Public Health: Countering Opioid Overdoses
Problem
The opioid epidemic is a severe public health crisis that must be attended to with urgency in the U.S. It has spread in due part to the problem of care providers over-prescribing strong and addictive opioids or pain relief to patients, who in turn become long-term opioid addicts (Brummett et al., 2017). Illegal opioids are also hitting the streets from other sources, compounding the problem; however, since many health care providers are unable to impact what happens on the streets (in terms of keeping drugs out of the country), they can make a difference by intervening in their facilities. It is true that patients have a right to expect pain relief, but the short-sightedness of health care professionals who prescribe opioids to patients is often a major setback for the fight against opioid abuse. One solution is to cut back on the strength of opioids prescribed to patients so that the goal is pain management (i.e., tolerating the pain) rather than total pain relief (i.e., zero pain). The goal should be to get the pain down to a level where the patient is able to stand it—not to make it disappear completely (Harbaugh et al., 2018). If too strong opioids are being prescribed, the patient can become a drug addict very easily because the feeling of no pain is highly addictive. Other problems like sleep apnea and severe depression can follow, however, causing the patient to feel that more drugs are needed to counterbalance these new issues (Rowsell et al., 2016). This it is a negative circle of patients feeling bad and doctors prescribing more drugs; patients feeling worse, and more drugs being given. Sooner rather than later, people end up overdosing on opioids, either on ones prescribed to them or on ones that they get illegally off the streets. The reason for the overdose is that they are hooked and are now substance abusers.
People and Organizations Involved
Doctors, patients, community leaders and family members are all stakeholders in this problem. Doctors and nurses, however, bear most of the responsibility for preventing opioid overdoses. In order to reduce the risk opioid overdose it is important for health care providers to educate patients on the benefits of using their drug prescription only for pain tolerance rather than as a way to achieve zero pain...
References
Brummett, C. M., Waljee, J. F., Goesling, J., Moser, S., Lin, P., Englesbe, M. J., ... & Nallamothu, B. K. (2017). New persistent opioid use after minor and major surgical procedures in US adults. JAMA surgery, 152(6), e170504-e170504.
Harbaugh, C. M., Lee, J. S., Hu, H. M., McCabe, S. E., Voepel-Lewis, T., Englesbe, M.J., ... & Waljee, J. F. (2018). Persistent opioid use among pediatric patients after surgery. Pediatrics, 141(1), e20172439.
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Rowsell, L., Wong, K., Yee, B., Eckert, D. J., Somogyi, A., Duffin, J., ... & Wang, D. (2016). Identifying obstructive sleep apnea patients vulnerable to opioid-induced respiratory depression-a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover trial. Am J Respir Crit Care Med, 193, A4321.
Volkow, N. D., & McLellan, A. T. (2016). Opioid abuse in chronic pain—misconceptions and mitigation strategies.
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Legislative Letter Jason M. Lewis, Senator Chair of the Joint Committee on Public Health State House Tel [HIDDEN] Dear Senator Lewis, A public health emergency was declared by Governor Deval Patrick on March 27, 2014, due to the dramatic rise in opiate abuse in Massachusetts (Cassidy, 2014). On the agenda was an addition $20 million for substance abuse prevention and treatment, taking Zohydro off the market, and allowing police officers to carry the anti-overdose drug naloxone.
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