Where is CDC’s Guidance About Its Opioid Guideline?
By Carol Levy, PNN Columnist
By happenstance, I recently came across the CDC's 2022 revised opioid prescribing guideline. Too many doctors and states saw the agency’s original 2016 guideline as being written in stone -- not the voluntary set of recommendations they were intended to be.
To their credit, the CDC tried to address that misconception in its updated guideline:
“Recommendations are voluntary and are intended to support, not supplant, individualized, person-centered care. Flexibility to meet the care needs and the clinical circumstances of a specific patient is paramount.”
The CDC also acknowledged the damage done by its 2016 guideline, when many pain patients were forcibly tapered or cutoff from opioids, regardless of their diagnosis or condition.
Some patients were abandoned by doctors who no longer wanted to risk going to prison for prescribing opioids. Other physicians retired or closed their offices, sometimes without warning. And several states passed legislation limiting how many days initial opioid prescriptions could be written for.
It is always hard to put the genie back in the bottle. Two years after the revised guideline was released, about 90% of patients still have trouble getting their opioid prescriptions filled at pharmacies. Others have to fight with their insurance company to get opioid medication covered.
Patients are still being forced into withdrawal and disability, despite a history of taking opioids safely and responsibly. Some will have to leave jobs they could only perform with the help of opioids. Others can’t play with their kids, walk the dog or even get out of bed, because they are no longer able to get the medication that helped them lead relatively normal lives.
It should not have taken CDC six years to revise the opioid guideline, to make clear that they were only recommendations and never a mandate.
Is there a way to undo the damage? For the doctors who closed their practices or stopped treating pain, it is probably too late. For the patients who chose suicide because they could no longer get opioids, it is definitely too late
But maybe, just maybe, we can persuade doctors, pharmacists, lawmakers and insurers to take another look at the revised opioid guideline and convince them they are out of line.
It would be helpful if the CDC joined in an effort to fix the mess that it helped create.
Carol Jay Levy has lived with trigeminal neuralgia, a chronic facial pain disorder, for over 30 years. She is the author of “A Pained Life, A Chronic Pain Journey.” Carol is the moderator of the Facebook support group “Women in Pain Awareness.” Her blog “The Pained Life” can be found here.