Deadly Delays: Insurance Denials, Wait Lists Erode Hope For Those Struggling With Addiction
Even when there are enough beds in a treatment center, many who are fighting an opioid addiction find that their insurance won't cover the program. In other news, a one-mile stretch in Boston paints a vivid picture of the epidemic, two anti-opioid bills in Missouri face different fates, and state officials in Ohio are preaching the benefits of naloxone.
New Hampshire Public Radio:
Politics In Real Life: Dying From Overdose While Waiting For Treatment
Courtney Griffin was addicted to heroin and ready to get help. She packed up her things, and her mom drove her to a residential treatment facility about an hour from their home in New Hampshire. There was a bed waiting for her. But unfortunately, that's not where her story ends. Ninety minutes after they arrived, Pamela Griffin said, her daughter was back in the waiting room, shaking her head. Their health insurance company declined to cover the treatment. (Keith, 5/12)
WBUR:
State’s Opioid Epidemic Is Vividly Seen On Boston’s ‘Methadone Mile’
The ravages of the state’s opioid epidemic are perhaps nowhere more visible than in an area of Boston known as “Methadone Mile” — a one-mile stretch of Massachusetts Avenue in the shadow of Boston Medical Center. (Becker, 5/13)
St. Louis Public Radio:
One Step Forward, One Step Back For Anti-Opioid Legislation In Missouri
Missourians working to reduce the impact of the opioid crisis are close to scoring one victory this legislative session: a measure expanding access to the opioid overdose antidote is on its way to the governor’s desk. But with one day left in the session, another tool many consider vital in the fight against opioids appears out of reach. Missouri is likely to remain the only state in the nation without a prescription drug monitoring database. (Phillips, 5/12)
The Columbus Dispatch:
State Begins Awareness Campaign About Overdoses, Life-Saving Solutions
As the death toll from fentanyl soars in Ohio, health officials are getting the word out about naloxone, a drug that saves people from life-sapping overdoses. (Johnson, 5/12)
Meanwhile, Stat profiles Dr. Richard Sackler, whose secret testimony on OxyContin's marketing could soon be made public —
Stat:
The Man At The Center Of The Secret OxyContin Files
A Kentucky judge’s order to unseal secret OxyContin records is putting the spotlight on a wealthy, publicity-averse doctor whose testimony about the marketing of the addictive pain pill is the most prized document in the court files. (Armstrong, 5/12)
And media outlets report on charges related to prescription pain killers —
The Associated Press:
Louisville Doctor Sentenced For Overprescribing Pain Pills
A former doctor with offices in Louisville and southern Indiana has been sentenced to 100 months in prison for unlawfully distributing prescription drugs. Jamie Guerrero agreed to pay $827,000 in restitution to victims as part of a January plea agreement. U.S. District Judge Greg Stevens sentenced the former anesthesiologist on Thursday. (5/12)
The Associated Press:
3 Doctors Accused Of Selling $5M In Prescription Drugs
Federal prosecutors allege three doctors at a now-defunct clinic in Philadelphia that specialized in helping drug addicts actually sold them $5 million worth of prescription drugs. According to a federal indictment released Wednesday, the doctors sold prescriptions for controlled substances to drug dealers and addicts for cash while performing little or no treatment as required by law. (5/12)