President Barack Obama shot down a proposal on Monday from the nation’s governors designed to curb America’s opioid and heroin crisis. The proposal called for limiting the number of high-powered painkillers a doctor could prescribe at a time, but Obama said the move could block access to drugs that people truly need.
“If we go to doctors right now and say ‘Don’t overprescribe’ without providing some mechanisms for people in these communities to deal with the pain that they have or the issues that they have, then we’re not going to solve the problem, because the pain is real, the mental illness is real,” Obama said. “In some cases, addiction is already there.”
The recommendation had received bipartisan support at the National Governors Association’s winter meeting, but President Obama rejected the sweeping proposal. The president thanked the governors for crossing party allegiances to come to a solution, but he didn’t think it adequately addressed the full scope of the problem.
“This is an area where I can get agreement from Bernie Sanders and Mitch McConnell. That doesn’t happen that often,” Obama said.
Opioids in America
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, heroin and prescription painkillers play a roll in the deaths of 78 Americans every day. Certain prescription opioids are seen as gateway drugs to heroin, which is cheaper and often much easier to obtain.
Vermont Govermor Peter Shumlin criticized Obama for rejecting the proposal, saying, “You can’t convince me that we’ve got 250 million Americans in chronic pain.”
The fact of the matter is that opioids are likely over-prescribed in this country, and while some doctors certainly hand them out too easily, for some patients, it is truly the only option that keeps their pain at bay. For others, surgery or costly therapy sessions are out of the question, so they rely on those painkillers to manage their pain. Dr. Steven Stack, president of the American Medical Association, praised Obama for shutting down the blanket rule which would have undoubtedly hurt a large portion of actual chronic pain sufferers.
“The complexity of the problem makes it difficult to create a successful one-size-fits-all approach,” Stack said.
Stack is right. There is no perfect one-size-fits-all approach to chronic pain care, just like there is no magic pill to solve one’s pain. In the end, we need comprehensive exams to understand to underlying cause of pain, and we need to work with patients to understand their treatment options and the potential implications of each. It’s much harder than simply prescribing a painkiller, and it also takes work on the patient’s end to work to get better and not just rely on their pain pills, but this duel-responsibility approach is what it’s going to take to start reversing the opioid crisis.