The Politics of Pain:
Drug Policy & Patient Access to Effective Pain Treatments
Friday, September 17, 2004
121 Cannon HOB
11am-12:30pm (Light refreshments following presentations)
Ronald T. Libby, PhD.
Professor, University of North Florida
DEA investigation initiatives & funding sources
Rev. Ronald Myers, Sr., M.D.
Founder, President, American Pain Institute
Impact on African-American community
Eric Sterling
President, Criminal Justice Policy Found., fmr.
Cong, staffer who helped write DEA laws
Failure of drug policy
Frank B. Fisher, M.D.,
Exonerated pain management specialist
Myth of available pain treatment
Maia Szalavitz
Fellow, media watchdog group, STATS
Opioid-phobia & media distortion of issue
Siobhan Reynolds
Founder & President, Pain Relief Network
Impact on families & economic issues
Moderator: Kathryn Serkes
President, Square One Media Network
More than 48 million people in the U.S. suffer from chronic pain, according to the National Institutes of Health. Recent high-profile news cases of opioid usage have placed the issue on the front pages, including a debate over dependency vs. addiction, who is ?deserving? and who is ?undeserving,? of opioid treatment, and whether pain patients should be subjected to different standards of personal scrutiny than other patients.
The DEA claims drug diversion has reached crisis proportions, justifying increased investigative initiatives that frequently circumvent the Congressional appropriations process. Physicians are being prosecuted and imprisoned, and patients sentenced based on pill counts. As a result, physicians are afraid, and pain is going untreated. A bi-partisan amendment sponsored by Reps. Conyers and Paul, M.D., to defund these initiatives failed this session, but is gaining more support.
But efforts by some, including featured panelists, have exposed how news stories have overblown the problem by using faulty statistics and methodology in reporting drug diversion. The Orlando Sentinel recently retracted a series of articles and fired the reporter.
Medical research and treatment has made tremendous advances in pain management, but is public policy keeping up? And is law enforcement discouraging patient access to treatment as a result of prosecution of physicians under the Controlled Substances Act?
This distinguished panel will examine the current state of pain management, law enforcement initiatives, patient experiences, economic impact of untreated pain, funding sources, sentencing guidelines, H.R. 3015 prescription drug database act, and solutions for cooperation between lawmakers, regulators, law enforcement and the medical community.
RSVP: or (800) 635-1196 by 12:00 noon, Wed. Sept 15.
Briefing & lunch are free of charge.
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