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Wednesday, Nov 4 2015

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N.H. Regulators Consider Governor's Emergency Rules On Opioid Prescriptions

The rules, if adopted by the state Board of Medicine, would place new restrictions on the potent pain drugs like limiting the size and duration of prescriptions as well as new training for those who prescribe. Meanwhile, drug deaths become a national 2016 campaign issue.

For years, Chris Clough prescribed more pain medication than almost anyone else in New Hampshire. Along the way, state regulators say, he broke nearly every rule in the book. Clough, a 41-year-old physician assistant for the state鈥檚 largest chain of pain clinics, failed to warn patients of the risks of opioids. He failed to screen them for addiction or mental illness. He disregarded drug screens that suggested his patients were abusing their potent medications. (Wallstin, 11/4)

Gov. Maggie Hassan wants lawmakers to approve $11.1 million in new programs to combat the state鈥檚 heroin and opioid crisis. Hassan will ask the Executive Council today to approve a special legislative session beginning Nov. 18 鈥 not a sure thing, with Republicans holding a 3-2 majority. (Rayno, 11/3)

Gov. Maggie Hassan鈥檚 package of tough regulations to control the opioid pain prescriptions goes before the state Board of Medicine on Wednesday, with several doctor groups and the state鈥檚 hospitals urging the board to slow down the process. The 11-member board is expected to take up the regulations, which limit the size of prescriptions, require patient drug testing and other examinations, and mandate training for physicians and physician assistants who write opioid prescriptions. (Hayward, 11/3)

Christopher Stawasz, manager of an ambulance service in Nashua, said the city set a record of 28 overdoses in September, then topped it with 37 in October. 鈥淚t鈥檚 surreal,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just day after day.鈥滱cross the state, overdoses are on track to break last year鈥檚 record of 326 deaths. The pattern is so alarming that participants in an October WMUR Granite State poll ranked drug abuse as the most important issue in the 2016 presidential campaign, surpassing jobs and economy for the first time in eight years. That is prompting a conversation in the state with the nation鈥檚 first primary that is remarkably different from prior elections in its expressions of compassion rather than condemnation. (Haddon, 11/3)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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