Vermont Governor Proposes Limits on Painkiller Prescriptions

Photo

The prescription drug hydrocodone, also known as Vicodin. The governor of Vermont has proposed limits on the number of painkillers that could be prescribed.

Credit
Toby Talbot/Associated Press

Gov. Peter Shumlin of Vermont on Wednesday announced proposed limits on the number of painkillers that could be prescribed, the latest measure his administration has taken to combat the opioid crisis that has ravaged the state in the last five years.

At a news conference outside the Vermont Department of Health in Burlington, Mr. Shumlin and Dr. Harry Chen, the state’s health commissioner, spoke for about half an hour about proposed regulations, which they said represented a cutting-edge approach to combating the crisis.

Under the proposal, the severity and duration of pain would be used to determine the specific limit for a prescription of opioids. For example, for a minor procedure producing moderate pain, a provider would be limited to prescribing nine to 12 opioid painkiller pills, depending on the medication. The limits would be higher for more complicated procedures, and there would be exceptions for the treatment of severe pain.

The limits are proposed amendments to an existing rule and would be official in December if approved after a period of public comment and review by a state legislative committee, said Scott Coriell, a spokesman for the governor. Mr. Shumlin proposed the rule in his State of the State address in January, and he set its passage as one of the chief priorities in his final year in office.

Advertisement

Continue reading the main story

The governor, who announced last year that he would not seek a fourth term, spoke in a phone interview about Wednesday’s announcement in the larger context of his battle against the flood of opioids. He said that when he took office in 2011, he very quickly realized that “we had a full-blown health crisis on our hands.” Three years later, in his State of the State address, he pledged to fight that crisis.

He said that limiting the number of opioid pills that could be prescribed would be an effective way to cut down on addiction.

Photo

Gov. Peter Shumlin’s proposal is his latest step to combat the opioid crisis that has ravaged Vermont over the past five years.

Credit
Kristopher Radder/The Brattleboro Reformer, via Associated Press

Asked whether he hoped his successor would continue the fight, Mr. Shumlin said, “This is not a hard problem to solve.”

“We didn’t have a heroin crisis in America before OxyContin was approved and started being handed out like candy,” he said. “If politicians would lead a more rational conversation about how we manage pain in America, we could fix the majority of this problem with a click of our fingers.”

Dr. Chen stressed that the rule announced Wednesday was designed to combat the prescription of opioids for cases of “acute pain.”

“These are people who don’t normally take opioids,” he said. “We want to reduce the variability in terms of what prescribers are prescribing.”

Some critics said Wednesday’s proposals might backfire. Liz Evans, the executive director of the New York Harm Reduction Educators, a group that works to promote access to safe equipment and health care for people who use drugs, said that although she was “sure that the governor is motivated by kindness,” she was worried that the proposed regulations might not have the intended effect.

“I think prohibiting access to pain medication can result in pushing people to using more illicit drugs in a more dangerous way without being paired with existing evidence-based public health strategies that are known to work,” she said.

Dr. Chen agreed that a public health approach was necessary and said it was something that Vermont aimed to employ.

Advertisement

Continue reading the main story

“It’s a community problem,” he said. “It needs to be solved on a communitywide basis.”


Continue reading the main story