Hackathon Encourages Innovative Solutions For Tackling Complex Opioid Epidemic
The teams listened to the community's problems, then came up with solutions ranging from a mobile counseling van to a Fitbit-style bracelet that would track oxygen levels and automatically inject naloxone if needed. In other news on the crisis, a decision to ban a tea that helps those addicted to opioids wean themselves has led to an outcry, a report details the cost of the epidemic and lawmakers call attention to the problem of synthetic drugs.
WBUR:
Hacking A Solution To Boston's Opioid Crisis
[Mike] Duggan's pitch is one of 68 that launched Boston's first opioid hackathon. Almost 200 counselors, computer coders, architects, doctors and current and former addiction patients gathered last weekend for a day of stories and speeches and then two days of hacking. (Bebinger, 9/12)
NPR:
DEA's Move To Ban Kratom Leads To Outcry
Kratom is made from the leaves of a small tree native to Southeast Asia that is a relative of the coffee plant. According to David Kroll, a pharmacologist and medical writer, farmers and indigenous people have used it for hundreds of years as both a stimulant to increase work output and also at the end of the day as a way to relax. The leaves are often brewed like a tea, or crushed and mixed with water. In the U.S., kratom has become popular among people coping with chronic pain and others trying to wean themselves off opioids or alcohol. (Silverman, 9/12)
Kaiser Health News:
Study: Health Spending Related To Opioid Treatment Rose More Than 1,300 Percent
The nation’s ongoing opioid problem comes with staggering physical and emotional costs to patients and families. But the dollar cost to the health system has been harder to peg. Now a new report shows a more than 1,300 percent rise in spending by health insurers in a four-year period on patients with a diagnosis of opioid dependence or abuse. From 2011 to 2015, insurers’ payments to hospitals, laboratories, treatment centers and other medical providers for these patients grew from $32 million to $446 million — a 1,375 percent increase. (Appleby, 9/12)
Roll Call:
Lawmakers See Synthetics As Growing Drug Abuse Challenge
Lawmakers are trying to draw attention to a rapidly emerging overdose crisis caused by synthetic drugs, less than two months after a bill to combat prescription opioid and heroin abuse was signed into law. The opioid measure included provisions that make it easier for the government to prosecute drug traffickers, but synthetic drugs pose a different kind of challenge that wasn’t addressed in the legislation. While most drugs are on a list of controlled substances, synthetics can escape law enforcement scrutiny if the chemists who make them tweak their formulas slightly. (Siddons, 9/13)