I will share a few shots of some messages & recs as it is behind paywall
Selectivity is unavoidable. It is 50 pages!
2/These are the key messages of the Commission
3/The Commission does see the opioid overdose/poisoning crisis as a result of a multi system regulatory failure
4/The commission does recommend opioid agonist treatment but offers caveats in maximum or unmanaged supply
5/The Commission recommends sensitivity toward patients with pain
6/The Commission offers support for PDMPs.
Ed note: I use one. It can be helpful. I am concerned that these mandatory systems are not open to appeal or correction by patients and that my patients are adversely and incorrectly labeled by the PDMP due to receiving team based care
7/The Commission quotes patients and prescribers on opioids and pain, commendably
8/The Commission quotes people in recovery, which I think is helpful here
9/The Commission makes a strong case for financing and expanding accessible, high quality, non-stigmatizing health and social care services for people with opioid use disorder
10/The Commission gives attention to criminal justice system involvement as a situation where there should be a maximizing of benefit and minimizing of adverse effects
. (I refuse to put that “s” in for the “z” cause I’m tweeting in ‘Merica , f- yeah!)
11/There are hundreds of citations and far more I have not summarized.
Full panel of recommendations here.
If a person lacking Lancet access reaches out to me personally I will share the article under fair use / fin
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1/This is an update 🧵re: our research on suicides after Rx opioid reduction
Clinical context of SuicIde following OPIOID transitionS
(CSI OPIOIDs)
TL;DR: we're progressing. The pilot study is NOW.
A "bigger" study is coming
We are preparing docs for the funder & ethical review
3/I'm going to detour one tweet here on ADVOCACY:
In my role as ADVOCATE, not researcher, I have been decrying the imposition of nonconsensual changes to care of disabled patients, changes lacking evidentiary support, since 2017 (here with @AJ_Gordon ) statnews.com/2017/02/24/opi…
2/It is *harmful* to make clinicians invisible from the chain of accountability in our drug death crisis.
Civil litigators like to portray the medical profession understood as "putty". For people who like cop-outs and shirking responsibility, this is just fine.
3/But there's no drug company that convinced med schools to NOT prioritize training in addiction, in pain, in rehabilitation or in long-term care of complex problems.
And that choice, by OUR profession, is a big part of why many docs were pliant to marketing pushes
2/“We don’t know which among you have an open heart and an open mind, and which have just learned to appear that way.
We’ve done our best to screen out the latter, but medical school admissions is an imperfect process”
3/“During the early years of training you may be in survival mode..so that you can get through all the stuff we foist on you to memorize. You won’t need much of it when you practice medicine, but a fair amount of the content will be on board exams” #TwitterGIFs
Be ready to speak LOUDLY to protect patients who were *not protected* by institutions that gave that the 2016 Guideline regulatory force, without regard to the the complexities of scientific evidence
“As medical boards, insurers and government agencies enforce this guideline, prescribing differently from the topline recommendations is likely to become onerous, leaving many patients in the lurch”
Hey: 👩🏽⚕️👨🏽⚕️🧑🏼⚕️
I'm sick of stories on health care that erase and dumb down the professional roles & responsibilities of clinicians (doctors, nurses, etc) – whether it’s @NYTimes on genetic screening or @DopesickOnHulu on opioids. /1
The public is flooded with stories about health care that show health professionals as, well,
patsies, victims and cogs.
Health professionals need to ask "why we look that way" to them, and push back /2
That’s what got me talking in our latest podcast from @OnHealer.
We reviewed a @NYTimes story of highly marketed prenatal screening tests.
These tests do traumatize moms if results come in without appropriate clinical counseling.
Listen: pod.link/healer/episode… /3
Reflections shared with me from Dr. Lachlan Forrow this evening
Eric Cassell - "Hope has *nothing* to do with probabilities"
2/"Everything that is done in the world is done by hope."
Martin Luther and Martin Luther King, Jr.
3/Hope is your superpower. Don’t let anybody or anything make you hopeless. Hope is the enemy of injustice,” Stevenson said. “Hope is what will get you to stand up when people tell you to sit down.”