Posted on September 30, 2022.
CHICAGO — With a report issued today detailing the horrific toll of the nation’s overdose and death epidemic, the American Medical Association (AMA) calls for an all-hands approach—policymakers, public health experts, educators, faith leaders, and employers—to help save lives.
While physicians and other health care professionals have reduced opioid prescribing in every state—by nearly 50% nationally— that by itself cannot reverse the trend of drug-related overdose deaths. In fact, for the first time, in 2021 drug-related overdose deaths exceeded 100,000—primarily due to illicitly manufactured fentanyl, methamphetamine and cocaine. Overdose deaths are amplified by underlying social needs including housing and transportation.
“No community has been—or will be—spared the pain of this epidemic. The spiking mortality numbers—with young people and Black and Brown Americans dying at the fastest growing rates—add yet another urgent call to remove health inequities from the nation’s health care system. We know policymakers have not exhausted all remedies. Until we have, we must keep advocating for humane, evidence-based responses,” said Bobby Mukkamala, M.D., chair of the AMA Substance Use and Pain Care Task Force (PDF).
The report calls for a campaign to include:
“What is becoming painfully evident is that there are limits to what physicians can do. We have dramatically increased training and changed our prescribing habits, reducing the number of opioids prescribed while increasing access to naloxone, buprenorphine and methadone. But illicitly manufactured fentanyl is supercharging this epidemic. We need help from leaders across sectors to combat this public health crisis,” said Dr. Mukkamala.
The use of prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) also continued its upward trajectory with physicians and other health care professions surpassing the 1 billion mark for the first time. PDMPs are electronic databases that track controlled substance prescriptions and help identify patients with uncoordinated care who might be receiving multiple prescriptions from multiple prescribers.
Read the report here, including state-by-state data for opioid prescriptions, MOUD, naloxone and PDMP use.
Source: www.ama-assn.org
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