Report says state laws do little to curb opioid abuse
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say 28,000 people died from opioid overdoses in 2014. That’s even though states have passed more than 80 different laws aimed at curbing opioid abuse over the last seven years.
A new report out this week from the New England Journal of Medicine finds most of these laws have little effect on this national epidemic.
Those measures include making it hard for patients to get prescriptions from multiple doctors and developing drug monitoring databases.
Dartmouth economist – and lead author – Ellen Meara said the research is clear: All these laws have not helped slow overdoses.
“It’s really time to be honest with ourselves, and ask what has worked, what hasn’t,” she said. “If we don’t, we aren’t spending our time or our dollars on solutions that can actually slow down this epidemic and reverse it.”
Meara and her team looked at how laws impacted disabled people on Medicare – arguably the population these laws aim to help.
Frederick Isasi with the National Governor’s Association said this report will help elected leaders find meaningful solutions.
“There is a very strong consensus around the country that we don’t have the evidence base to know what works and doesn’t work,” he said.
Next month, Isasi said the NGA will release a collection of the most promising policies that governors and legislators should consider.
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