Minnesota Considering Price Hikes On Chronic Pain Prescriptions

opioidsIf you’re dealing with a chronic pain condition, it’s entirely possible that it has impacted your financial earnings ability or led to increased expenses due to extra medical appointments. In other words, chronic pain can be a significant financial burden for many, and that burden may grow even stronger if Minnesota legislators end up passing HF 1728/SF 2142.

The proposal would add additional fees to opioid prescriptions, and these fees would be passed down to the patient. Legitimate medication has become much harder to get now that the US is really attempting to crack down on the rising opioid-related deaths, but for the patients with chronic pain or those with cancer who truly need their medication, not only are they having a harder time getting their prescription, but it may soon be more expensive. Passing these expenses onto the patients will only cause more strife for patients who are already financially burdened by their medical condition.

The Opioid Price Hike Problem

These price hikes would cause much more harm to legitimate chronic pain patients than it would help in curbing the opioid crisis. This is especially concerning because most chronic pain specialists advise their patients not to rely on pain medications as their main form of treatment. As we’ve preached on the blog in the past, opioids can absolutely be part of a comprehensive treatment plan, but they are not a great stand alone option. Doctors know that opioids alone will not address the underlying issue causing the chronic pain condition, so if they are going to prescribe them, they will be used in conjunction with other treatments like physical therapy, exercise or other active treatments. Making it harder for patients to have access to the medications that can make physical therapy more bearable or simply manage cancer-related pain isn’t the answer.

Lawmakers should seriously consider visiting a pain clinic or a cancer ward before they blindly vote to increase the price of opioids for those with a legitimate prescription in Minnesota. The overwhelming majority of patients use these medications responsibly and have a medically necessary reason for seeking them out. These price hikes will be deferred to them and may make it much harder for them to care for their pain condition. They may have to ration their pills outside of their doctor’s orders to cut down on other necessary expenses just to be able to afford their medications. This bill isn’t the answer, and it will put a bigger financial strain on many chronic pain sufferers across Minnesota.

We’ll keep an eye on the bill when it comes up for a vote, but hopefully Minnesotans aren’t further financially burdened by this potential price hike.