Physicians Taking Steps to Reverse Opioid Epidemic but Mortality Continues to Rise

Jun 10, 2019 at 11:25 pm by Staff


A new AMA report on opioids highlights the limited effects of mandates to stem an epidemic that claims about 130 people every day -- underscoring the immediate need for policymakers to focus on removing barriers to evidence-based treatment.

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The 2019 Opioid Progress Report found that physicians and other health care professionals are taking significant actions in the face of the epidemic, and some reports suggest that prescription opioid-related mortality may be leveling off. Yet, death from heroin and illicitly manufactured fentanyl and fentanyl analogs are at historic levels.

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This is the third annual AMA report on actions physicians have taken.

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"The opioid epidemic is at a crossroads," said AMA President-elect Patrice A. Harris, M.D., M.A., who chairs the AMA Opioid Task Force. "While physicians must continue to demonstrate leadership by taking action, it is clear that these significant reductions in opioid prescribing, increases in prescription drug monitoring program (PDMP) use and taking more education--by themselves--will not stop people from dying."

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To end the epidemic, the AMA Opioid Task Force is calling on policymakers and other stakeholders to eliminate all barriers to evidence-based treatment and to take specific steps such as removing prior authorization for medication-assisted treatment (MAT) for the treatment of opioid use disorder, enforcing state and federal laws that require insurance parity for mental health and substance use disorders, and ending health insurance company barriers to comprehensive multimodal, multidisciplinary pain care, including non-opioid alternatives.

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Key findings from the report include:

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"Progress has been made, but much more work remains. It is time for states to end prior authorization and other barriers to medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder; and time for payers, PBMs and pharmacy chains to re-evaluate all policies restricting access evidence-based care for pain and substance use disorders," Dr. Harris said. "If it weren't for naloxone, it is likely that tens of thousands more Americans would be dead. The report shows that to save many more lives, policymakers, payers, PBMs and pharmacy chains must remove all barriers to evidence-based care."

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Created in 2014, the AMA Opioid Task Force is comprised of more than 25 national, state, specialty and other health care associations to coordinate efforts within organized medicine to help end the opioid epidemic. Additional information on the AMA Opioid Task Force is available here. Real-time updates on the AMA's work on opioids is accessible here.

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