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Questions Arise Over Medication-Assisted Opioid Treatment

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Monday, August 14, 2017   

LINCOLN, Neb. -- Overdoses on painkillers kill more than 60 Americans every day, and in Nebraska, the drug overdose death rate has doubled since 2004. But according to the American Psychological Association, doctors have been reluctant to prescribe treatment designed to prevent addiction.

At Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Andrew Huhn said Suboxone was approved for the treatment of opioid use disorder back in 2002. But research by the APA found many doctors are not willing to increase their use of it.

"It reduces the risk of relapse to illicit opioids, and it also has been shown to reduce the incidence of overdose death,” Huhn said. "It can be a treatment that's used in the short term; it can be a treatment that's used long term. "

Methadone is the other drug prescribed for opioid addiction, but many in the regulatory and law enforcement communities are concerned that both it and Suboxone are being abused at high rates.

In 2015, nearly 150 people in Nebraska died of a drug overdose, and at least 54 were opioid related.

As a psychologist practicing in Lincoln, Dr. Rose Esseks works with patients who want to get off opioids. She said it's a difficult process, and cautioned against going cold turkey.

"You're subject to withdrawal if you've been taking them for decades. So you definitely want to get off them in a medically controlled manner,” Esseks said. "You want to taper it down and then you want to look at other medications or options, other kinds of treatments, physical therapy, psychological therapy, and replace it with something else."

According to APA research, doctors are concerned about the number of patients requesting treatment for painkiller abuse, and many don't have the time to take on new patients. Huhn said it's a crisis that keeps getting worse every year, and, he said, it's destroying lives.

"Addiction or opioid use disorder is a chronic disease, so just like diabetes or asthma, it's not going to go away,” he said. "If you have a severe opioid use disorder it needs to be treated like a chronic disease. "

Government data published earlier this year estimated that 1.27 million people were hospitalized or sought help at an emergency room for opioid-related issues in 2014.

ch Huhn at 410-955-5212; Esseks at 402-310-0819. Research at: http://bit.ly/2v8SIke, http://bit.ly/2vu4d6S


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