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ER visits for opioid overdose up 30%, CDC study finds
cacman Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 07-03-2010
Posts: 12,216
The opioid epidemic in the United States shows no signs of slowing, according to a Vital Signs report released Tuesday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The report found that emergency department visits due to suspected opioid overdoses continued to climb -- about 30% -- from July 2016 to September 2017 across the country.

"This is really a fast-moving epidemic that's getting worse," said Dr. Anne Schuchat, acting director of the CDC and acting administrator of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, who was not an author of the report.

"The increases in overdoses were seen in adults of all age groups. They were seen in men and women. They were seen in every geographic region in the nation," she said.

The findings in the report could help identify and track overdoses in a way that helps the development of responses from both the medical community and law enforcement agencies, Schuchat said.

Based on the report, some emergency departments could enhance prevention and treatment and improve efforts to connect patients with resources to help prevent future overdoses.

"We really think that this is a wake-up call for all of us -- that the opioid epidemic is in all of our communities and that there's more that we need to do," Schuchat said.

Potential for misuse
US Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams said Tuesday that the country's opioid epidemic hits particularly close to home.

"My younger brother has struggled with addiction for decades, and I often think about the fact that it could have been me," he said. "My whole family, like many other families in America, have experienced a similar story and over the years have witnessed firsthand the pain that comes from opioid use disorder, which is commonly referred to as addiction."

Opioids are a class of drugs used to reduce pain, and they have the potential to be misused. Prescription opioids can be prescribed by doctors and include oxycodone or OxyContin, hydrocodone or Vicodin, and morphine.

Pharmaceutical fentanyl is an opiate drug that is about 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine, and it is usually administered to patients who are in severe pain through injection, a patch or a lozenge.

Most of the fentanyl that people buy on the street, however, doesn't come from pharmacies or hospitals. Rather, much of it is illegally made in clandestine labs as chemical variations of legal fentanyl.

Heroin is an illegal opioid that is highly addictive. Between 2010 and 2016, the rate of heroin-related overdose deaths increased by more than FIVE times, according to the CDC.

Every day, more than 115 people in the US die after overdosing on any type of opioid, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

The states with the biggest rise in overdoses
The new report included data on emergency department visits from July 2016 to September 2017 from the CDC's National Syndromic Surveillance and Enhanced State Opioid Overdose Surveillance programs.

The data showed that among about 91 million emergency department visits identified in the National Syndromic Surveillance Program, which includes 45 states, a total of 142,557 were suspected opioid overdoses.

Those visits increased 29.7% from July 2016 to September 2017, but the CDC researchers found that there were some regional differences, too.

The Midwest had the largest increase of prevalence, at 69.7%; followed by the West, at 40.3%; Northeast, at 21.3%; Southwest, at 20.2%; and Southeast at 14%, the data showed.

Among about 45 million emergency department visits identified in the Enhanced State Opioid Overdose Surveillance Program, which includes 16 states, a total of 119,198 were suspected opioid overdoses.

Those visits increased 34.5% from July 2016 to September 2017, the researchers found, and 10 states experienced significant increases in prevalence during that time period.

Wisconsin had the largest increase, 108.6%, and Delaware had the second largest, 105%. Pennsylvania saw a 80.6% increase, Illinois saw a 65.5% increase, Indiana saw a 35.1% increase, Maine saw a 34% increase, North Carolina saw a 31.1% increase, Ohio saw a 27.7% increase, and Missouri saw a 21.4% increase. In the West, Nevada saw a 17.9% increase, and New Mexico saw a 8.3% increase.

Meanwhile, a significant decrease occurred in Kentucky: 15%. New Hampshire saw a 7.1% decrease, and a non-significant 5.3% decrease was observed in West Virginia. It is unclear whether those decreases are true declines or merely statistical fluctuations, Schuchat said.

The researchers noted that the increases in the Midwest were consistent with trends in previously reported opioid overdose deaths. Yet the increases in the Southwest and West and the decreases in the Southeast were unanticipated. Those findings might foreshadow death trends to come, they noted.

"Research shows that people who have had an overdose are more likely to have another. Emergency department education and post-overdose protocols, including providing naloxone and linking people to treatment, are critical needs," Alana Vivolo-Kantor, first author of the report and a behavioral scientist in the CDC's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, said in a statement Tuesday.

The drug naloxone can reverse opioid overdose. Based on research presented at the American College of Emergency Physicians' annual conference last year, naloxone was found to be successful in stopping overdose 93% of the time.

"Data on opioid overdoses treated in emergency departments can inform timely, strategic, and coordinated response efforts in the community as well," Vivolo-Kantor said.

The new CDC report had some limitations, including that the data sources could have underestimated or overestimated opioid overdoses based on differences in how hospitals coded their emergency department visits.

Also, the findings were representative of only the hospitals participating in the CDC's surveillance programs and were not generalizable to areas not participating in those programs.

Overall, the new findings underscore just how serious the opioid epidemic has become, said Dr. Caleb Alexander, an associate professor and co-director of the Center for Drug Safety and Effectiveness at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

He added that the trends described in the report are consistent with reports of worsening injuries and deaths.

"In 2016, more people died from drug overdoses than ever before in the United States. More than 60,000 people died in 2016, and this represented about a 20% increase from 2015," said Alexander, who was not involved in the new report.

In December, the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics released a data brief detailing those trends in the lives lost to drug overdoses in 2016.

"What this new report does is, this shines a brighter light on one particular facet of the epidemic, namely emergency department visits arising from overdoses," Alexander said.

"Just as more people are dying from prescription opioids, heroin and illicit fentanyl, this report highlights that more people are also being seen in emergency departments for overdoses from these products," he said.

Opioids might not be best for pain
The World Health Organization has described the epidemic of opioid overdoses and deaths in North America as being fueled by increased prescribing and sales.

About 40% of opioid overdose deaths involve a prescription opioid, according to the CDC.

Yet a separate study published in the journal JAMA on Tuesday found that treating pain with opioids was not superior to treatment with non-opioid medications over a 12-month period.

The study involved 240 patients diagnosed with chronic back, hip or knee pain recruited from 62 Minneapolis VA primary care clinicians from June 2013 to December 2015.

For the study, the patients were separated into two randomized groups: One group was treated with opioids, and the other received non-opioid medications.

Each group had a three-step prescribing strategy. For the non-opioid group, patients were prescribed acetaminophen and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in the first step. Step two included additional oral medications, such as nortriptyline or amitriptyline and topical analgesics. Step three included drugs like pregabalin or tramadol.

For the opioid group, the first step was immediate-release morphine, oxycodone or hydrocodone. Step two included morphine sustained-action and oxycodone sustained-action, and step three was transdermal fentanyl.

The researchers found that there was no significant difference in pain-related function and health-related quality of life between the two groups over 12 months.

Rather, the researchers found that non-opioid medications were associated with significantly better or lower pain intensity, but opioids caused significantly more medication-related adverse symptoms. No deaths or opioid use disorder diagnoses occurred during the study.
The researchers wrote that their "results do not support initiation of opioid therapy for moderate to severe chronic back pain or hip or knee osteoarthritis pain."

On the other hand, many patients with chronic pain need some type of relief and turn to opioids for care.

Since 1999, the prescribing of opioids has increased substantially, and that has led to a large number of Americans developing opioid use disorder or addiction, the CDC's Schuchat said. She added that the opioid epidemic has come in three waves, and overprescribing represents just the first.

"The second wave occurred related to heroin -- where the heroin supply was inexpensive and extremely potent, and so in the population that was addicted to opioid medicines, the exposure to heroin was quite deadly," Schuchat said.

"This third wave that we're experiencing right now is related to fentanyl and other illicitly manufactured opioids that might be either injected or taken as pills, and this latest illicit product is even more potent than the heroin," she said. "So even without an increase in people who are using opioids, the use of an opioid is even more dangerous than it used to be."

https://www.cnn.com/2018/03/06/health/opioid-overdose-emergency-departments-cdc-study/index.html
victor809 Offline
#2 Posted:
Joined: 10-14-2011
Posts: 23,866
You sure whine a lot about opioids.
bs_kwaj Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 02-13-2006
Posts: 5,214

I just say 'no' to drugs.

Thanks Nancy.

Beer
Speyside Offline
#4 Posted:
Joined: 03-16-2015
Posts: 13,106
How about so CliffsNotes?
Ewok126 Offline
#5 Posted:
Joined: 06-25-2017
Posts: 4,356
bs_kwaj wrote:
I just say 'no' to drugs.

Thanks Nancy.

Beer


Can I say "Maybe" to drugs? cause they do me right! Lucky I gots enough sense to know when to take them and when not to. Well my wife does I should say cause I forget to take em. Anxious Beer
cacman Offline
#6 Posted:
Joined: 07-03-2010
Posts: 12,216
victor809 wrote:
You sure whine a lot about opioids.

Not opiods, but the fact the guberment allowed big pharma to create the epidemic our Country is experiencing while making millions off the lives they are destroying through lying and deceitful advertising. Big pharma was allowed to create the "demand". Then big pharma exploited the epidemic by creating a larger and larger "supply" while Narcan is offered for free. Meanwhile MJ is still classified in the same category as opioids. The whole situation is totally hypocritical. Big pharma and the guberment should be held accountable for the epidemic they created.

Say hello to my old neighborhood and where my family has lived since immigrating to this Country in 1905. A small example of what's happening throughout America thanks to big pharma and their lying/deceitful promotion of opioids.
https://newsinteractive.post-gazette.com/riding-od-road

Bringing awareness to the guberment allowing more than 60,000 people to die in 2016 from opioid abuse is NOT whining. It's bringing awareness to the reforms the gubement needs to place on big pharma, and the medical industry in general.
Thunder.Gerbil Offline
#7 Posted:
Joined: 11-02-2006
Posts: 121,359
Nothing like bringing awareness to the masses via a discount cigar forum...

Sing it brother! Sing it loud! Sing it proud!
Ewok126 Offline
#8 Posted:
Joined: 06-25-2017
Posts: 4,356
I wonder if I can stick my opioid in a cigar? Nothing on the gubment nor big pharma being deceitful about that are they? Any percentages about that?
rfenst Offline
#9 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,601
Blah, blah, blah!
rfenst Offline
#10 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,601
Thunder.Gerbil wrote:
Nothing like bringing awareness to the masses via a discount cigar forum...

Sing it brother! Sing it loud! Sing it proud!


lol
Gene363 Offline
#11 Posted:
Joined: 01-24-2003
Posts: 30,935
Ya know, I cannot just fault big Pharma alone. There has to be something else that causes so many people to take them. Over the years I've been given prescriptions and even the drugs themselves by doctors for various surgeries and injuries. I've got a collection of the things just in case my back decides to F me up one day. I never used more than a couple if any at all. My Doc knows that.

Every couple of years I get a new prescription so it's up to date. First time I asked for an update he was a little concerned but I brought a bag with my collection of all pills I had never taken. He was quite happy to see they had not been used and hooked me up. FWIW, Doc's get a lot of scrutiny about what they prescribe.
Ewok126 Offline
#12 Posted:
Joined: 06-25-2017
Posts: 4,356
Exactly Gene.

I would bet a very high number of those listed in the percentages above knew or knows that addiction can happen and death of overdose if this or any drug is abused. So my question is when is the individual going to be held accountable themselves and quit blaming everyone else or companies, gubment for their ignorance. The "Well I didn't know because they didn't tell me" I call BS. I knew long before cigarette commercials was ban, Before Drs tried to get people to quit, Before one was not allowed to smoke in a hospital, Before the "TRUTH" commercials was playing that cigarettes could kill but yet let me claim that it is the tobacco companies fault because they didn't say "This could kill you" or the FDA because they allow it to be sold.

If I go to Cali and I am toting an AR15 full auto with a 75 round drum clip because that is OK in parts of AZ so I thought it would be OK in any part of the US or World even, and claim ignorance to the law and what could happen if I was caught, yeah give that a go. But yet it would be their fault because they did not send me the MEMO right?

Besides 99.9% of all things on this rock that Taste good, Feels good, Makes you feel good, is guess what....... bad for you if abused or overdosed.
cacman Offline
#13 Posted:
Joined: 07-03-2010
Posts: 12,216
rfenst wrote:
Blah, blah, blah!

Would expect nothing else from a lawyer and wrongful death cases he can not defend, or make any money from..
tamapatom Offline
#14 Posted:
Joined: 03-19-2015
Posts: 7,381
Ouch
teedubbya Offline
#15 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
It’s funny when someone disrespects someone and doesn’t recognize the true loss of respect is from all of those that just watched said disrespect.

Speyside Offline
#16 Posted:
Joined: 03-16-2015
Posts: 13,106
^That implies I still had any respect for someone.
gummy jones Offline
#17 Posted:
Joined: 07-06-2015
Posts: 7,969
Yea but guns
Think of the children
cacman Offline
#18 Posted:
Joined: 07-03-2010
Posts: 12,216
Thunder.Gerbil wrote:
Nothing like bringing awareness to the masses via a discount cigar forum...

Sing it brother! Sing it loud! Sing it proud!

Well we do have to listen to the Lib's incessant crying over everything Trump does.
At least he isn't killing 115 people per day.
danmdevries Offline
#19 Posted:
Joined: 02-11-2014
Posts: 17,620
All these illicit narcotics out there my hospital has had to increase its supply of Narcan many many times over.

At the same time, we have NO doses left of morphine, and now ran out of hydromorphone.
rfenst Offline
#20 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,601
danmdevries wrote:
All these illicit narcotics out there my hospital has had to increase its supply of Narcan many many times over.

At the same time, we have NO doses left of morphine, and now ran out of hydromorphone.


How the hell can a hospital run w/o morphine or dilaudid? What do you use for severe pain?
cacman Offline
#21 Posted:
Joined: 07-03-2010
Posts: 12,216
^^^ Love the hypocrisy!
Narcan is given away for free.
But they'll charge you $10+ a tablet for that Acetaminophen or Ibuprofen in the ER for pain.
Ewok126 Offline
#22 Posted:
Joined: 06-25-2017
Posts: 4,356
rfenst wrote:
How the hell can a hospital run w/o morphine or dilaudid? What do you use for severe pain?


I will give you 3 guesses.
Thunder.Gerbil Offline
#23 Posted:
Joined: 11-02-2006
Posts: 121,359
cacman wrote:
Well we do have to listen to the Lib's incessant crying over everything Trump does.
At least he isn't killing 115 people per day.


I see.

Does it make you feel better, posting these threads?
cacman Offline
#24 Posted:
Joined: 07-03-2010
Posts: 12,216
^^^ I do consider the epidemic more important that who the President had an affair with when he wasn't President.
Especially considering the poor condition of our Health Care system.

Hell, Cigna just bought Express Scripts for $65B. Makes for a nice little monopoly..
tailgater Offline
#25 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,187
teedubbya wrote:
It’s funny when someone disrespects someone and doesn’t recognize the true loss of respect is from all of those that just watched said disrespect.



How disrespectful!

tailgater Offline
#26 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,187
cacman wrote:
^^^ Love the hypocrisy!
Narcan is given away for free.
But they'll charge you $10+ a tablet for that Acetaminophen or Ibuprofen in the ER for pain.


Truth!

Thunder.Gerbil Offline
#27 Posted:
Joined: 11-02-2006
Posts: 121,359
cacman wrote:
^^^ I do consider the epidemic more important that who the President had an affair with when he wasn't President.
Especially considering the poor condition of our Health Care system.

Hell, Cigna just bought Express Scripts for $65B. Makes for a nice little monopoly..



So you are trying to keep it real.

Sounds like a podcast "Keepin' it real with Cacman!" "Today's topic will be big pharma, the homeless, why weed is still illegal and, is the CAO Brazilia truly the King of Cigars. With today's special guest: Victor809"

Let us know how that works out for you.
teedubbya Offline
#28 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
I figured it would be a podcast on how Gurkas MSRP is the equivalence of a hospital charging $10 for ibuprofen and then leading in to the Byzantine Generals Problem and how it relates to blockchain programming
Thunder.Gerbil Offline
#29 Posted:
Joined: 11-02-2006
Posts: 121,359
I think that's episode 3, sponsored by Mylan.
cacman Offline
#30 Posted:
Joined: 07-03-2010
Posts: 12,216
I'd suggest blazing up a doobie and watching the HBO documentary "Warning, This drug may kill you", but since MJ is considered as bad as heroin I wouldn't want to be responsible any potential over-dosing from smoking too much MJ.

Ironic that a drug dealer can be convicted for the death of a client, but big pharma can't be held liable for the deaths they cause.
teedubbya Offline
#31 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
Same with gun dealers and manufacturers. Do you suppose it has to do with legal vs illegal activity and protections as a result of that in addition to $$ and lobbying efforts. It could also have to do with not wanting to stifle innovation and potential cures out of fear of financial ruin.

I'm for legalization of MJ but am about as sympathetic for illegal drug dealers as I am for illegal immigrants. You break the law you takie your chances.... round and round it goes where she lands no one knows
Thunder.Gerbil Offline
#32 Posted:
Joined: 11-02-2006
Posts: 121,359
cacman wrote:
I'd suggest blazing up a doobie and watching the HBO documentary "Warning, This drug may kill you", but since MJ is considered as bad as heroin I would want to be responsible any potentially over-dosing from smoking too much MJ.

Ironic that a drug dealer can be convicted for the death of a client, but big pharma can't be held liable for the deaths they cause.


There's two things that will never be on my bucket list...

Would you care about opioids if marijuana wasn't classified in the same category? Seems to be your underlying whining every time you post about opioids.
cacman Offline
#33 Posted:
Joined: 07-03-2010
Posts: 12,216
Yes, I would still care about the epidemic. It is appalling our guberment allowed big pharma to get away with their lies and deceitful pushing of these type of drugs. And the fact they are not liable for their actions.

Simply bring up MJ as a single example of the hypocrisy our guberment has towards health care and drugs.
victor809 Offline
#34 Posted:
Joined: 10-14-2011
Posts: 23,866
If only we had some laws against taking these drugs without a medical reason....
RMAN4443 Offline
#35 Posted:
Joined: 09-29-2016
Posts: 7,683
victor809 wrote:
If only we had some laws against taking these drugs without a medical reason....

sounds like a good argument in the anti gun debate....
tailgater Offline
#36 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,187
Captain obvious is sweating.

victor809 Offline
#37 Posted:
Joined: 10-14-2011
Posts: 23,866
RMAN4443 wrote:
sounds like a good argument in the anti gun debate....

Good thing I'm not an anti-gun person.
RMAN4443 Offline
#38 Posted:
Joined: 09-29-2016
Posts: 7,683
victor809 wrote:
Good thing I'm not an anti-gun person.

I realize that......should have added Sarcasm .......I was just commenting on the fact that there are laws in place,yet it keeps on happening.......more laws aren't going to fix it
victor809 Offline
#39 Posted:
Joined: 10-14-2011
Posts: 23,866
So you're saying cacman is essentially an anti-gun nut for oxy....

You know... like how I'm a chocoholic... but for scotch.
tailgater Offline
#40 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,187
Victor is in to black scotish dudes?

teedubbya Offline
#41 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
tailgater wrote:
Victor is in to black scotish dudes?




I think they are called blottish. Scacks didn't go over well. Scollered came in a close second though.
Speyside Offline
#42 Posted:
Joined: 03-16-2015
Posts: 13,106
I thought he meant he wanted high colonic while substituting Scotch for water.
cacman Offline
#43 Posted:
Joined: 07-03-2010
Posts: 12,216
victor809 wrote:
If only we had some laws against taking these drugs without a medical reason....

If only you would have actually read the article you would have noted that "About 40% of opioid overdose deaths involve a prescription opioid, according to the CDC".

If only we had some laws against doctors over-prescribing these drugs without a medical reason....
or
If only we had some laws preventing big pharma from "contributing" to the lobbyists, politicians, and insurance companies that allow doctors to profit from over-prescribing these drugs without a medical reason....

d'oh!
victor809 Offline
#44 Posted:
Joined: 10-14-2011
Posts: 23,866
You do realize that "prescription drug" doesn't necessarily mean the drug was prescribed to the person who took it... right?

Prescriptions are faked, prescription drugs resold, prescription drugs are stolen... all of which is illegal.
DrafterX Offline
#45 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,644
Good point.. plus the heroin thing... So I figure like 3 people died last year from prescribed opioids.. and they prolly took too many... Mellow
frankj1 Offline
#46 Posted:
Joined: 02-08-2007
Posts: 44,299
Thunder.Gerbil wrote:
So you are trying to keep it real.

Sounds like a podcast "Keepin' it real with Cacman!" "Today's topic will be big pharma, the homeless, why weed is still illegal and, is the CAO Brazilia truly the King of Cigars. With today's special guest: Victor809"

Let us know how that works out for you.

are you ok with my plan to post matzoh ball threads at Passover? Floaters or sinkers?

You stomped on latkes, but you mellowed on hamantaschen...
Thunder.Gerbil Offline
#47 Posted:
Joined: 11-02-2006
Posts: 121,359
frankj1 wrote:
are you ok with my plan to post matzoh ball threads at Passover? Floaters or sinkers?

You stomped on latkes, but you mellowed on hamantaschen...


Go for it. If it wasn't for matzoh ball soup, the only use I'd have for those things is soaking up oil/atf/coolant spills in the garage...
danmdevries Offline
#48 Posted:
Joined: 02-11-2014
Posts: 17,620
rfenst wrote:
How the hell can a hospital run w/o morphine or dilaudid? What do you use for severe pain?


Fentanyl, Toradol, Ofirmev.

Dunno what we're gonna do when the Fentanyl runs out, and it will. Was added to "the list" a few days ago because it's pretty much all that's available and the manufacturers can't keep up with the added demand

https://www.ashp.org/drug-shortages/current-shortages/Drug-Shortage-Detail.aspx?id=1273

Expected dates for resupply currently pushed back till the end of April for Morphine and Dilaudid

I feel terrible for my open heart patients who get tylenol only.
DrafterX Offline
#49 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,644
That would suck... Mellow
Thunder.Gerbil Offline
#50 Posted:
Joined: 11-02-2006
Posts: 121,359
danmdevries wrote:


I feel terrible for my open heart patients who get tylenol only.



Just give them some weed, a few vicodin and a half gallon of Stoli per week because opiates are bad, like, ya know?
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