As I’m working on my forthcoming book, A Nation in Pain: Healing Our Biggest Health Problem (Oxford, 2013), I’m also contributing to WBUR’s CommonHealth blog. The following entry first appeared on WBUR’s site.
Today’s New York Times carries a front page article fanning the hysteria – once again – about prescription painkillers.
A prominent number quoted in the article – that, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 14,800 people died in 2008 in episodes involving these painkillers – is correct. And that’s 14,800 too many. No doubt about it.
But look at what the article failed to say: That, again according to the CDC, half of all those deaths involving prescription painkillers also involved at least one other drug, including benzodiazepines, cocaine and heroin. And that “alcohol is also involved in many overdose deaths.” To blame it all on prescription painkillers – and pain patients and their doctors – is simply not the full truth.
The New York Times story also failed to note that, in contrast to the 14,800 people whose deaths involved prescription painkillers, 443,000 American adults die every year from cigarette smoking. And more than 80,000 die every year from excessive alcohol use. Non-prescription painkillers such as NSAIDS (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs like ibuprofen) aren’t exactly benign, either – they kill an estimated 7,000 to 10,000 American adults a year.
Nor did the article mention the extent of suffering caused in this country by chronic pain.
According to a recent report from the Institute of Medicine, an estimated 100 million Americans live in chronic pain, and that doesn’t count children, people in the military or in institutions such as nursing homes. And – estimates vary – one tenth to one third of them have chronic pain that is severe and disabling. At least some of this latter group do need opioids, probably strong ones, and possibly for the rest of their lives. To put too many barriers in the way of access to opioids is tantamount to what some ethicists call “torture by omission.”
Furthermore, The New York Times articles picks on doctors for overprescribing painkillers. But doctors are not the real problem.
If it’s diversion and abuse that you’re worried about, consider where street abusers actually get their drugs. According to a 2009 government report, 53.3 percent get their drugs free from a friend or relative, 9.9 percent buy them from a friend or relative, 5 percent steal them from a friend or relative. That’s roughly 70 percent who get it from your medicine cabinet and mine. (And yes, 17.6 percent get them from one doctor.)
To be sure, opioids are not perfect painkillers. In fact, by some estimates, they’re only 30 to 40 percent effective. And yes, of course, non-pharmacological treatments are essential (though not always reimbursed) for treating chronic pain, including meditation, exercise, distraction, acupuncture and massage.
Prescription painkiller deaths grab the headlines, and the front page stories. But all too often, the silent suffering of people in chronic pain does not.
Put bluntly, people do not die from marijuana. There are simply no deaths – zero – attributable to marijuana, and that’s according to the government’s own statistics, from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.[i]
In start contrast, government figures show that 443,000 American adults die every year from cigarette smoking,[ii] and more than 80,000 die annually from excessive alcohol use.[iii]
Even NSAIDS (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs like ibuprofen) are more dangerous than marijuana – they kill an estimated 7,000 to 10,000 American adults a year.[iv]
[i] K. Hunter, Personal Communication, 3/22/12.
[ii] Smoking-Attributable Mortality, Years of Potential Life Lost and Productivity Losses – United States, 2000-2004, Nov. 14, 2008, Vol.57, No. 45, Retrieved 3/15/12.
[iii] “Alcohol and Public Health: Alcohol-Related Disease Impact (ARDI), Average for United States 2001-2005, Alcohol-Attributable Deaths Due to Excessive Alcohol Use,” http://apps.nccd.cdc.gov/DACH_ARDI/Default/Report.aspx?T=AAM&P=de9de51e-d51b-4690-a9a4-358859b692bc&R=804296a0-ac47-41d3-a939-9df26a176186&M=E2769A53-0BFC-453F-9FD7-63C5AA6CE5D7&F=AAMCauseGenderNew&D=H
[iv] Lanza, Frank L. et al, “Guidelines for Prevention of NSAID-Related Ulcer Complications,” American College of Gastroenterology, March, 2009, Vol. 104, pp. 728- 738.
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Shannon says
May 7, 2012 at 10:26 pmI saw your piece “Blue Cross Painkiller Policy Risks Hurting Patients.” I have been so worried about the current hysteria in the press and among politicians on the issue of painkillers. I just wrote my own blog post on this subject… I hope you will read it. I talk about the bill in Congress about painkillers, the mess in Washington state, Canada’s problems with their painkiller pain, and the IOM report.
Thank you for getting our view point out into the media! Pain patients like myself don’t have the ability to get our voices heard, especially when there is just so much hand-wringing over this.
I know you are a busy lady but if you get the chance to read it, here’s the link to my post: http://nippaininthebud.blogspot.com/2012/05/should-politicians-decide-your-pain.html
Blessings,
-Shannon
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