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A Multifaceted Approach to Addressing Prescription Drugs in Your Community

A Multifaceted Approach to Addressing Prescription Drugs in Your Community. Jason B. Fields MD Medical Services Manager, DACCO. Florida’s Prescription Drug Diversion and Abuse Roundup 2012 to 2015 Pam Bondi, Attorney General.

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A Multifaceted Approach to Addressing Prescription Drugs in Your Community

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  1. A Multifaceted Approach to Addressing Prescription Drugs in Your Community Jason B. Fields MD Medical Services Manager, DACCO

  2. Florida’s Prescription Drug Diversion and Abuse Roundup2012 to 2015Pam Bondi, Attorney General Florida’s Prescription Drug Diversion and Abuse Roadmap, 2012 – 2015, April 2nd, 2012

  3. Contributors to the Crisis • Florida had weak regulatory oversight of pain management practices, • Limited oversight of physician dispensing habits • No statewide Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP). Florida’s Prescription Drug Diversion and Abuse Roadmap, 2012 – 2015, April 2nd, 2012

  4. The Crisis • “Most serious public health and safety threat to our state” • Prescription drug abuse kills more than seven Floridians every day • Florida’s communities suffer from prescription drug addiction due to increasing health care costs and a growing proportion of prescription drug diversion fueled crime. • There are reporting increases in the number of infants suffering from Neonatal Withdrawal Syndrome due to their mother’s abuse of opioid painkillers. Florida’s Prescription Drug Diversion and Abuse Roadmap, 2012 – 2015, April 2nd, 2012

  5. Goals of the Roadmap • This action has led to a dramatic decrease in the number of Florida physicians dispensing the most powerful pain-killing narcotics from their offices. • Law enforcement and health regulators are now actively collaborating in regional strike forces to inspect, investigate, and prosecute those who seek to flood our communities with diverted pharmaceuticals. • At the end of 2011, Florida successfully launched its PDMP, which is a crucial component in our efforts to combat prescription drug abuse. Florida’s Prescription Drug Diversion and Abuse Roadmap, 2012 – 2015, April 2nd, 2012

  6. HB 7095 (June 1st, 2011) • This significant piece of legislation banned dispensing of Schedule II and Schedule III controlled substances by physicians • Created a standard of care for all physicians prescribing controlled substances to treat chronic pain • Required physicians to either electronically prescribe controlled substances or use counterfeit-proof prescriptions • Added several critical criminal violations to support enforcement • Improved reporting to the state’s PDMP from 15 days to 7 days. Florida’s Prescription Drug Diversion and Abuse Roadmap, 2012 – 2015, April 2nd, 2012

  7. PDMP • HIPAA compliant Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP) in accordance to F.S. 893.055. • Has contributed to the steep decline in the number of Florida doctors dispensing the most oxycodone in a given year. • Florida went from 90 of the top 100 prescribers to, as of last count, only 13 of the top 100 now residing in Florida. Florida’s Prescription Drug Diversion and Abuse Roadmap, 2012 – 2015, April 2nd, 2012

  8. PDMP • The PDMP became operational on September 1, 2011, when it began receiving  controlled substance dispensing data from pharmacies and dispensing practitioners • Health care practitioners began accessing the data reported to the PDMP on October  17, 2011, and Law Enforcement Agencies began requesting PDMP reports during the  course of active investigations on November 14, 2011

  9. PDMP • Information collected in the database is available to registered health care practitioners to help guide their decisions in prescribing and dispensing certain highly abused prescription drugs • It may also assist health care practitioners in identifying  patients who are “doctor shopping” or trying to obtain multiple prescriptions for the same  controlled substance from multiple health care practitioners, which is a felony in the  State of Florida.

  10. The Crisis • Florida has became the epicenter of pharmaceutical drug diversion • Prescription drug overdoses kill on average seven Floridians every single day – a tragic number five times greater than deaths caused by all illicit drugs combined. • For every 1 overdose death there are 9 treatment admissions, 35 emergency room visits for misuse or abuse, 161 people with abuse and/or dependence issues and a staggering 461 nonmedical users of prescription drugs. Florida’s Prescription Drug Diversion and Abuse Roadmap, 2012 – 2015, April 2nd, 2012

  11. Substance Use in Adolescents • There are multiple genetic and environmental risk factors that make adolescents vulnerable to the initiation of substance use. • Unfortunately, earlier use of tobacco, alcohol, and drugs is more likely to result in substance use disorders in adulthood. • The substance use in the teenage years which begins as minimal or experimental use with minimal consequences can progress in a subset of individuals to more serious substance use disorders like substance abuse or dependence.

  12. Substance Use in Adolescents • Substance abuse is regular use that has a negative impact on daily functioning or that is associated with recurrent significant problems. • Substance dependence is associated with loss of control over the use of a drug with more serious consequences. • There is abundant evidence that the earlier the initiation of use of substances like tobacco, alcohol, or marijuana, the more likely that individual will have significant addiction issues.

  13. MTF • Monitoring the Future (MTF) is a long-term study of American adolescents, college students, and adults through age 50. • It has been conducted annually by the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research since its inception in 1975 and is supported under a series of investigator-initiated, competing research grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

  14. Narcotics Other than Heroin • The use of narcotic drugs other than heroin (most of which are prescription analgesics) increased sharply in recent years, as have emergency room admissions involving these drugs, making this class of drugs of particular concern. • Use in 12th grade—the only grade for which use is reported—showed some no significant decline in 2012. The two major components of this class are Vicodinand OxyContin, and both showed no significant declines in all three grades. • However, for the three grades combined, the declines for both Vicodinand OxyContinwere significant in 2012, as a result of the greater precision gained with the larger combined sample.

  15. Oxycontin • OxyContin use increased some in all grades from 2002 (when it was first measured) through 2011, • In 2012 the prevalence rate dropped in all three grades; though no single grade change was significant, the change for the three grades combined was. • Annual prevalence in 2012 was 1.6%, 3.0%, and 4.3% in grades 8, 10, and 12, respectively.

  16. Vicodin • Use of Vicodin remained fairly steady at somewhat higher levels since 2002, until among 10th and 12th graders its use declined after 2009. • Use among 8th graders also declined in 2011. • In 2012 annual prevalence rates were 1.3%, 4.4%, and 7.5% in grades 8, 10, and 12; and the decline in 2012 was significant for the three grades combined.

  17. Marijuana Use Past Year Use and Perception of Risk of Using Regularly

  18. NSDUH: Past Year Non-Medical Use • Misuse of prescription drugs is second only to marijuana as the Nation’s most prevalent illicit drug problem and is a public health concern, with approximately 22 million persons initiating nonmedical pain reliever use since 2002. • Combined 2010 and 2011 data indicate that the rate of past year nonmedical use of prescription pain relievers among those aged 12 or older was 4.6 percent nationally and ranged from 3.6 percent in Iowa to 6.4 percent in Oregon

  19. NSDUH: Past Year Non-Medical Use • The national rate for the total population declined between 2009-2010 and 2010-2011 (from 4.9 to 4.6 percent).8 This rate also decreased nationally among persons aged 12 to 17 (from 6.4 to 6.1 percent) • Among those 18 to 25 (from 11.5 to 10.4 percent); however, the rate remained unchanged for persons aged 26 or older.

  20. Myth: Having an Rx prescription gives a patient license to adjust the dosage, and it is safe to continue taking the medicine after it is no longer needed. Likewise, if the medication is prescribed, it can be shared with family and friends.

  21. Fact: Taking prescription drugs that are not prescribed—or taking them in any way other than directed by a doctor—is considered misuse or abuse and can lead to dangerous outcomes. Additionally, using another person’s medication is against the law. Sharing your prescription medicines with another person is also illegal and could lead to devastating results.

  22. Myth: Because Rx drugs are legal, misuse and abuse of these drugs is less risky than using illegal drugs.

  23. Fact: Rx medications provide many benefits when used correctly under a prescriber’s care. But when misused or abused, they can be just as dangerous as illicit drugs, especially when taken with alcohol or other drugs.

  24. Myth: Prescription medications are not drugs of typical abuse among teens and young adults.

  25. Fact: Even though the percentages of teens abusing these drugs is relatively low, compared to marijuana, current trends reveal troubling signs that abuse of these medications is acceptable behavior. What makes it more complicated is that parents, other adult caregivers and those prescribing the medications to teens seem to be unaware of the problem.

  26. Myth: Rx medications are more difficult to obtain than illegal drugs.

  27. Fact: Those who abuse Rx medications report that these drugs can be easily obtained from family members and friends. Additional sources include family medicine cabinets and other frequented locations such as kitchen cabinets, night stands and purses.

  28. Myth: Parents believe that because Rx medications are prescribed by healthcare professionals, teens and young adults will not abuse them.

  29. Fact: Many parents are not even aware that commonly prescribed medications are being abused to get high. In fact, some do not consider the possibility that their unused medicines could get into the wrong hands, and many do not know how to properly dispose of old medicines.

  30. NSDUH: Source Where Pain Relievers Were Obtained for Most Recent Nonmedical Use among Past Year Users Aged 12 or Older: 2010-2011

  31. Developmental Vulnerability • There is a 2 to 8 fold increase in substance use problems if use of tobacco, alcohol, and THC begins < 15 • There is a 1 in 4 chance of coming into harm if using starts < 15 • A narrow window of approximately 2 years for onset of onset of first use makes such a significant difference

  32. New Users in the Past Year of Specific Illicit Drugs among Persons Aged 12 or Older, 2010 Note: The specific drug refers to the drug that was used for the first time in the past year, regardless of whether it was the first drug ever used or not. *Includes pain relievers, tranquilizers, stimulants, and sedatives Source: SAMHSA, 2009 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (September 2010).

  33. Drug-Induced Deaths vs. Other Injury Deaths, 1999–2009* *Data for 2008 and 2009 are provisional and subject to change. Causes of death attributable to drugs include accidental or intentional poisonings by drugs and deaths from medical conditions resulting from chronic drug use. Drug-induced causes exclude accidents, homicides, and other causes indirectly related to drug use. Not all injury cause categories are mutually exclusive. Source: National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Vital Statistics Reports Deaths: Final Data for the years 1999 to 2007 (2001 to 2009); Deaths: Preliminary Data for the years 2008 and 2009 (2010 and 2011). 9/2011

  34. Unintentional Drug Overdose Deaths United States, 1970–2007 27,658 unintentional drug overdose deaths Cocaine Heroin Year National Vital Statistics System, http://wonder.cdc.gov

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