Schuette urges companies to implement opioid programs

Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette has joined with a bipartisan group of attorneys general from 17 state as well as the District of Columbia and U.S. Virgin Islands to call on more than a dozen health care companies that provide pharmacy benefit management (PBM) services to implement programs to reduce prescription opioid abuse.

In addition, the attorneys general sent a letter to the president and CEO of CVS Health Corporation applauding the company’s recent program that automatically enrolled all commercial, health plan, employer and Medicaid clients in an opioid abuse mitigation program.

“Opioid addiction can take root as a result of an injury and a legitimate prescription for an opioid pain reliever designed to make the patient feel better,” said Schuette. “Opioid addiction doesn’t see race, gender, socioeconomic status, it just sees another victim. We can’t fight this ever-growing threat with law enforcement efforts alone, we need partnerships across industries to make a dent in the problem.”

In their letters to the PBMs, the attorneys general asked that the companies adopt similar measures as CVS, including limiting to seven days the supply of opioids dispensed for certain acute prescriptions for patients who are new to the therapy, limiting the daily dosage of opioids dispensed based on the strength of the opioid, and requiring the use of immediate-release formulations of opioids before extended-release opioids are dispensed. The CVS program’s requirements are similar to the opioid prescribing guidelines recently issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The multistate PBM letters were sent to:

• Argus Health Systems, Inc.
• Benecard Servies LLC
• Envision Pharmaceutical Services LLC
• Envolve Health
• Express Scripts, Inc.
• Humana, Inc.
• Magellan Rx Management
• MedImpact Healthcare Systems, Inc.
• Navitus Health Solutions LLC
• OptumRX , Inc.
• PerformRx
• Prime Therapeutics, Inc.
• ProCare Rx
• RxAdvance
• WellDyneRx

“The opioid epidemic is the most pressing public health crisis our country faces,” the attorneys general wrote. “It affects every state and has a devastating impact on communities – tearing apart families and stretching the budgets of local law enforcement and first responders as they do the difficult work on the front lines. For our part, attorneys general are pooling resources and coordinating across party lines to address the crisis.”

In addition to Schuette, those joining one or both of today’s letters include attorneys general from Alabama, Arizona, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Montana, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Opioids, both prescription and illicit, are now the main driver of drug overdose deaths nationwide. According to CDC, opioids were involved in 33,091 deaths in 2015, and opioid overdoses have quadrupled since 1999.

According to statistics from the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, approximately 1,365 people died as a result of an opioid overdose in 2016, compared to 884 in 2015 and 426 in 2012, meaning Michigan’s overdose rate has tripled since 2012.
 

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