Bravo Ontario; Forced Opioid Tapering is (Mercifully) Ending | American Council on Science and Health – By Josh Bloom — January 30, 2020
Let’s hear it for Dr. Nancy Whitmore, the head of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. She has the ethics and the courage to make changes in policy that should have never been in place to begin with.
Barbaric forced tapering will no longer be permitted, and doctors and patients will make treatment plans together.
Hallelujah!! Finally, some common sense and courage in the face of the anti-opioid politics dictating medical care these days.
policymakers in Ontario… realized that forced tapering of pain medications is “arbitrary and inappropriate,” and decreed that physicians will no longer be required to wean patients off of prescription opioids.
Yesterday, Barry Ulmer, the executive director of the Chronic Pain Association of Canada (CPAC) issued a press release about an email he received from Dr. Nancy Whitmore, the registrar, and CEO of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) (1) spelling out a radically different (and badly needed) change in policy that she has instituted for Ontario.
Dr. Whitemore’s decision was based on numerous medical consultations, input from pain patients and advocates, and a patient survey conducted by CPAC.
Some highlights include (emphasis mine):
- Ontario doctors would no longer be required to force taper chronic pain patients from their opiate medicines arbitrarily.
- Instead of being forced to follow the 2017 Canadian Guideline for Opioids for Chronic Non-Cancer Pain doctors now have the discretion to apply relevant guidelines as they see appropriate and with consideration for the needs of each individual patient.
- The revised policy is based on collaboration between physicians and patients, not the mandatory (not to mention cruel and medically unsound) one-size-fits-all approach that was previously shoved down patient’s throats.
- Not only will physicians now have the discretion to act in the best interest of patients, but they may no longer inappropriately or arbitrarily taper patients.
- The use of treatment agreements / prescribing contracts is no longer endorsed by CPSO. Good. It’s bad enough to be left in pain, but treating pain patients like children or addicts and make them jump through hoops to get the medication they need and deserve is humiliating and degrading.
Mr. Ulmer’s comments in the press release mirror something that we at ACSH have been saying for years:
“Overdose deaths continue to increase while pain patients (47.8%) were forced to reduce their medications with more than two-thirds experiencing substantial increases in suffering according to our survey.”
Ulmer added, “We applaud the CPSO for this initiative, however, actions speak louder than words. Will the CPSO begin the arduous task to correct the injustices done to the thousands and thousands of people with pain in the province?”
NOTES:
(1) CSPO is the regulatory agency for physicians practicing in Ontario. They call the shots.
(2) According to the email. “This guideline was commissioned by Health Canada in a failed attempt to deal with opioid overdose deaths based on the incorrect assumption that cause could be attributed to pain patients and their doctors.”This is what we at ACSH and patient’s rights advocates have been saying for years, only to have it fall on deaf (and dumb) ears.
The Canadians listened to American misinformation, in this misguided tapering. Of course in Canada the system would be faster to respond with less industry pressure, and less misinformation in their media. People in pain would be less distressed too, since they have nationalized healthcare.
Here in the US, they are peddling placebos, even though this is unscientific. The mass media want us to believe we don’t need healthcare or medications, because sometimes placebos appear to work. This is targeted misinformation at work. https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-placebo-for-pain-reliefeven-when-you-know-its-not-real-11579525202?shareToken=stcbaa9c267a724ac29d0d1ca92bbc4a40&mod=pckt_f2_4
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I just wish the folks who come up with this nonsense would be subjected to it themselves.
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I can only say that the US is hoping to be far behind , I hope they are not and see the error of their ways but it is highly unlikely. Unfortunately we will continue to suffer for a long time coming and continue to see suicides from the ones who can no longer stand the suffering.
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*correction us pain patients are GOING (not hoping)TO BE FAR BEHIND could not edit oopsie …
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These are sad times when logic no longer prevails even in health care. We are now treated how politicians and self-proclaimed “experts” believe we should be, like irresponsible little children who can’t be trusted with anything that could be dangerous… unless it’s a gun. Thank goodness we are still allowed that final recourse to our misery.
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