Welcome, Guest.
Please login or register.
New Narcotic Regulations
Rotterdam NY...the people's voice    Rotterdam's Virtual Internet Community     Chit Chat About Anything  ›  New Narcotic Regulations Moderators: Admin
Users Browsing Forum
No Members and 74 Guests

New Narcotic Regulations  This thread currently has 346 views. |
1 Pages 1 Recommend Thread
Admin
February 27, 2013, 8:03am Report to Moderator
Board Moderator
Posts
18,484
Reputation
64.00%
Reputation Score
+16 / -9
Time Online
769 days 23 minutes
Quoted Text
New narcotics law a headache for doctors, worse for patients

    In about six months, on Aug. 27, a new regulation requires physicians to go online to a New York website to check the history of any patient for whom they are going to prescribe a [controlled substance]. The goal is to decrease the number of deaths from overdoses.
    I have been treating opioid-dependent patients for the past decade, and the vast majority, over 90 percent, haven’t obtained their narcotics from physicians. They have bought them on the “street.” Therefore it is dubious that this regulation will have the desired effect.
    The cost! If I can spend as little as six minutes online for each patient, and being semi-retired have 50 patients, it will waste five hours of my time each month.
    For those at the legal limit of 100 patients, the cost will be 10 hours each month. This is a good deal of unpaid time which will require me to increase my fee, and I assume others as well. Worse is the number of patients who will be rejected because we won’t have the time to see them.
    If the approximately 3 percent or 2,000 physicians in New York who can treat opioid dependence with Buprenorphine [were] to reduce their patient load by even 15, we would have 30,000 patients who will remain addicted and unable to obtain treatment. (How many of these will die from an overdose?)
    Already, potential patients who call me report making 25 calls to physicians who are already at their limit. I have patients who are motivated enough to drive four and a half hours each way because they can’t find a doctor who can treat them in their area, or in Massachusetts.
    How this will affect the 65,000 physicians in New York who don’t prescribe Suboxone is another question.
    I wish there were a regulation requiring the people who make these decisions to consult with the New York Medical Society.

JACK L. UNDERWOOD, M.D.
Schenectady



http://www.dailygazette.net/De.....r00904&AppName=1
Logged
Private Message
Madam X
February 27, 2013, 11:55am Report to Moderator
Hero Member
Posts
3,190
Reputation
66.67%
Reputation Score
+8 / -4
Time Online
26 days 9 hours 21 minutes
Doctor Underwood is a very distinguished and intelligent man. If he doesn't understand the logic behind these new regulations, that means there isn't any. Kind of like the new gun laws. Criminalize people who aren't doing anything wrong, invade privacy, for what?
I think perhaps law enforcement wants a new source of revenue, if marijuana gets decriminalized. Either that, or health insurance companies don't wantpeople with chronic pain to have all the relief they need, because it's expensive. So make it so much of a hassle that doctors won't prescribe them, andpatients won't ask for them because of the shame and embarrassment.
Bureaucrats keeping a man from helping vulnerable needy people. How disgusting.
Logged Offline
Private Message Reply: 1 - 6
bumblethru
February 27, 2013, 11:59am Report to Moderator
Hero Member
Posts
30,841
Reputation
78.26%
Reputation Score
+36 / -10
Time Online
412 days 18 hours 59 minutes
no problem...............if these folks are in real pain OR just plain old addicted....they can and WILL get their meds on the streets!!!

nothing like the government turning over the customers and profits to the drug dealers!!!

the government medical agency has been in the business of 'legal' drug dealing FOREVER...............why stop now???


When the INSANE are running the ASYLUM
In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule. -- Friedrich Nietzsche


“How fortunate for those in power that people never think.”
Adolph Hitler
Logged
Private Message Reply: 2 - 6
Patches
February 27, 2013, 1:28pm Report to Moderator
Hero Member
Posts
4,839
Reputation
63.16%
Reputation Score
+12 / -7
Time Online
40 days 11 hours 18 minutes



AGREE FULLY BT.....NOW ON THE OTHER HAND....THERE ARE THOSE WHO NEVER SEE THEIR PATIENTS AND ARE STILL  ABLE TO GET THEIR PRESCRIPTIONS ONCE A MONTH.......TRUE FACT.

THERE IS A DEFINITE NEED FOR NARCOTIC LAWS THAT WILL PRESENT THOSE FROM BUYING STREET DRUGS.....BUT THEN AGAIN....WHERE IS THE LAW TO GET THESE DEALERS OFF THE STREETS...?? ..

IT IS JUST AS IMPORTANT TO HAVE A DRUG TASK FORCE FOR THE STREET DRUGS.....NO ONE REALLY KNOWS HOW MUCH THEY ARE MAKING AND HOW THEY OPERATE UNTIL THEY HAVE BEEN IN THE MIX

DRUG DEALERS ARE WORSE THAN THE DOCTORS PRESCRIBING THESE DRUGS.....
Logged
Private Message Reply: 3 - 6
Libertarian4life
February 27, 2013, 2:39pm Report to Moderator

Hero Member
Posts
7,356
Reputation
50.00%
Reputation Score
+12 / -12
Time Online
119 days 21 hours 10 minutes
Quoted from Madam X

I think perhaps law enforcement wants a new source of revenue, if marijuana gets
decriminalized. Either that, or health insurance companies don't want people with
chronic pain to have all the relief they need, because it's expensive.


The new source of revenue, and more police job creation is the likely reason.

Old school opiates are cheap.

10mg hydrocodone/oxycodone are less than 50 cents a piece. $15/30 tablets
15mg morphine is around $6 for 30 tablets.

Oxycontin is a different story at $100 or more depending on the dosage.


Logged
Private Message Reply: 4 - 6
Libertarian4life
February 27, 2013, 2:46pm Report to Moderator

Hero Member
Posts
7,356
Reputation
50.00%
Reputation Score
+12 / -12
Time Online
119 days 21 hours 10 minutes
Quoted from Patches



AGREE FULLY BT.....NOW ON THE OTHER HAND....THERE ARE THOSE WHO NEVER SEE THEIR PATIENTS AND ARE STILL  ABLE TO GET THEIR PRESCRIPTIONS ONCE A MONTH.......TRUE FACT.

THERE IS A DEFINITE NEED FOR NARCOTIC LAWS THAT WILL PRESENT THOSE FROM BUYING STREET DRUGS.....BUT THEN AGAIN....WHERE IS THE LAW TO GET THESE DEALERS OFF THE STREETS...?? ..

IT IS JUST AS IMPORTANT TO HAVE A DRUG TASK FORCE FOR THE STREET DRUGS.....NO ONE REALLY KNOWS HOW MUCH THEY ARE MAKING AND HOW THEY OPERATE UNTIL THEY HAVE BEEN IN THE MIX

DRUG DEALERS ARE WORSE THAN THE DOCTORS PRESCRIBING THESE DRUGS.....


The entire point is that people shouldn't need street dealers for pain meds.

Street dealers often buy prescription drugs from kids who steal them from their homes.

Street dealers will also sell to kids.

Allowing doctor's to determine legitimate needs would take the business away from the street dealers.

Allowing socialist government hysterical knee jerk legislation to force doctors to do anything
other than what their medical training has taught them, will empower street dealers.

Logged
Private Message Reply: 5 - 6
senders
February 27, 2013, 3:21pm Report to Moderator
Hero Member
Posts
29,348
Reputation
70.97%
Reputation Score
+22 / -9
Time Online
1574 days 2 hours 22 minutes
Quoted from Patches



AGREE FULLY BT.....NOW ON THE OTHER HAND....THERE ARE THOSE WHO NEVER SEE THEIR PATIENTS AND ARE STILL  ABLE TO GET THEIR PRESCRIPTIONS ONCE A MONTH.......TRUE FACT.

THERE IS A DEFINITE NEED FOR NARCOTIC LAWS THAT WILL PRESENT THOSE FROM BUYING STREET DRUGS.....BUT THEN AGAIN....WHERE IS THE LAW TO GET THESE DEALERS OFF THE STREETS...?? ..

IT IS JUST AS IMPORTANT TO HAVE A DRUG TASK FORCE FOR THE STREET DRUGS.....NO ONE REALLY KNOWS HOW MUCH THEY ARE MAKING AND HOW THEY OPERATE UNTIL THEY HAVE BEEN IN THE MIX

DRUG DEALERS ARE WORSE THAN THE DOCTORS PRESCRIBING THESE DRUGS.....


we used to count syringes...WASTE OF TIME....same with the narcs....WASTE OF TIME....when people feel bad
for whatever freakin' reason NO md/shrink can fix it....a human will do what they think they need to do for themselves.

unfortunately we have 'civilized' ourselves right out of personal wisdom in exchange for washing machines/mcdonalds
and politicians who decide what size fu(king soda I can order.

this is what the public FAILS TO SEE:

Quoted Text
EHR | Health Maintenance Protocol eHealth

HealthWatcher automates sending those easy-to-forget reminders to your patients with medical advice and health care best practices

Providing sound health maintenance means including a full array of counseling, screening, and other preventive services designed to minimize the risk of premature sickness and death and to assure optimal physical, mental, and emotional health throughout the natural lifecycle. Today's leading EHR systems offer a wide variety of electronic health record (eHealth or EHR) features to optimize workflow and patient safety. For example, screening tests and physician counseling are important tools for identifying common yet potentially serious injuries, illnesses and diseases that can be prevented or cured with early intervention.

EHR Helps Obtain Successful Health Compliance Outcomes

EHR (eHealth) provides you the tools for successful management of patient populations, conditions, and preventive health routines ensuring patient compliance and preventive care. The HealthWatcher tool allows for customized profiles and protocols to ensure your practice complies with best practices and your patients adhere to your medical advice.

eHealth Maintenance Tailored to Your Practice Needs

With ADP AdvancedMD EHR, you can tailor your health maintenance solution to fit the unique needs of different groups of patients. For example, you can customize health maintenance information by diagnosis or by payer to accommodate carrier guidelines. Find out how ADP AdvancedMD can help your support staff quickly identify and reach out to patients who are due for tests or procedures. LIKE CATTLE OF COURSE

Utilize Continuity of Care Protocols for Better Safety, Health Maintenance & Compliance
Our HealthWatcher (eHealth maintenance) module is part of our EHR and is a tool that helps the practice and provider follow continuity of care protocols. We support care plans, guidelines and protocols for the management of specific conditions based on factors such as age, sex, diagnosis and lab result values.

Benefits of HealthWatcher Maintenance in the EHR
Generates alerts for appointment recall, prescription refills and laboratory orders
Protocols can contain one or a series of tasks, renewable based on user-defined intervals
Health maintenance protocols can be assigned to an individual or group of patients



Protected Health Information. The Privacy Rule protects all "individually identifiable health information" held or transmitted by a covered entity or its business associate, in any form or media, whether electronic, paper, or oral. The Privacy Rule calls this information "protected health information (PHI)."12

“Individually identifiable health information” is information, including demographic data, that relates to:

the individual’s past, present or future physical or mental health or condition,
the provision of health care to the individual, or
the past, present, or future payment for the provision of health care to the individual,
and that identifies the individual or for which there is a reasonable basis to believe it can be used to identify the individual.13  Individually identifiable health information includes many common identifiers (e.g., name, address, birth date, Social Security Number).

The Privacy Rule excludes from protected health information employment records that a covered entity maintains in its capacity as an employer and education and certain other records subject to, or defined in, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, 20 U.S.C. §1232g.


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

Logged Offline
Private Message Reply: 6 - 6
1 Pages 1 Recommend Thread
|


Thread Rating
There is currently no rating for this thread