Posted on Feb 25, 2021
The Re-emergence of the Opioid Epidemic and What it Means for Veterans
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Out of the COVID-19 pandemic, an opioid epidemic in our country has re-emerged with a vengeance. Today, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 220 Americans will lose their lives due to an opioid overdose.
To put the current number of deaths by opioid overdose into perspective, a report on substance use amid COVID-19 indicates that opioid overdoses in the U.S. increased by 42% in May 2020 when compared to May 2019. Data from the Department of Veterans Affairs also tells us that veterans continue to remain more susceptible to opioid overdoses.
The good news is that despite the seemingly overwhelming nature of the situation, COVID-19 has highlighted a number of key areas where there are viable policy options to address the opioid epidemic. However, addressing the epidemic will require targeting populations, particularly veterans, that are at a higher risk for overdose.
But what exactly can and should leadership do?
1. An effective method of preventing opioid overdose is to co-prescribe a drug known as naloxone with all opioid prescriptions. Naloxone has a 75-100% efficacy in blocking or reversing the fatal effects of an opioid overdose by reversing the respiration of individuals who experience extremely delayed breathing or have stopped breathing altogether due to ingesting a lethal amount of opioids.Veterans Affairs hospitals already provide naloxone free of charge to veterans that are enrolled in their care programs. However, veterans receiving care outside of the VA system should have increased access to the life saving drug as well.
States could look to the precedent set by those that have a mandatory co-prescription plan currently in place, or follow the lead of California and Ohio where providing the option of a co-prescription is required for those who may want or feel they need it. Providing naloxone to a greater portion of the veteran population, which has twice the number of overdoses as their civilian counterparts, is perhaps one of the most effective ways that we can prevent death by opioid overdose among veterans.
2. Medical providers can change their approach to treating veteran patients and how they prescribe opioids. Prescribing opioids and other medications should never entirely replace traditional therapy practices, including talk therapy, physical therapy and other effective therapy methods. In fact, a study on the reasons a group of veterans discontinued using opioids as a part of their treatment plan found that they were more likely to do so because their clinician stopped prescribing the opioids as opposed to discontinuing use on their own volition.
This research highlights the critical role that clinicians can play in preventing or combatting addiction through the manner in which they prescribe opioid medications. It must be ensured that clinicians receive proper training both when it comes to prescribing opioids and detecting substance misuse.
3. Ending the opioid crisis and expanding access to substance education, prevention and treatment was a platform on which President Biden ran on during his 2020 campaign. President Biden has a fairly thorough plan laid out on his website for how his administration intends to combat the opioid epidemic. Though the plan does indicate the president’s intention to target vulnerable populations, including veterans, by expanding access to treatment and training VA clinicians in safe opioid prescribing practices, more directives must be included in the plan in order for it to truly impact opioid abuse among veterans. The same can be said for initiatives carried out on the state level. For instance, making expanded access to rural broadband a priority in state legislatures, like Iowa and North Dakota are currently doing, would drastically improve the delivery of telemedicine. Ensuring that veterans have access to both virtual mental and physical healthcare has the potential to assuage opioid use, especially in rural areas of the country.
The public has demanded action for far too long and that demand has only become justifiably heightened in the midst of the pandemic. The political leadership on the state and federal level that we trust to protect and better the lives of veterans must act and use their platforms to help end the opioid epidemic once and for all. This includes providing tailored education, prevention and treatment options to our nation’s heroes.
To put the current number of deaths by opioid overdose into perspective, a report on substance use amid COVID-19 indicates that opioid overdoses in the U.S. increased by 42% in May 2020 when compared to May 2019. Data from the Department of Veterans Affairs also tells us that veterans continue to remain more susceptible to opioid overdoses.
The good news is that despite the seemingly overwhelming nature of the situation, COVID-19 has highlighted a number of key areas where there are viable policy options to address the opioid epidemic. However, addressing the epidemic will require targeting populations, particularly veterans, that are at a higher risk for overdose.
But what exactly can and should leadership do?
1. An effective method of preventing opioid overdose is to co-prescribe a drug known as naloxone with all opioid prescriptions. Naloxone has a 75-100% efficacy in blocking or reversing the fatal effects of an opioid overdose by reversing the respiration of individuals who experience extremely delayed breathing or have stopped breathing altogether due to ingesting a lethal amount of opioids.Veterans Affairs hospitals already provide naloxone free of charge to veterans that are enrolled in their care programs. However, veterans receiving care outside of the VA system should have increased access to the life saving drug as well.
States could look to the precedent set by those that have a mandatory co-prescription plan currently in place, or follow the lead of California and Ohio where providing the option of a co-prescription is required for those who may want or feel they need it. Providing naloxone to a greater portion of the veteran population, which has twice the number of overdoses as their civilian counterparts, is perhaps one of the most effective ways that we can prevent death by opioid overdose among veterans.
2. Medical providers can change their approach to treating veteran patients and how they prescribe opioids. Prescribing opioids and other medications should never entirely replace traditional therapy practices, including talk therapy, physical therapy and other effective therapy methods. In fact, a study on the reasons a group of veterans discontinued using opioids as a part of their treatment plan found that they were more likely to do so because their clinician stopped prescribing the opioids as opposed to discontinuing use on their own volition.
This research highlights the critical role that clinicians can play in preventing or combatting addiction through the manner in which they prescribe opioid medications. It must be ensured that clinicians receive proper training both when it comes to prescribing opioids and detecting substance misuse.
3. Ending the opioid crisis and expanding access to substance education, prevention and treatment was a platform on which President Biden ran on during his 2020 campaign. President Biden has a fairly thorough plan laid out on his website for how his administration intends to combat the opioid epidemic. Though the plan does indicate the president’s intention to target vulnerable populations, including veterans, by expanding access to treatment and training VA clinicians in safe opioid prescribing practices, more directives must be included in the plan in order for it to truly impact opioid abuse among veterans. The same can be said for initiatives carried out on the state level. For instance, making expanded access to rural broadband a priority in state legislatures, like Iowa and North Dakota are currently doing, would drastically improve the delivery of telemedicine. Ensuring that veterans have access to both virtual mental and physical healthcare has the potential to assuage opioid use, especially in rural areas of the country.
The public has demanded action for far too long and that demand has only become justifiably heightened in the midst of the pandemic. The political leadership on the state and federal level that we trust to protect and better the lives of veterans must act and use their platforms to help end the opioid epidemic once and for all. This includes providing tailored education, prevention and treatment options to our nation’s heroes.
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 20
It never went away, it was overtaken by pandemic news.
Step one: call these drugs what they are: NARCOTICS
Step one: call these drugs what they are: NARCOTICS
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SPC Terry Page
Rx narcotics play an important role in pain management and most of us know their inherent danger. I think the best we can do is treat them like a loaded gun and apply appropriate caution. Loaded guns are useful, we just have to be aiming at the enemy. I totally agree that the problem never went away, just drowned out by pandemic noise.
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SSG Mick Rolling
Narcotics or managed drugs used to assist with a patient with chronic pain that helps raise their quality of life. WE ARE NOT JUNKIES.
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I am infected with agent orange without these type of medications I would be in so much pain I would want to die, my va doctor educate me about the abuse of the medicine I am on I have found that most people overdose on these certain medicines because they have lost hope,loneliness, the feeling no cares, I’m lucky to have a va doctor that does care about me.
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MSgt T Clark
Great point. So many veterans and the general population reach a emotional depth of disparity that the narcotics become their escape. I mean look the circumstances in which we must combat the pandemic like social distancing away from the people we love and comrade with friends has elevated the opioid crisis.
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PO2 Edward Gilbert
The focus to reduce addictions and take away narcotics where needed has definitely hurt those that need them to manage pain. Doctors who understand that and can treat accordingly along with monitoring the use, education as you mentioned, needs to be part of the treatment process. Not just remove them from the equation for those of us who can't live without them. It is then that the patient starts looking to the street, and the drugs coming over from China and distributed on the streets now are not always what they appear to be, and what is contributing to many overdoses.
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SFC (Join to see)
A lot of us are in that boat together, I was dry for 15 years before I learned I could drink without needing to get blotto drunk. Not everyone can do that. I am lucky to enjoy a drink on occasion and not crave another and another and another. MAJ Ken Landgren
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MAJ Ken Landgren
SFC (Join to see) - I am not proud of my drinking. It controlled me to a degree. I used it to help me fall asleep, but my tolerance kicked in and it became a habit. People with PTSD and a chemical dependency are in an infinitely difficult position. It is virtually impossible to heal significantly from PTSD when a person has lost touch to reality due to an addiction. This is from first hand experience. I got the fvcking t-shirt. I have been sober for 7 years, I have immense gratitude for what I have, and I am happy now.
I essentially treated myself for PTSD because none of my therapists could tell me anything relevant to healing. Something on my shoulder whispered, Ken write a PTSD Paper. I am always looking for people with PTSD who want to read it.
<I know I am rambling but I want to share my excitement.>
I am very excited with the possibility that I will collaborate with a couple suicide prevention researchers at a university level. They can't have true empathy because they never were in a situation like a heavyweight boxing match and getting knocked down over an over again. They don't understand the pain and thinking processes of why some people will get up and why some don't want to get up. I want to paint the picture for them.
Have an excellent night!
I essentially treated myself for PTSD because none of my therapists could tell me anything relevant to healing. Something on my shoulder whispered, Ken write a PTSD Paper. I am always looking for people with PTSD who want to read it.
<I know I am rambling but I want to share my excitement.>
I am very excited with the possibility that I will collaborate with a couple suicide prevention researchers at a university level. They can't have true empathy because they never were in a situation like a heavyweight boxing match and getting knocked down over an over again. They don't understand the pain and thinking processes of why some people will get up and why some don't want to get up. I want to paint the picture for them.
Have an excellent night!
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SPC Joseph Kopac
I talked to some Vets a few years ago during my stay in a VA hospital. Suicide attempts. Their preferred method was opioids. I was amazed at the amounts and high dosages they were getting.
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CPL Earl Kochis
It is like alcoholism and in some cases worse. I take them for pain and my doctor and i have an agreement. My dosage stays what it is now and we use other therapy methods to help me manage my pain. Some people i know have been prescribed over 100mg a day and that to me is way too much. MAJ Ken Landgren
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