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Prescription for Success Commissioner E. Douglas Varney 5th Annual Regional Healthcare Symposium The Era of Modern Healthcare: Access. Quality. Cost Friday, October 17th, 2014 10/14/2014 1 10/14/2014 2 Objectives • Participants will understand the extent of the prescription drug problem in Tennessee. • Participants will gain knowledge of how the prescription drug problem is currently being addressed in Tennessee. • Participants will gain knowledge of the strategic plan to reduce prescription drug use and assess ways that they can become involved in implementing the plan. 10/14/2014 3 Who Abuses Prescription Drugs? 70.0% Percent of publicly funded substance abuse treatment admissions due to prescription opioids and alcohol in Tennessee and United States: 1992 ‐ 2011 with a 2012 ‐ 2015 projection 60.0% 50.0% 40.0% 30.0% 20.0% 10.0% 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012* 2013* 2014* 2015* 0.0% Tennessee ‐ Opioids United States ‐ Opioids Source: Tennessee Department of Mental Health and 10/14/2014 Tennessee ‐ Alcohol According to 2011 data comparing people in state‐ funded treatment programs across the United States, Tennesseans were more than three times more likely to identify prescription opioids as their primary substance of abuse than the national average. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services administration. (2012). Treatment Episode Data Set—Admissions (TEDS‐A). U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, D.C. * Indicates projected 4 Who Abuses Prescription Drugs? • Young adults (18‐25‐year‐ olds) in Tennessee are using prescription opioids at a 30% higher rate than the national average. • 7% of Tennessee’s 12‐17 year‐old population have used prescription drugs for non‐medical reasons. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. (2010‐2011). National Survey on Drug Use and Health. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, D.C. 10/14/2014 69,100 Tennesseans Addicted to Prescription Opioids Need Treatment 151,900 Tennesseans • 4.56% of Tennessee Population Risky Prescription Opioid Use Need Early Intervention 4,629,000 Tennesseans Do Not Use Prescription Opioids or use them as prescribed Need Prevention and Promotion Strategies • 95.44% of Tennessee Population 5 ACCESS TO PRESCRIPTION DRUGS 10/14/2014 6 Sources of Prescription Drugs People who abuse prescription painkillers get drugs from a variety of sources Other source, 7.1% Got from drug dealer or stranger, 4.4% Took from friend or relative without asking, 4.8% Bought from friend or relative, 11.4% Obtained free from friend or relative, 55.0% Prescribed by a doctor, 17.3% • More than 70% of people who abused or misused prescription drugs got them from a friend or relative, either for free, by purchasing them, or by stealing them. National Survey on Drug Use and Health. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, D.C. Source: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Results from the 2010 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: volume 1: summary of national findings. 10/14/2014 7 CSMD Data Number of controlled substance prescriptions (by class) reported to Controlled Substances Monitoring Database (CSMD), 2010 ‐ 2013* * ** Year Opioids % Change Benzodiazepines % Change Other % Change 2010 8,150,946 ‐ 3,951,144 ‐ 4,423,662 ‐ 2011 9,018,139 10.6% 4,152,587 5.1% 5,001,445 13.1% 2012 9,265,450 2.7% 4,061,418 ‐2.2% 5,125,142 2.5% 2013** 9,227,456 ‐0.4% 3,913,356 ‐3.6% 5,433,347 6.0% Classes of controlled substances were defined based on CDC guidance document. April 1, 2013 all prescribers in Tennessee were required to check the CSMD Source: 2014 Report to the 108th General Assembly by the Tennessee Department of Health Controlled Substance Database Advisory Committee, Board of Pharmacy. 10/14/2014 8 CSMD Data Distribution of the Top 10 Products Reported to the CSMD, CY 2013 Hydrocodone products, 34.60% Buprenorphine products, 3.20% Alprazolam, 14.50% Morphine products, 3.50% Oxycodone products, 13.10% Diazepam, 4.10% Lorazepam, 5.00% Clonazepam, 6.10% 10/14/2014 Tramadol, 6.70% Zolpidem, 9.20% • In 2013, 2,550 dispensers reported 18,574,159 Controlled Substance prescriptions into the CSMD. • In 2013, the CSMD was queried 4,497,866 times by healthcare providers. • 9,898,069 MMEs were dispensed in 2013. TN Department of Health, CSMD Committee (2014 Report to the 108th TN General Assembly) 9 Doctor Shopping and High Utilization Patients • As utilization of the Controlled Substance Monitoring Database has increased, the number of people doctor shopping has decreased. 1st Quarter 2013 1,776 2nd Quarter 2013 1,540 3rd Quarter 2013 1,518 Number of Persons Convicted of Doctor Shopping 180 153 136 120 60 56 48 4th Quarter 2013 1,228 0 2010 2011 2012 Jan‐Jun 2013 TN Department of Health, CSMD Committee (2014 Report to the 108th TN General Assembly) Source: TN Department of Corrections 10/14/2014 10 Under‐prescribing? Overprescribing? • There has been a longstanding belief that prescribing opioids is the best way to treat chronic pain. • The Tennessee Intractable Pain Treatment Act enacted in 2001 gives patients with chronic pain a Bill of Rights, which guarantees access to long‐term opioids as a first‐line treatment for chronic pain. • The perceived under‐prescribing or prescribing opioids less frequently than appropriate by Tennessee physicians in 2001 has now been replaced by overprescribing or prescribing opioids excessively or unnecessarily. • While opioids should no longer be considered first‐line treatment of chronic pain, they do continue to be prescribed at very high rates in Tennessee. • There are legitimate medical reasons for prescribing opioids and benzodiazepines 10/14/2014 11 Rate of Prescriptions Dispensed in TN TN Department of Health, CSMD Committee (2014 Report to the 108th TN General Assembly) 10/14/2014 12 CONSEQUENCES OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG ABUSE 10/14/2014 13 Healthcare Costs 2,100 Tennessee emergency department visits for poisoning by prescription opioids and related narcotics*: 2005‐ 2010 2,031 1,840 1,850 1,724 1,505 1,600 1,341 1,345 1,403 1,350 • The number of emergency department visits for prescription drug poisoning has increased by approximately 34% from 2006 to 2011. Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP). (2013) Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. 1,100 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 * Does not include heroin poisoning. ** ED visits by first listed diagnosis of: 965.00, 965.02, or 965.09 10/14/2014 14 Healthcare Costs Total Tennessee Hospital Charges for Poisoning by Prescription Opioids: CY 2001‐2011 $35,000,000 $29,308,823 $30,000,000 $25,000,000 $21,452,897 $22,610,669 $20,000,000 $15,869,791 $12,387,459 $15,000,000 $9,568,457 $10,000,000 $5,831,077 $5,000,000 $10,984,558 $11,585,460 $7,071,845 $4,118,187 $‐ CY CY CY CY CY CY CY CY CY CY CY 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Source: Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP). Mar 2013. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. * Does not include heroin poisoning. • The Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project shows that the total Tennessee hospital charges for prescription opioid poisonings has risen exponentially over the past 10 years. In 2001, the cost was $4,118,187 and increased by 600% to $29,308,823 in 2011. Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP). (2013) Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. Overdose Deaths • • • From 1999 to 2010, the number of people dying from drug‐related overdoses increased at a greater rate in Tennessee than in the United States. While there has been an increase of 127% nationwide, (16,849 deaths in 1999 to 38,329 in 2010), in Tennessee there has been a 210% increase, (342 in 1999 to 1,059 in 2010), in the number of drug overdose deaths. In 2012, there were 1,094 drug related overdose deaths in Tennessee. Office of Policy , Planning and Assessment, Tennessee Department of Health (2013) USA Today. (2013). Drug Overdose Deaths Spike Among Middle Aged Women. Accessed online: http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/07/02/drug‐ overdose‐deaths‐women/2483169/ 10/14/2014 16 Criminal Justice System Involvement 611,710 599,587 63,445 65,000 600,000 556,763 Number of Non‐drug Related Crimes 590,352 550,000 60,065 540,882 582,452 500,000 48,069 50,000 45,573 450,000 46,868 400,000 60,000 528,940 509,269 55,000 54,252 481,894 48,371 • 45,000 40,503 40,000 350,000 35,000 300,000 28,716 30,000 250,000 25,000 Number of Drug Related Crimes 650,000 Number of Drug and Non‐drug Related Crimes: Tennessee, 2001‐2013 70,000 • Drug‐related crimes against property, people and society have increased by 55% from 2005 to 2013. During the same period, non‐drug‐related crimes decreased. In 2008, the cost of apprehending, prosecuting, and incarcerating people involved with drug‐related crimes in Tennessee was $356.5 million; adjusted for inflation in 2013, this cost is $387.3 million. Tennessee Bureau of Investigation. (2013). Tennessee Incident Based Reporting System. Nashville, TN. EMT Associates, Inc. (2010) The economic costs of alcohol and other drug abuse in Tennessee, 2008. Prepared for Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities, December 2010. CY CY CY CY CY CY CY CY CY 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 10/14/2014 Non‐drug Related Drug Related 17 Children in State Custody • • Prescription opioid abuse is also resulting in children being removed from homes and entering state custody. About 50% of the youth taken into Department of Children’s Services custody resulted from parental drug use. It is projected that during 2013 there will be 1,534 substance abuse related custodies. Additionally, incidents of child abuse resulting from drug exposure are one of the primary reasons that children were referred to the Department of Children’s Services over the last four years. Using data from the first six months of 2013, it is projected that 22,714 incidents of child abuse will be reported as a result of drug exposure. Tennessee Department of Children’s Services (2013) 10/14/2014 18 Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome • Cumulative Number of NAS Cases Reported in Tennessee, January ‐ December 2013 and January ‐ September 2014 • 855 900 • 669 600 • 300 0 2013 10/14/2014 2014 The average cost to stabilize a newborn with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome is $62,973, while the cost of birthing newborns who are not suffering withdrawals is only $7,258. The average cost for 669 newborns without Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome would be $4,855,602 a difference of $37,273,335. Using TennCare eligibility records, it was determined that 179 of the 736 infants diagnosed with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome in 2012 (24.3%) were placed in Department of Children’s Services custody within one year of their birth, a nine percent increase from 2011. Among all TennCare infants born in 2012, 1.6% were placed in Department of Children’s Services custody within one year of birth. Infants born with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome are 14.8 times more likely to be in Department of Children’s Services custody during their first year of life as compared with other TennCare infants. Tennessee Department of Health. (2013). Accessed via web: http://health.state.tn.us/MCH/NAS/index.shtml Bureau of TennCare (2013). Department of Finance and Administration. Tennessee Department of Health. Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Summary, Week 31, Nashville, TN, accessed via web: http://health.state.tn.us/MCH/PDFs/NAS/NASsummary_Week_31.pdf TennCare (2013). Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome among TennCare enrollees, Provisional 2012 data. Accessed via web at: http://www.tn.gov/tenncare/forms/TennCareNASData2012.pdf 19 CURRENT EFFORTS TO COMBAT THE PRESCRIPTION DRUG EPIDEMIC IN TENNESSEE 10/14/2014 20 10/14/2014 21 Governor’s Public Safety Subcabinet • Created in 2012 with the following goals: – – • • The Public Safety Subcabinet is coordinated by the Department of Safety and Homeland Security and is made up of commissioners and directors from the departments of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services; Health; Children’s Services; Correction; Board of Parole; Finance & Administration, Office of Criminal Justice; Transportation, Governor’s Highway Safety Office; Commerce & Insurance, Law Enforcement and Training Academy; and Military, as well as the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation. The subcabinet workgroup identified three major challenges that significantly impact crime in our communities: – – – • • Develop and implement a measurable public safety action plan designed to have a significant impact on crime in Tennessee; and Help create a climate in communities across the state that fosters the creation of more and better jobs. Drug abuse and trafficking Violent crime Repeat offenders 19 action steps are pertinent and focus on the action items that are pertinent to preventing, treating and regulating prescription drug abuse. The Governor’s Public Safety Subcabinet work resulted in the passage of the Prescription Safety Act of 2012. The Department of Safety and Homeland Security (2012). Public Safety Action Plan. Accessed via website at: http://news.tn.gov/system/files/PUBLIC%20SAFETY%20ACTION%20PLAN.pdf 10/14/2014 22 Residential Recovery Court • A collaborative effort between the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services and the Department of Correction, and is the first statewide Residential Recovery Court in the nation. • Nine‐ month residential program with an additional nine months of aftercare in the community following release. • The Morgan County Recovery Court has a 100‐bed capacity and began enrolling felony offenders on August 1, 2013. • Six Judicial Districts (9, 13, 15, 21, 23, and 26) will ultimately feed into the Morgan County Recovery Court. • The Recovery Court will cost an average of $35 per person per day compared to $67 per day in prison. Tennessee Department of Correction (2013) 10/14/2014 23 Coalitions 10/14/2014 24 Number of Community Substance Abuse Prevention Coalition Prescription Drug Take‐Back Events Total Number of Permanent Prescription Drug Collection Boxes 120 99 90 60 36 30 Q1CY12 10/14/2014 Q2CY14 25 New DEA Rules • • • • • • DEA Releases New Rules That Create Convenient But Safe and Secure Prescription Drug Disposal Options: Effective October 9, 2014. The Final Rule authorizes certain DEA registrants (manufacturers, distributors, reverse distributors, narcotic treatment programs, retail pharmacies, and hospitals/clinics with an on‐site pharmacy) to modify their registration with the DEA to become authorized collectors. All collectors may operate a collection receptacle at their registered location, and collectors with an on‐site means of destruction may operate a mail‐back program. Retail pharmacies and hospitals/clinics with an on‐site pharmacy may operate collection receptacles at long‐term care facilities. The public may find authorized collectors in their communities by calling the DEA Office of Diversion Control’s Registration Call Center at 1‐800‐882‐9539. Law enforcement continues to have autonomy with respect to how they collect pharmaceutical controlled substances from ultimate users, including holding take‐ back events. Any person or entity—DEA registrant or non‐registrant—may partner with law enforcement to conduct take‐back events. 10/14/2014 26 Number of Permanent Prescription Drug Collection Boxes 10/14/2014 27 SBIRT Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral to Treatment • SBIRT is an early intervention approach that targets those with nondependent substance use to provide effective strategies for intervention prior to the need for more extensive or specialized treatment. • The goal of SBIRT is to have sites of care, such as physicians’ offices and outpatient hospitals, trauma centers, hospital emergency departments, ambulatory medical practices, and school clinics, screen patients who are at‐risk for substance use, and if appropriate, provide them with brief intervention services or referral to appropriate treatment. • By screening people in these settings it is possible to identify people who have had substance use related illness or injury that could provide a motivation for behavior change. 10/14/2014 28 Low Cost/High Impact Alternatives Oxford House Program The Oxford House Program is a conglomeration of democratically run, self‐supporting, drug‐ free homes. Oxford Houses, after initial set‐up, are self‐sustaining. Community Housing with Intensive Outpatient Services • Appropriate community housing that is recovery‐based as well as Intensive Outpatient Treatment is a good alternative to more expensive residential treatment services for many people. Recovery housing locations are not licensed treatment facilities, but offer a safe, sober, supportive environment for individuals in early recovery to bridge the gap between treatment services and full community integration. The average cost per day of recovery housing with Intensive Outpatient Treatment is $80/day compared to $140/day for residential treatment. Lifeline The Lifeline Project has three key goals: • Reduce stigma; • Increase community understanding and support of policies that provide access to treatment and recovery services; and • Encourage the establishment of additional 12‐step meetings, such as Narcotics Anonymous and other recovery support services, across the state. • Project approaches include encouraging the establishment of evidence‐based addiction and recovery programs (including 12‐step programs) as well as educational presentations for civic groups, faith‐based organizations, and community leaders to increase understanding of the disease of addiction and support for recovery strategies. Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services. (2013) 10/14/2014 29 Controlled Substance Monitoring Database • Prescribers must obtain 2 hours of CMEs on controlled substances. • Notification system that alerts clinicians when their patients have met certain risk thresholds. • Letters are sent to the top 50 prescribers of controlled substances that request an explanation justifying the amounts. 10/14/2014 30 A PLAN FOR THE FUTURE 10/14/2014 31 Goals of this Plan • Decrease the number of Tennesseans that abuse controlled substances. • Decrease the number of Tennesseans who overdose on controlled substances. • Decrease the amount of controlled substances dispensed in Tennessee. • Increase access to drug disposal outlets in Tennessee. • Increase access and quality of early intervention, treatment and recovery services. • Expand collaborations and coordination among state agencies. • Expand collaboration and coordination with other states. 10/14/2014 32 Goal 1: Decrease the number of Tennesseans that abuse controlled substances. • Support community coalitions as the vehicle through which communities will successfully prevent and reduce prescription drug diversion, abuse, and overdose deaths. • Continue and expand the “Take Only As Directed” statewide prescription drug media campaign. • Support the Tennessee Congressional Delegation in promoting a policy that restricts direct‐to‐consumer marketing of prescription drugs on television, radio, and social media sites. • Support the Coalition for Healthy and Safe Campus Communities. 10/14/2014 33 Goal 2: Decrease the number of Tennesseans who overdose on controlled substances. • Improve the uniformity and reliability of drug overdose reporting by all county medical examiners. • Implement new case management system for medical examiners. • Enact a Good Samaritan Law. 10/14/2014 34 Goal 3: Decrease the amount of controlled substances dispensed in Tennessee. • Complete the development of guidelines for prescribing opioids and encourage adoption. • Licensing bodies should continue to review their own policies and procedures around unsafe opioid prescribing practices and enact new rules that allow better self‐ regulation of licensees including tougher and timelier consequences for physicians who overprescribe. 10/14/2014 35 Goal 3: Decrease the amount of controlled substances dispensed in Tennessee. • Improve the utility of the Controlled Substance Monitoring Database. • Review and revise the Tennessee Intractable Pain Treatment Act and the Tennessee Code related to pain management clinics in order to address current opioid prescribing practices. Gray, James (August 2013). Position Statement to the Tennessee Medical Association re Tennessee Intractable Pain Treatment Act (Tenn. Code Ann. § 63‐6‐1101). 10/14/2014 36 Goal 3: Decrease the amount of controlled substances dispensed in Tennessee. • Revise pain clinic rules to better address the prescription drug problem in Tennessee. • Develop additional specific guidelines for prescribing narcotics for Acute Care Facilities (Urgent Care and Emergency Departments). • Design a smartphone application that will provide prescribers automatic updates on milligram/morphine equivalents and other technological enhancements. 10/14/2014 37 Goal 4: Increase access to drug disposal outlets in Tennessee. • Develop guidelines for the destruction of pharmaceuticals received from local Take‐Back events and permanent prescription drug collection boxes. • Establish additional permanent prescription drug collection boxes • Establish local incineration sites for the destruction of unused prescription medications. • Provide training on the new Drug Enforcement Administration’s regulations. 10/14/2014 38 Goal 5: Increase access to and quality of early intervention, treatment and recovery services. • Provide additional state funding for evidence‐based treatment services for people with prescription opioid dependency who are indigent and unable to pay for services on their own. • Expand Screening Brief Intervention Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) into Tennessee Department of Health primary care sites statewide. • Expand the use of SBIRT in Tennessee. • Provide additional specialized treatment options for mothers with opioid addiction whose babies have been born with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome or who are at risk of losing their children. 10/14/2014 39 Goal 5: Increase access to and quality of early intervention, treatment and recovery services. • Study efficacy and feasibility of Recovery Schools and Collegiate Recovery Communities. • Provide additional low budget/high impact services such as Oxford Houses, Lifeline, 12‐Step Meetings, and Faith‐Based initiatives. • Develop additional Recovery Courts throughout the state. • Create up to three additional Residential Recovery Courts. • Develop best practices for opioid detoxification of pregnant women. • Provide specialized training to treatment providers on best practices for serving people with opioid addiction. • Increase the availability of and refine training for time‐ limited substance abuse case management services. 10/14/2014 40 Goal 6: Expand collaborations and coordination among state agencies. • Continue the Strategic Prevention Enhancement Policy Consortium. • Continue the Substance Abuse Data Taskforce. • Develop strategies and resources to assist Department of Children’s Services caseworkers in making referrals for treatment for parents at risk of substance abuse in non‐custodial and custodial cases and train Department of Children’s Services caseworkers on effective practices to support recovery. 10/14/2014 41 Goal 7: Expand collaboration and coordination with other states. • Develop memorandums of understanding between other states that guide information sharing practices for information gained through Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs. 10/14/2014 42 Contact Information Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services http://www.state.tn.us/mental/ Full Report: tn.gov/mental/prescriptionforsuccess 10/14/2014 43