‘Recovery-Friendly’ Job Fair Offers Those Recovering From Opioid Addiction Another Chance
In New Hampshire, where unemployment rates are at record lows, employers struggle to find workers to fill positions. But a new effort sees a solution in one of the state's other problems: the opioid epidemic. Also in the news, telemedicine's role in helping curb the epidemic; what insurance companies cover in terms of opioids; the responsibility of hospitals for post-surgical patients; and more.
Wall Street Journal:
Amid A Dearth Of Workers, New Hampshire Taps Recovering Addicts For Jobs
At a recruiting event in a sunlit parish hall here, job seekers from sober houses streamed in, looking for opportunities from a range of employers all willing to look beyond gaps in resumes, criminal records and messy pasts. Making the rounds at the “recovery-friendly job fair” was Ben Gale, who said it was tough getting work when he had to explain his history with drugs. “A lot of places look at you very differently,” said the 25-year-old, now sober from a heroin addiction. “A lot of them don’t want to give you a chance.” (Levitz, 11/27)
NPR:
Telemedicine For Addiction Treatment? Picture Remains Fuzzy
When President Trump declared the opioid epidemic a public health emergency, it came with a regulatory change intended to make it easier for people to get care. Doctors are now allowed to prescribe addiction medicine virtually, without ever seeing the patient in person. In Indiana, this kind of virtual visit has been legal since early 2017. So I called about a dozen addiction specialists in Indiana to find out how it was going. But no one had heard of doctors using telemedicine for opioid addiction treatment until I ran across Dr. Jay Joshi. (Forman, 11/24)
NPR:
The Insurance Company Paid For Opioids, But Not Cold Therapy
As a lifelong racket-sports fanatic, I've dealt with shoulder pain for decades, treating it with bags of frozen peas, physical therapy, cortisone shots and even experimental treatments like platelet-rich plasma. Eventually, however, the soreness prevented me from handling daily-living tasks like pulling a bottle of olive oil off the top shelf of my kitchen or reaching to the back seat of my car to grab my purse. Even low-impact activities such as swimming freestyle hurt a lot. Sleeping also got tougher. After MRI showed two full-thickness rotator-cuff tears, I finally called a surgeon. (Kafka, 11/25)
NPR:
Should Hospitals Be Punished For Post-Surgical Patients' Opioid Addiction?
In April this year, Katie Herzog checked into a Boston teaching hospital for what turned out to be a nine-hour-long back surgery. The 68-year-old consulting firm president left the hospital with a prescription for Dilaudid, an opioid used to treat severe pain, and instructions to take two pills every four hours as needed. Herzog took close to the full dose for about two weeks. Then, worried about addiction, she began asking questions. "I said, 'How do I taper off this? I don't want to stay on this drug forever, you know? What do I do?' " Herzog says, recalling conversations with her various providers. She never got a clear answer. (Bebinger, 11/26)
The Associated Press:
Maryland Tests Out Part Of Federal Response To Opioid Crisis
A federal initiative to combat the opioid epidemic is being tested in Maryland. The Baltimore Sun reports Maryland, where overdose deaths are surging, is one of seven states approved to allow large residential centers to bill Medicaid for substance abuse treatment. Under the new structure, treatment centers receive reimbursement for each patient rather than a set grant. (11/22)
Tampa Bay Times:
Report: Opioid, Cocaine Deaths On The Rise Statewide And In Tampa Bay
According to the annual Medical Examiners Commission Drug Report, deaths in which opioids were either present in the system or identified to be the cause of death saw a 35 percent increase from 2015, up to a total of 5,725 statewide. Cocaine-related deaths shot up from 1,834 to 2,882 during the same time, a 57 percent increase. (Varn, 11/27)
Charleston (S.C.) Post and Courier:
Opioid Use By S.C. Medicaid Recipients Is Down Due To Drug Monitoring Program, Report Says
The state's prescription drug monitoring program is showing promising results in reducing opioid prescriptions written in South Carolina, according to a new University of South Carolina report. ... In response to the epidemic, state health leaders set up a prescription monitoring program and made it mandatory for all doctors to check before prescribing opioids. The database is run through the Department of Health and Environmental Control. USC's work focused on the Medicaid population, but lead researcher Ana Lopez-De Fede said the trends extend beyond those patients. (Wildeman, 11/26)
Miami Herald:
An Accused Pill Doctor And A Groin-Punching Nurse’s Assistant Get Licenses Suspended
A doctor accused of drug trafficking, a registered nurse twice convicted of prostitution, and a certified nursing assistant who punched a sick senior citizen in the genitals have been suspended, according to November’s Florida Department of Health discipline report. (Neal, 11/26)