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#1 2008-03-31 12:26:09

docalex
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Wanted: A Public Health Approach to Prescription Opioid Abuse

Wanted: A Public Health Approach to Prescription Opioid Abuse and Diversion - David E. Joranson and Aaron M. Gilson; Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety; 15(9): 632-634; 2006.
(Full text PDF of Joranson article)   (This post on War on Docs/Pain Crisis blog)




Excerpt:

[Efforts] to reduce mortality from opioids must be [targeted] at those who cause the problem… However, targeting interventions requires information about why prescription drugs are misused, how they are diverted, and who diverts them. This area continues to be ripe for a public health examination.

Comment: (DeLuca):
Joranson, in response to Paulozzi, describes a basic public health approach to the ‘drug abuse crisis.’ One wonders whether the combined brain power and resources of the NIH, CDC and FDA would not have accomplished this long ago, were it not for misguided drug war policy imperatives.

The Challenge of Prescription Drug Misuse, published in 2005 by Dr. Hurwitz while in federal custody, is an example of the sort of creative analysis we should expect, but never get, from our academic and federal patriarchs. For a deeper consideration of Hurwitz' analysis of government data on prescription drug "abuse", see: Questions for Dr. Volkow (NIDA) - DeLuca, 2008-03-11.



References and Resources:


The Challenge of Prescription Drug Misuse: A Review and Commentary - William Hurwitz; Pain Medicine; 6(2); 152-161; March 2005. Posted: 2005-03-29.


Increasing Deaths from Opioid Analgesics in the United States - Leonard J. Paulozzi, Daniel S. Budnitz, and Yongli Xi; Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety; 15(9); 618-627; 2006. Posted: 2006-09-14.


Dr. Fishman's Response to Paulozzi et al.: Prescription Drug Abuse and Safe Pain Management (PDF) - Scott M. Fishman; Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety; 15(9): 628-631; 2006. Posted: 2006-09-14.


Drug Crime (Not Pain Docs) a Source of Abused Pain Medications in the U.S. - David E. Joranson and Aaron M. Gilson, Journal of Pain and Symptom Management; 30(4): 299-301; 2005. Posted: 2006-02-21.


The Pathological DEA: Aftermath of the DEA FAQ Debacle (Articles from the January 2006 issue of Pain Medicine, and Related Resources) - compiled by Alexander DeLuca; WAR ON PAIN SUFFERERS series #11; 2006.


The War on Drugs, War on Doctors, and the Pain Crisis in America - Alexander DeLuca; MPH thesis; Columbia University; 2004.


[END]


..alex...
Alex DeLuca, M.D., MPH
Senior Consultant, PRN

doctordeluca@painreliefnetwork.org

 

 
 
 

#2 2008-04-02 18:29:37

Tami
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Re: Wanted: A Public Health Approach to Prescription Opioid Abuse

Alex wrote:

The Challenge of Prescription Drug Misuse, published in 2005 by Dr. Hurwitz while in federal custody, is an example of the sort of creative analysis we should expect, but never get, from our academic and federal patriarchs

Thanks Alex, agreed, I have yet to read anywhere as comprehensive an analysis as Dr. Hurwitz. It is what we should expect, and deserve. Was this work published in any med journals?

Thanks for all the great links for research, I study most of them frequently.

Tami


Tami Strand Political Activist for the Pain Relief Network a Nonprofit NonPartisan 501(C)(3) Corporation. "Delaying aggressive opioid therapy in favor of trying everything else first is not rational based on a modern, scientific understanding of the pathophysiology of chronic pain, and is therefore not the standard of care." Dr. Alexander Deluca   
Rage Against The Machine

 

 
 
 

#3 2008-04-04 21:30:07

docalex
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Re: Wanted: A Public Health Approach to Prescription Opioid Abuse

Tami wrote:

Alex wrote:

The Challenge of Prescription Drug Misuse, published in 2005 by Dr. Hurwitz while in federal custody, is an example of the sort of creative analysis we should expect, but never get, from our academic and federal patriarchs

Thanks Alex, agreed, I have yet to read anywhere as comprehensive an analysis as Dr. Hurwitz. It is what we should expect, and deserve. Was this work published in any med journals?

Tami

It was published in the journal Pain Medicine, which is a peer-reviewed journal, and a pretty good one. Here's the cite with link to the full text:

The Challenge of Prescription Drug Misuse: A Review and Commentary - William Hurwitz; Pain Medicine; 6(2); 152-161; March 2005. Posted: 2005-03-29.

To all:

It is an academic article - take your time with it. But this is genius - this is Billy's wonderful mind. He's working entirely with Government data - he just brings it all together in a way it suddenly makes sense. He brings truth to the lie, literally. Phenomenal document. When I first read it, I dubbed it an "instant classic" in the war on doctors literature.

See also:
Virtually everything about the trials of Dr. William Hurwitz


..alex...
Alex DeLuca, M.D., MPH
Senior Consultant, PRN

doctordeluca@painreliefnetwork.org

 

 
 
 

#4 2008-04-08 16:17:42

MissDiva
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Re: Wanted: A Public Health Approach to Prescription Opioid Abuse

http://www.libertyforall.net/?p=1084


Excerpt from War on Drugs has been a whopper of a failure
by Jack Cole

The war on drugs doesn’t make us any safer. The war on drugs doesn’t prevent drug abuse. The war on drugs costs a fortune. And the war on drugs and its huge profits encourage corruption at all levels of law enforcement.

The good news is that there are workable alternatives. When the Swiss did a 10-year experiment, treating heroin addicts by giving them heroin up to three times a day, everything changed. There was a 60 percent drop in property and violent crime, overdose deaths disappeared, AIDS and hepatitis declined to the lowest rates in Europe, addiction rates went down as addicts stabilized their lives enough to kick their habit, and the rate of projected cases of new heroin users fell by a staggering 82 percent.

By treating heroin addiction as a medical problem, instead of a sign of bad moral character, officials were able to tame Switzerland’s drug problem and gut the drug dealers, as we had always dreamed — just like that.

I represent Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, an international group of law officers who are sworn opponents of drug abuse. We know a system of legalized regulation of drugs is more efficient and ethical than one of prohibition.

Originally published at the LEAP (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition) blog January 25, 2007.

Last edited by MissDiva (2008-04-08 16:17:55)


MissDiva ~ Pat

Actions speak louder than words.

 

 
 
 

 

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