency resuscitation tacitly lets a terminal and hopeless patient slip away; they walk the line between honoring laws / families' wishes and the Hippocratic duty to do no harm by not prolonging suffering. Most doctors wish that palliative care and letting people go at their time could be official; a significant minority favor outright assisted suicide. Those brave enough to take some action now do things like silent codes. How does risking your license and reducing your billable hours by letting a patient die display the kind of greedy, insensitive behavior you people seem to think almost all doctors display?
And as for the money, doctors as a whole are not overpaid; doctors may average almost $200,000 a year, and the existence of specialist surgeons who make $700,000 a year makes it easy to assume they're all overpaid, but a complete statistical look at doctor's salaries - one that includes median, mode, and spread indicators- will tell you that the typical salary is pretty fair for a field that involves a minimum of 11 years higher education (often stretching past 15), $150,000+ in educational debt, and usually takes a lot more than 40 hours a week.
So some doctors are overpaid, and some doctors are callous. Show me a profession with neither of those problems. The majority of doctors are paid no more than a fair wage (or even not enough), care deeply about their patients, hate the waste and legal bullshit of medicine much more than you do, and are really tired of taking shit from people who think they like the system this way or got into medicine for the money.
The longer you assholes complain about doctors being stupid or only caring about money, the more stupid pricks who only care about the money will be the only ones willing to go to medical school. That's already starting, in my opinion. Enjoy reaping what you've sown.
In terms of pharmacodynamics, methadone is a garden variety opiate. It has two major distinctions: it has good oral bioavailability, and it is long-acting (i.e. it has slow pharmacokinetics). These are major advantages for people with chronic pain. Morphine has poor oral activity, and also wears off fast. This makes it good for intravenous infusion in a hospital setting, but terrible for patients with severe chronic pain. One aspect of opiate analgesia is that once the pain "breaks through," it is hard to knock it down again. Opiates work best for pain relief if blood levels are kept reasonably constant. So with a short acting opiate, patients have to be constantly popping pills. A long-acting opiate makes it possible for a patient with chronic pain to live something approaching a normal life.
Respiratory depression by opiates tracks very well with pain relief, so it is not plausible that the respiratory depression would greatly outlast the pain relief, as claimed in the article. Moreover, we have a huge amount of experience with methadone, because it is widely used for opiate maintenance in opiate addicts. Opiate addicts take methadone under supervision, so they can't escalate their doses. So we know that when methadone is taken as prescribed on a regular basis, it is safe and effective, and toxic levels do not build up in the body.
I think that this is a problem of poor patient and physician education and poor choices by physicians in prescribing a long-acting drug to patients who don't really understand what that means. The average patient has no experience with long-acting pain relievers, because all of the commonly used medications such as hydrocodone are short-acting. The pain relief of a long-acting opiate lasts a long time, but it is also slow in onset. This is an unavoidable aspect of the pharmacokinetics of long-acting drugs. That means that you can't wait until you start hurting, then take a methadone pill and expect the pain to go away in under an hour, as with short-acting drugs. It will take days for the pain relief from methadone to build up to its full level. A patient who doesn't understand this is likely to think, "It isn't working," and take more than the prescribed dose--and then when it does build up, they end up in respiratory depression.
There is no way to have a long acting opiate pain killer drug that does not carry the same risk as methadone. The same hazards apply to oxycontin (which is a time-release formulation of a short-acting opiate, oxycodone).
So the patient needs to be told in no uncertain terms, "This isn't a drug where you can wait until you start hurting and then take a pill. It won't work, and it is dangerous to take it that way. You must take it on schedule, every day. You can't take extra even if you are hurting. If you miss a pill, don't take extra to make up. If you take more than the prescribed dose, or take it more often than prescribed, you may DIE." And the doctor needs to be absolutely certain that the patient understands this and is capable of complying. If not (or if there is not a reliable care-giver capable of controlling dosing), then the patient should be prescribed a short-acting narcotic (although this carries its own, different risks).