Opioid Crisis Has Sad Unintended Consequences

Medicine tablets and capsules in containers

The national awareness that has been created by the opioid crisis is a great thing, and has saved many lives.  However, The New York Times Recently ran an article about some unintended consequences caused by physicians being more cautious about prescribing pain medications.  Many doctors refer patients who need pain killers to “pain clinics,” which specialize in treating those with chronic pain and often prescribe opioids.  However, even the pain clinics have become increasingly cautious.  The Times told the story of Brent Slone, who flipped his vehicle to avoid a stalled car and suffered severe injuries.  He miraculously survived, but was paralyzed from the waist down and in intense pain.  Six years after the car wreck, the pain clinic he went to cut his pain medication in half with no explanation.  He showed up at the pain clinic in his wheelchair, but they gave him no sympathy and told him he couldn’t get a refill on his prescription for six weeks.  He sent his wife a text which said “They denied script im done love you.”  He then went to a local park and committed suicide.  Although his family won a nearly $7 million malpractice judgment against his doctors and the pain clinic, this was a small consolation to his wife.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/07/opinion/opioid-crisis-pain-victims.html

 

CVS To Start Hiring Physicians

CVS Health Corp. announced it is going to fulfill its ambition of becoming a major provider of healthcare services by hiring physicians who will work at in-store clinics.  CVS acquired insurance giant Aetna in 2018 and said that now it will focus its M&A activity on growing its in-store doctor’s offices.  “We really believe that we need to kind of push into primary care, so we can influence the overall cost of care,” Karen Lynch, the CEO of CVS Health Corp., told The Wall Street Journal.

 

https://www.wsj.com/articles/cvs-health-posts-higher-revenue-as-customers-seek-covid-19-tests-vaccines-11635939627

 

Monterey, CA Coronavirus Update From A Carmel Caregiver : CA Cases Approach 50K

There were 132 new coronavirus cases reported in Monterey County today. This brings the total to 42,016, with two new deaths reported.  Nationally, the numbers are better.  There were only 59,462 new cases reported, for a cume total of 28.2 million cases.  There were 1,825 deaths, for a total of 501,014.  In California, there were 4,338 new cases for a total of 3.5 million, with 205 new deaths.  That makes for a grand total of almost 50K deaths in our state.  On the good news front, a new study suggest that both the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines may also prevent infections.  The Mayo Clinic studied 31K people who had received at least one dose of either vaccine.  They found the vaccines to be more than 80% effective at preventing infection for 36 days after the first dose.  Vaccine efficacy was 75% 15 days after the first dose and 89% effective from 36 days after the first dose.