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Risky Painkillers More Often Prescribed To Vets With PTSD, Study Finds

Painkillers Vets Ptsd

LINDSEY TANNER   03/06/12 09:30 PM ET EST  AP

CHICAGO — Morphine and similar powerful painkillers are sometimes prescribed to recent war veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress along with physical pain, and the consequences can be tragic, a government study suggests.

These vets are at high risk for drug and alcohol abuse, but they're two times more likely to get prescriptions for addictive painkillers than vets with only physical pain, according to the study, billed as the first national examination of the problem. Iraq and Afghanistan vets with PTSD who already had substance abuse problems were four times more likely to get these drugs than vets without mental health problems, according to the study.

Subsequent suicides, other self-inflicted injuries, and drug and alcohol overdoses were all more common in vets with PTSD who got these drugs. These consequences were rare but still troubling, the study authors said.

The results underscore the challenge of treating veterans with devastating physical injuries and haunting memories of the horrors of war. But the findings also suggest that physicians treating these veterans should offer less risky treatment, including therapies other than drugs, the study authors and other experts say.

Opium-based drugs like morphine and hydrocodone can dull excruciating physical pain. Relatively few veterans are prescribed such drugs. But some doctors likely prescribe them for vets who also have mental pain "with the hope that the emotional distress that accompanies chronic pain will also be reduced. Unfortunately, this hope is often not fulfilled, and opioids can sometimes make emotional problems worse," said Michael Von Korff, a chronic illness researcher with Group Health Research Institute, a Seattle-based health care system. He was not involved in the study.

The research involved all veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan wars who were diagnosed with non-cancer physical pain from October 2005 through December 2010 – or 141,029 men and women. Half of them also were diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder or other mental health problems.

The results were published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The Department of Veterans Affairs paid for the study, which is based on VA health care data.

Lead author Dr. Karen Seal, who treats patients at the San Francisco VA Medical Center, said she sometimes prescribes opiates for war vets, but only if other painkillers don't work, and only in collaboration with non-drug treatment from mental health experts, occupational therapists and other specialists.

That type of approach is part of a VA pain management policy adopted in 2009, toward the end of the study period.

Dr. Robert Kerns, the VA's national program director for pain management, said the study "draws attention to growing concerns" about the use of opiate painkillers in veterans. These drugs may have a role in treating chronic pain in vets but only as part of a comprehensive pain management plan, he said.

In a written statement about the study, the VA said its pain management approach has been cited as a model of care, but that "we recognize that more work needs to be done."

Retired Lt. Col. Steve Countouriotis, a 30-year Army veteran who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, says that after returning home a few years ago, he received a morphine prescription for war-related back and shoulder pain. He refused to take it and used aspirin instead.

"I don't feel comfortable taking those kinds of medicines," said Countouriotis, 60, of Petaluma, Calif. "I don't like mood-altering drugs." He said he doesn't have PTSD, but that some colleagues who do have also been given the drugs.

Doctors are too quick to prescribe them, Countouriotis said, adding, "It's too many, too soon."

Army data provided to The Associated Press last year showed that referrals for opiate abuse among soldiers rose during the decade that ended in 2009, and totaled more than 670 between October 2009 and June 2010.

Some vets in the new study got the drugs from overburdened primary care physicians outside the VA health system.

"Imagine primary care doctors getting about 20 minutes to see a patient expressing high levels of distress," because of war-related physical and mental trauma, said Seal, the study author. The balance between providing pain relief while being cautious with drugs that can be habit-forming "is always in play," she said.

In the study, 15,676 vets received opiate prescriptions for physical pain. These prescriptions went to almost 18 percent of vets with PTSD and 12 percent of those with other mental health problems, compared with about 7 percent of vets without those problems.

Among those with PTSD, subsequent self-inflicted injuries, including suicides, occurred in 3 percent of vets who got the drugs, versus 2 percent who didn't receive those prescriptions. The study doesn't provide a breakdown of suicides vs. nonfatal self-injuries.

The study "brings much needed attention to the complexity of this problem," said Dr. William Becker, a Yale University instructor and primary care physician who treats substance abuse and has worked with veterans.

"Patients are typically younger individuals who are in many cases kind of struggling to find their feet again" after returning home from war, he said. The ideal treatment includes behavioral counseling, therapy for war wounds and management of chronic pain.

"The word is spreading and I think this paper is going to send another strong message that this has really got to become the standard of care," Becker said.

___

Online:

JAMA: http://www.jama.ama-assn.org

PTSD: http://1.usa.gov/ftZKFP

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truly moderate
Paleo-conservative and Anti-tea party
04:55 PM on 03/10/2012
"Among those with PTSD, subsequent self-inflicted injuries, including suicides, occurred in 3 percent of vets who got the drugs, versus 2 percent who didn't receive those prescriptions."

These percentages are very low. No doubt a cause for concern, ill agree. However, IF a veteran is suffering from physical pain post deployment, they should at the least be prescribed opiods approved for moderate pain like Nucynta (which has a more limited abuse potential but is a step up from tramadol), tramadol, and hydrocodone/codeine. I can see more cause for concern when drugs like oxycodone and hydromorphone are prescribed because these drugs have more abuse potential. Risk management should be practiced and that means signing a responsibility agreement and random DTing.

Again, soldiers in pain should not be denied treatment. Its just that those treatments should be geared to reduce risk while still achieving more pros than cons.
05:29 AM on 03/09/2012
www.newleafprogramme.co.uk
EFFECTIVE TREATMENT FOR PTSD
NO DRUGS.
08:04 PM on 03/07/2012
It's too bad that it is taking so long for people to get medical marijuana. Sometimes people just drift into excessive drinking or lots of opiates to self-medicate for pains or depression, if they had access to medical marijuana, they could have relief of their pain. I have back pain and medical marijuana does help. Instead of medicating with opiates, booze, or other harmful drugs, medical marijuana taken in edibles really works for me and many others.
Great e-book on medical marijuana: MARIJUANA - Guide to Buying, Growing, Harvesting, and Making Medical Marijuana Oil and Delicious Candies to Treat Pain and Ailments by Mary Bendis, Second Edition. This book has great recipes for easy marijuana oil, delicious Cannabis Chocolates, and tasty Dragon Teeth Mints. goo.gl/iYjPn  goo.gl/Jfs61
07:57 PM on 03/07/2012
Synthetic herion in pill form will make all physical and more importantly mental pain go away...In fact, if you shoot it up, it's just like the dangerous and illegal street herion....as any high school aged addict can tell you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Richard Hartman
Disabled U.S Army Vet
07:13 PM on 03/07/2012
i`m fine on this combo ! pain is stress , with my ptsd i dont have room for more stress, so i guess i`m one of the lucky disabled veterans !
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:51 AM on 03/07/2012
The route from soldier to addicted lab rat neglected by an underfunded VA is a very short step.

The blowback from these immoral and unethical poisonings and addictions will be immense. But the US simply does not care.

Once the soldiers are out of the active service, they are out of our minds. And apparently out of their own minds as well.

Another national tragedy of Empire America.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hawklord Tst
gamer. i was born, and will probably die one day
05:46 PM on 03/07/2012
yes, all we need is a whole generation of americans going waltzing matilda
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Iva 123
10:46 PM on 03/07/2012
After seeing what our government did in 50's and 60's on mental patients, I am not surprised.
Veterans families has to step in and guide them what kind of treatment to choose. My advise, never blindly trust anyone with your health or you become lab rat.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8k0C88B0QE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iOeZdAJjGSo&feature=results_video&playnext=1&list=PL286B03D821BC5270

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUrDog-dg4s&feature=autoplay&list=PL286B03D821BC5270&lf=results_video&playnext=2

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aZd34jInRhM&feature=autoplay&list=PL286B03D821BC5270&lf=results_video&playnext=3

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPjZ74Xt1RI&feature=autoplay&list=PL286B03D821BC5270&lf=results_video&playnext=4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bNv_VOn4puY&feature=autoplay&list=PL286B03D821BC5270&lf=results_video&playnext=5

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzIw44w00ow&feature=related

I think in case of PTSD hypnotherapy would work better then anything. In case of depression the doctors should check first level of vit B12. Low levels of vit B12 can cause severe depression and doctors almost never check it , sometimes even refuse because they prefer to prescribe antidepressants. www.B12awareness.org
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08:26 AM on 03/08/2012
THX for the data. Good post.
11:19 AM on 03/07/2012
Great article. The only thing missing is the mention of alternative modalities that relieve pain and suffering for so many veterans, such as acupuncture. It is imperative that we start listening to ways people get relief from pain and include these methods in our conversations, regardless of what is "proven" to work because frankly, too many people are suffering. This article offers more information: http://acutakehealth.com/help-for-veterans-with-ptsd
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plebian43
Go back to sleep, it's your duty.
11:33 AM on 03/07/2012
Well said, heal them where they can be healed rather than masking the symptoms and wreaking further havoc on their bodies.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeandre Gerber Pretorius
Content Developer | Author | Community Manager
11:12 AM on 03/07/2012
Controlled amounts of psilocybin to deal with the PTSD. Cannabis for pain reduction both smoked and eaten. Finally a minute amount of DMT to have a complete reset in the "old knocker".

Obviously this won't work for all, but it sure as hell is a lot less dangerous than any of the pharma drugs or opiates they are receiving now, and at a fraction of the cost.

All of the drugs I have listed will directly deal with all the problems hat the vets have, obviously it should go along with therapy and should be paid for by the government who decided to send those women and men to war in the first place to fight a war that only benefits "that evil white man with his damn cat"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WesStrikesBack
A winegrowing secular humanist
11:10 AM on 03/07/2012
Many, many vets have been able to reduce or stop their medication using a psychiatric service dog to mitigate their PTSD disability.

Check out and support psychdog.org for more information.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marinemomof3
"They lied mom", I know son, I know.
11:16 AM on 03/07/2012
I know of several. You can never believe what those dogs are capable of.

Thank you for info :)
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kitlevey
American Lion
03:13 PM on 03/07/2012
It's a real stretch for most, but I believe spending quality time with a horse, especially training one of your own, has taught hundreds of disconnected people the path to renewed self esteem and fostered a centered sense of purpose.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ignacio sanabria
Mirror synapses at work
10:49 AM on 03/07/2012
Acupuncture, meditation, neural therapy, homeopathy, CBT, and drastic lifestyle changes are therapies that should be tried as the front line to treat these disorders.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chrystal Eastland
Scott me up Beamy!
03:44 PM on 03/07/2012
Do you understand what homeopathy really is? It's junk. It's heavily diluted medicine. As a controlled study, a few scientists took 10,000 times the dosage listed on the box of a "homeopathy" sleep medicine. Nothing. Not even a little. Didn't even fall asleep. Try taking that much dosage level of ANYTHING and see what happens. You'd be dead. It's junk science. Next study was a girl who called poison control claiming to have taken triple the dosage of her homeopathic medicine. Poison control told her not to worry because the pills she took were useless, essentially like drinking a glass of water. He told her it's a scam used to trick people and that she was in absolute NO danger. It is never something that should be used to treat anyone much less our vets of real pain.
While there are addiction dangers to medicines, the simple fact is that some of these people are coming home with actual, physical impairments that are horrifically painful. To have them have to get through your "frontlines" of homeopathy and meditation would be just as awful. This article doesn't mention that many MANY of these men coming home feel asking for help or relief of pain is a weakness. So, by the time they actually go in to a doctor they are in absolute agony. To have them have to first try a solid month or two of homeopathy and meditation to treat their "disorder" could be even MORE disastrous than anything else.
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Justtheobvious
Res-erected.
10:38 AM on 03/07/2012
Big Pharma is nothing but street drug dealers who lobby.
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plebian43
Go back to sleep, it's your duty.
11:31 AM on 03/07/2012
They are an absolutely soulless group of wraiths.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:30 AM on 03/07/2012
Maybe the returning vets are already ad dicted to op iates before they come home.....smoking op ium is cheap and easy to get in Afghanistan
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
saveourplanet
War, what is it good for?Absolutely nothin.
10:24 AM on 03/07/2012
I watched Dr. Drew last night which dealt with addiction of prescription drugs and a mother called in about her son, a young veteran who has PTSD and is addicted to pain killers.
Dr. Drew told her to get the PTSD treated FIRST, then the professionals who are tuned to treat that will get him into addiction therapy.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
patman77
10:17 AM on 03/07/2012
there will be a flood of afghan H flowing in as soon as the war ends.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:27 AM on 03/07/2012
it already is.... he roin arrests have tripled in the last 5 years.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sallybutt45
To thine own self be true.
10:14 AM on 03/07/2012
Sometimes the meds are the worst thing for the PTSD, it can cause a lot of side affects and may prompt suicidal thoughts or in some have led to violent crimes. The V,A. Should really consider marijuana , coupled with other modalities----hydrotherapy, massage and accupuncture, all of which may save sanity and lives, not to mention money in the long run. Group therapy sessions where the troops can vent and be with others experiencing the same problems.may also help. Anti-spasm meds may relieve some pains, coupled with anti-anxiety meds. Opiates are dangerous because the person may also be self-medicating with alcohol, and that is a deadly combination. Even mixing Tylenol w alcohol can cause irreversible liver damage.