Hoping to stem an epidemic of drug abuse tied to prescription narcotic painkillers, federal officials issued tough new prescribing guidelines to the nation's doctors.
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The new advisory, from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, stresses that doctors - especially primary care physicians - should try to avoid these addictive "opioid" painkillers whenever possible for patients with most forms of chronic pain.
For example, this would include patients suffering from joint or back pain, dental pain (tooth extraction, for example), or other chronic pain treated in an outpatient setting.
It would not include the use of narcotic painkillers for people dealing with cancer-related pain, or terminally ill patients in palliative care, the CDC said.
"More than 40 Americans die each and every day from prescription opioid overdoses," CDC director Dr. Tom Frieden said during news conference.
"Increased prescribing of opioids - which has quadrupled since 1999 - is fueling an epidemic that is blurring the lines between prescription opioids and illicit opioids," he added.
Recent reports have sounded alarm bells about the mounting death toll from narcotic painkiller abuse.
In December, the CDC announced that fatal drug overdoses had reached record highs in the United States - driven largely by the abuse of prescription painkillers and another opioid, heroin (many abusers use both).
According to the December report, more than 47,000 Americans lost their lives to drug overdose in 2014, a 14 percent jump from the previous year.
Reacting to the crisis last October, President Barack Obama noted that the daily death toll from drug overdoses now exceeds that of car crashes.
At the time, the White House announced a major initiative aimed at combatting the trend. The CDC advisory is a part of that effort.
Besides calling for physicians to try non-narcotic options first for pain relief, the CDC advisory also laid out other steps to curb the abuse of opioid painkillers.
Whenever these painkillers are prescribed, "the lowest possible effective dosage" should be used, the CDC said.
Also, patients who are on such drugs should be closely monitored to "reassess [patient] progress and discontinue medication if needed," the agency said.
The CDC said it is aiming the new guidelines at primary care physicians, because those doctors currently write nearly half of all prescriptions for narcotic painkillers. ■
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