Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Medication-Assisted Treatment Works For Opioid Addiction -- But Nearly 80% Of Users Aren't Getting It
Dante Bonzano had a reputation for being one of the best concrete finishers and bricklayers around. He often worked knee-to-knee with his father, who trained him from a young age to be a devout Jehovah鈥檚 Witness and work 12-hour days. The proud father used to say everything the boy touched turned to gold. But that didn鈥檛 turn out to be true. By the time he was a grown man, Bonzano was often in reach of a can of Bud or a syringe. His life passed in and out of Missouri鈥檚 prison system. (Bogan, 4/10)
Longtime advocates for measures that address an opioid crisis plaguing both the nation and the Show-Me state are cautiously optimistic that they鈥檒l become law this year. A fervent opponent to a prescription drug-monitoring database, Sen. Rob Schaaf announced last week that he would no longer resist a proposal that would establish one in Missouri. Schaaf, R-St. Joseph, has stifled similar bills for the past five years, citing privacy concerns. (Bott and Huguelet, 4/10)
Meet a victim of the nation鈥檚 opioid addiction scourge: the American worker. A number of U.S. states are taking steps through their workers compensation systems to stem the overprescribing of the powerful painkillers to workers injured on the job, while helping those who became hooked to avoid potentially deadly consequences. (Salsberg, 4/10)
The General Assembly passed a suite of bills designed to tackle Maryland's worsening heroin crisis, putting finishing touches Monday on measures to improve drug awareness education and help addicts get into treatment. Fighting heroin addiction has broad bipartisan support and the legislature was deluged with policy ideas, weighing more than two-dozen bills. Work groups of lawmakers whittled down the ideas and moved forward quickly with a package of legislation in the final weeks of the session. (Duncan, 4/10)
Seeking to stem the opioid epidemic in Oregon and prevent overdose deaths, the House of Representatives unanimously approved a proposed law on Monday that would provide safe-use recommendations to those who prescribe such pain-killing drugs. (4/10)
Every 19 hours on average, a baby was born exposed to drugs last year, according to state data. As the opioid crisis continues to ravage New Hampshire, the Division for Children, Youth and Families has seen a surge in the number of babies born exposed to substances and the number of child maltreatment reports related to addiction. (Morris, 4/10)
From the Milwaukee County Medical Examiner鈥檚 Office to community health centers, an unabated opioid crisis continues to overwhelm the county鈥檚 public health infrastructure, several drug experts said Monday. Much of the problem over the last year聽is tied to the narcotic聽fentanyl, which can be more than 50 times as powerful as heroin, and has flooded into the community. (Fauber, 4/10)
Opiate-related overdose deaths rose dramatically in Ramsey and Hennepin counties from 2015 to 2016, a report on metro-area drug-abuse trends has disclosed. In Ramsey County, 62 accidental opiate-related deaths occurred last year, compared to 47 in 2015, a 32 percent increase, according to 鈥淒rug Abuse Trends in the Minneapolis/St. Paul Metropolitan Area鈥 by Carol Falkowski, a leading expert on such trends. (Ojeda-Zapata, 4/10)
America鈥檚 best-known physician, Mehmet Oz, came to Philadelphia鈥檚 rail-side heroin encampments Monday for the kind of medical education seen by few doctors, let alone his daytime television audience. 鈥淚 just walked into hell,鈥 said Oz, wearing jeans and hiking boots, as he picked his way along big piles of discarded syringes along the Conrail tracks in West Kensington. (Wood, 4/10)
A Dallas woman has been sentenced to two years in federal prison for her role in an opioid prescription drug scheme in North Texas. Candis O鈥橲haea Lewis, 30, pleaded guilty to her role in the illegal operation between 2013 to 2015, U.S. attorney John R. Parker said Monday. She pleaded guilty聽last year to one count of unlawful use of a communication device. (Bruijn, 4/10)