Provinces clamp down on OxyContin abuse

dumpthemonarchy

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“This should be treated as a public health emergency.” says Dr Chase. Another quote from the article.

" Claudette Chase, medical director for the Sioux Lookout First Nation’s health authority and a member of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation’s prescription drug abuse task force, estimates that about a third of the aboriginal population in her area of northwestern Ontario is addicted to prescription opioids. In some communities, it’s as high as 75 per cent. Of the thousands who need treatment, she said, less than 10 per cent are getting help. "

It used to work by just sweeping this sort of aboriginal problem under the rug by just paying and paying. Now something has to be done that is constructive. The medical bureacrats will take little responsibility of course, they were just following clueless policy dealing with poor, uneducated country people.

There aren't enough clinics to treat the addicts, of any substance, especially in rural areas, and the users, in this case many aboriginals, can't afford to buy their own. Big problems lie ahead here.



Provinces clamp down on OxyContin abuse - The Globe and Mail




Provinces clamp down on OxyContin abuse

anna mehler paperny

From Saturday's Globe and Mail

Published Friday, Feb. 17, 2012 3:46PM EST

Last updated Saturday, Feb. 18, 2012 6:30AM EST


377 comments

The epicentres of Canada’s prescription pill problem have said they’ll only pay for the leading brand of potent painkillers under special circumstances – one of the most dramatic steps taken in years to tackle the country’s fastest-growing addiction.

Purdue Pharmaceuticals, which manufactures OxyContin, is replacing it with a drug that’s supposed to be less prone to abuse. But some provinces have decided that’s not good enough.

Ontario confirmed Friday that, starting at the end of the month, OxyContin – and its replacement, OxyNEO – will no longer be covered under the province’s general benefits plan. Any doctor who wants to prescribe a provincially funded dose of the long-acting oxycodone will need to prove that other attempts to treat a patient’s pain have failed. While this and other precautions have been “guidelines” for years, now they are a requirement.

“The active ingredient in OxyNEO is the same ingredient as in OxyContin, so it still has the same risks. … That’s why we felt it was important to strengthen the funding requirements,” said Diane McArthur, Ontario’s assistant deputy minister and executive officer of Ontario Public Drug Programs. “Ontario has the highest level of OxyContin use in the country. And that was quite concerning to us.”

Other provinces are making similar moves. Prince Edward Island, which already had special criteria for OxyContin prescriptions, has no plans to pay for new OxyNEO prescriptions. Manitoba only pays for OxyContin in exceptional circumstances and, along with British Columbia, has yet to make a decision on whether to pay for the drug’s replacement. Saskatchewan will make a decision on paying for the new drug as early as next week.

The federal government, which funds aboriginals not covered by provincial programs, has said it will only cover OxyNEO under extenuating circumstances.

Purdue acknowledges that addiction to its prescription painkiller is a growing health problem. The pharmaceutical giant developed OxyNEO “in an effort to make the tablets more difficult to be manipulated for the purpose of misuse and abuse,” said vice-president of corporate affairs Randy Steffan. OxyNEO also uses oxycodone, but is more difficult to crush, snort and inject.

But addiction experts argue that isn’t enough. And the provinces’ reluctance to fund one of the most popular painkillers out there indicates just how seriously they’re taking this problem.

Mr. Steffan wouldn’t comment on that reluctance. “Questions about reimbursement for OxyNEO,” he said, “should be directed to provincial health authorities.”

The move comes years after health-care practitioners first began sounding the alarm on the growing number of Canadians addicted to – and dying from – prescription pills.

“I think it’s a major step in the right direction, from a public health perspective,” said Irfan Dhalla, a doctor at St. Michael’s in Toronto.

But even as provinces move to narrow the supply of opioids, treatment options for addicts remain inadequate – especially where the need is greatest: in smaller, more remote communities with huge addiction rates and few or no treatment services.

“It’s no panacea,” says Clement Sun, who runs a methadone clinic in Toronto. “In southern Ontario, and in larger centres, [treatment availability is] pretty good. But rural areas and in Northern Ontario, they’re desperate.”

In Northern Ontario, the prospect of OxyContin’s phase-out prompted a call for help from health-care practitioners and community leaders with the Nishnawbe Aski Nation. There are so many addicts, and so few treatment facilities, that a disrupted supply could be a body blow to tiny communities.

Claudette Chase, medical director for the Sioux Lookout First Nation’s health authority and a member of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation’s prescription drug abuse task force, estimates that about a third of the aboriginal population in her area of northwestern Ontario is addicted to prescription opioids. In some communities, it’s as high as 75 per cent. Of the thousands who need treatment, she said, less than 10 per cent are getting help.

Part of the problem is the paperwork needed to access Suboxone, an easy-to-use alternative to methadone, the most common treatment for opioid addiction. Ontario’s Ms. McArthur said the province will meet shortly with the drug’s manufacturer, Reckitt Benckiser, about “new information” on the drug; lowering the barriers to prescribing Suboxone is a possibility.

In the meantime, Dr. Chase worries about a drought of OxyContin in communities with high addiction levels. The impacts could range from mass, racking withdrawals to more deaths thanks to an all-too-versatile illicit drug market, she said.
“This should be treated as a public health emergency.”
Ontario's methadone caseload in December, 2010: 29,332 patients, 296 physicians, 105 offices

Ontario's methadone caseload in December, 2011: 35,228 patients, 340 physicians, 120 offices

9,000
Estimated number of aboriginals in northwestern Ontario addicted to OxyContin

5
Estimated percentage of those receiving treatment

33
Estimated percentage of Northwestern Ontario's First Nations population addicted to OxyContin

75
Estimated percentage of OxyContin-addicted residents in some of Northwestern Ontario's hardest-hit communities.

1,229
Aboriginal Canadians receiving OxyContin under Ottawa's health program.

5,025
Aboriginal Canadians on methadone treatment under Ottawa's health program

61
Aboriginal Canadians on Suboxone treatment under Ottawa's health program.

$90-million

Amount Health Canada spends on addiction services for First Nations and Inuit.
Sources: Health Canada, Ontario Health Ministry, Nishnawbe Aski Nation
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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Ontario delisting OxyContin and its substitute from drug benefit program

Ontario is delisting the prescription painkiller OxyContin — and the drug that
will soon replace it — from the province’s drug benefit program.

The change, revealed Friday, is an attempt to curb an addiction epidemic in
the province by making it harder for physicians to prescribe — and patients
to get — the highly addictive drug.

In recent years, OxyContin prescriptions have skyrocketed in Ontario. The
drug, sometimes called “hillbilly heroin,” is sold on the street for its heroin-like
high and causes hundreds of overdose deaths each year.....

(LINK to the news story: Canada News: Ontario delisting OxyContin and its substitute from drug benefit program - thestar.com )

......People who are addicted to OxyContin and who will not be able to get
enough pills to satisfy their addiction will experience painful withdrawal,
including nausea and terrible stomach cramps. But, Furlan said, unlike
withdrawal from alcohol addiction, suddenly going off opioids is not
life-threatening.

“What is life threatening with opioids is overdose.”


This could be an interesting development. Be interesting to look back at
this Thread in a few months to see if there's any noticeable changes at all,
be it more or less crime, addicts, overdoses, etc...

Oh yeah....

OxyContin is a slow-release narcotic painkiller that is widely prescribed for
victims of moderate to severe chronic pain resulting from such problems
as arthritis, back trouble and cancer. One pill is designed to last 12 hours,
but abusers usually crush the medicine and then snort or inject it, producing
a quick, heroin-like high.
 

SLM

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Mar 5, 2011
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Makes me wonder what kind of physicians are still over-prescribing this drug? Doctor's that live under a rock and don't realize most of it ends up hitting the street?
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

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May 28, 2007
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My wife uses this off and on for chronic pain from a car accident in 2007. The doctor considered the risk of addiction as did my wife but they decided that there was no other viable pain killer that would work. It is covered not by the province but a private insurance plan right now. Should the private insurance plan not cover this, my wife would be forced to endure pain again as we cannot afford it outright. While certainly it is abused, cutting off the supply will hurt legitimate users. Also I think most of the addicts are buying off black market are they not?
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
3
36
London, Ontario
My wife uses this off and on for chronic pain from a car accident in 2007. The doctor considered the risk of addiction as did my wife but they decided that there was no other viable pain killer that would work. It is covered not by the province but a private insurance plan right now. Should the private insurance plan not cover this, my wife would be forced to endure pain again as we cannot afford it outright. While certainly it is abused, cutting off the supply will hurt legitimate users. Also I think most of the addicts are buying off black market are they not?

Would she not be eligible for the Exceptional Access Program?
 

bill barilko

Senate Member
Mar 4, 2009
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the users, in this case many aboriginals, can't afford to buy their own. Big problems lie ahead here
Not really-the addicts will turn to booze to ease the pain-junkies always do.

If others turn to other more dangerous substances well that option was always there wasn't it-a few dead junkies doesn't really matter.
 

dumpthemonarchy

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Not really-the addicts will turn to booze to ease the pain-junkies always do.

If others turn to other more dangerous substances well that option was always there wasn't it-a few dead junkies doesn't really matter.

In Vancouver junkies tend to break into a lot cars to pay for thier habits, but BC isn't delisting the drug for a new wave. Dead junkies might be cheaper than building new prisons.

Now I know how threads get merged, and why I couldn't do it.
 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
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Backwater, Ontario.
""Ontario confirmed Friday that, starting at the end of the month, OxyContin – and its replacement, OxyNEO – will no longer be covered under the province’s general benefits plan. Any doctor who wants to prescribe a provincially funded dose of the long-acting oxycodone will need to prove that other attempts to treat a patient’s pain have failed. While this and other precautions have been “guidelines” for years, now they are a requirement.''

Good idea, but "clamping down on abuse" is only a sidebar. What they are doing is DELISTING another drug so the payers (us) don't have to pay for it.

Anyone with money who can stick handle their way through the medical requirements to receive the replacement drug will be ok.

Anyone who is seriously ill and poor will have a fight on their hands to provide pain relief for their loved ones.

The abuse will still be there, and if you live in a high use neighbourhood, when the mass withdrawl starts, better bar your doors. Ever see Night of the Living Dead?

Dalton McLiar is getting the ball rolling. Wonder which "consultant" will be making a mill or two from this fiasco.

Ain't politicians wonderful.
 

TenPenny

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Jun 9, 2004
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""Ontario confirmed Friday that, starting at the end of the month, OxyContin – and its replacement, OxyNEO – will no longer be covered under the province’s general benefits plan. Any doctor who wants to prescribe a provincially funded dose of the long-acting oxycodone will need to prove that other attempts to treat a patient’s pain have failed. While this and other precautions have been “guidelines” for years, now they are a requirement.''

Good idea, but "clamping down on abuse" is only a sidebar. What they are doing is DELISTING another drug so the payers (us) don't have to pay for it.

Anyone with money who can stick handle their way through the medical requirements to receive the replacement drug will be ok.

Anyone who is seriously ill and poor will have a fight on their hands to provide pain relief for their loved ones.

The abuse will still be there, and if you live in a high use neighbourhood, when the mass withdrawl starts, better bar your doors. Ever see Night of the Living Dead?

Dalton McLiar is getting the ball rolling. Wonder which "consultant" will be making a mill or two from this fiasco.

Ain't politicians wonderful.

Delisting also means that in order to do a prescription, hoops will have to be jumped through, and most doctors won't bother - it's a pain in the ass to prescrbe delisted items, each prescription requires special permissions.