[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 74 (Wednesday, May 11, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H2234-H2247]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ESTABLISHING PAIN MANAGEMENT BEST PRACTICES INTER-AGENCY TASK FORCE
General Leave
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all
Members may have 5 legislative days to revise and extend their remarks
and to include extraneous material on the bill, H.R. 4641.
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Rodney Davis of Illinois). Is there
objection to the request of the gentlewoman from Indiana?
There was no objection.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to House Resolution 720 and rule
XVIII, the Chair declares the House in the Committee of the Whole House
on the state of the Union for the consideration of the bill, H.R. 4641.
The Chair appoints the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Poe) to preside over
the Committee of the Whole.
{time} 1340
In the Committee of the Whole
Accordingly, the House resolved itself into the Committee of the
Whole House on the state of the Union for the consideration of the bill
(H.R. 4641) to provide for the establishment of an inter-agency task
force to review, modify, and update best practices for pain management
and prescribing pain medication, and for other purposes, with Mr. Poe
of Texas in the chair.
The Clerk read the title of the bill.
The CHAIR. Pursuant to the rule, the bill is considered read the
first time.
The gentlewoman from Indiana (Mrs. Brooks) and the gentleman from New
Jersey (Mr. Pallone) each will control 30 minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Indiana.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I yield myself such time as I
may consume.
Mr. Chairman, this week we have and will continue to hear harrowing
and personal stories on the House floor about how opioid addiction is
devastating local communities and families across the country. Just
last night, my colleagues shared some of their stories. The gentleman
from Pennsylvania (Mr. Meehan) shared a story about a promising
collegiate athlete whose star was extinguished when a minor injury led
to an addiction and his eventual overdose and death. Ms. Kuster from
New Hampshire told of a constituent named Amber who tragically died of
an overdose after a treatment bed was unavailable for her after leaving
incarceration.
We are going to hear many more stories today about this epidemic that
has touched every community in every State of our country, an epidemic
that has exploded in recent years to the point where every 12 minutes
someone is dying of a drug overdose in this country. By the end of this
debate, there may be over five people who have died of an overdose.
The Energy and Commerce Committee has meticulously investigated this
epidemic over the past year with multiple hearings and expert
witnesses. The result is a thoughtful package of solutions focused on
prevention and treatment that will help those facing addictions and
their families deal with this opioid and, subsequently, heroin crisis.
The statistics couldn't be more stark.
The United States only represents 5 percent of the world's
population, yet we consume 80 percent of the world's pain medication.
Yet 80 percent of heroin users started with a prescription to legal
pain medication. Nearly 260 million opioid prescriptions were written
in the United States in 2012, outpacing the number of American adults
by 20 million.
As we debate this crisis, this is not just about statistics, because
we are actually talking about husbands, wives, brothers, sisters,
parents, and, sadly, our children. A parent who has inspired me is a
woman named Justin Phillips from Indianapolis, a Hoosier mom who lost
her son, Aaron, to a heroin overdose at the age of 20.
Out of her heartbreak, she found a calling to keep local and national
attention on the issue of heroin and opioid abuse, she said, ``until
the dying stops.'' She became a leading voice for families facing
addiction in Indiana, and she founded Overdose Lifeline, a nonprofit
organization devoted to purchasing those lifesaving drugs, those
[[Page H2235]]
reversal drugs, for Hoosier first responders. But she didn't stop
there.
She helped pass a bill at our statehouse, called Aaron's Law, to
provide access to overdose reversal drugs for others beyond first
responders. Justin is just like so many other moms and dads. She needs
our help to prevent more kids like Aaron from being lost to heroin and
opioid abuse.
Her story made me realize that solving this public health crisis,
this epidemic, must be a top priority for Congress and for the Federal
Government, and inspired me to work with my colleague from across the
aisle, Congressman Kennedy of Massachusetts, to lead these efforts in
the House to combat the heroin opioid crisis.
This week we are taking up a series of bills that are going to make a
real difference--we hope. They must make a real difference in turning
back this scourge.
{time} 1345
Now, I have cited the number of opioid prescriptions written in 2012,
which outpaces the number of American adults. But the fact is that our
prescribers--our doctors, our nurse practitioners, our dentists, and
others--are often unaware that, in many cases, their efforts to
properly treat their patients' pain can inadvertently create longer
term addiction issues.
While there are certainly legitimate medical needs for pain
medication opioids, many prescribers are unaware that, in many cases,
their efforts to properly treat their patients' pain can inadvertently
create these long-term addiction issues.
In an effort to address this, the CDC recently developed guidelines
for prescribing opioids for chronic pain. In order to improve the way
opioids are prescribed to patients with severe and chronic pain, these
guidelines seek to reduce their overuse and their abuse.
H.R. 4641, which I introduced with Representative Kennedy, would
ensure that the CDC's opioid prescribing guidelines are reviewed,
modified, and updated where needed by an interagency task force and
expert stakeholders from the prescriber community, the patient
community, the addiction community, and the recovery community to
reflect best practices going forward.
The task force will be comprised of representatives from the Federal
relevant agencies as well as those who deal with this problem day in
and day out: physicians, dentists, pharmacists, hospitals, overdose
reversal specialists, and pain and addiction researchers.
This task force will also include representatives from State medical
boards, pain advocacy groups, medical professional associations, mental
health and addiction treatment communities.
The scope and breadth of this group will ensure that the practices
are thoughtfully reviewed, modified, and updated. They will take into
account the different types of opioids, opioids within and between
different classes, the availability of deterrent technology as well as
nonpharmacological and medical device alternatives to opioids. It is
important that the task force consider the broadest scope of pain
management options.
It is also important that this isn't just going to be another
bureaucratic report that is compiled and sits on a shelf that is
reviewed by congressional researchers and congressional staff. They
must report out to Congress, lay out best practices, and provide a
strategy for disseminating these best practices for pain management and
recommendations at medical facilities.
We have to do more in this country. Failure to address a major part
of this epidemic from the outset will perpetuate the cycle of addiction
in our communities. This is but one important step. There are many,
many bills that the House is considering.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
I rise in support of H.R. 4641, a bill to create an interagency task
force on pain management. This legislation passed the committee with
unanimous support.
In 2014, pharmacies in the United States dispensed approximately 245
million prescriptions for opioids. This is enough to provide a script
to every adult in our entire Nation.
At the same time, we know that over 5 million Americans use
prescription pain relievers either recreationally or to satisfy an
opioid addiction.
This combination has produced tragic results. 2014 produced the
highest number of drug overdose deaths than any previous year on
record, with opioids and heroin driving the recent surge.
Unfortunately, our Nation's doctors and healthcare providers have not
been provided the tools and education necessary to safely prescribe
these medications in the midst of an opioid epidemic.
Recently, an article in the New England Journal of Medicine examined
this topic and found that ``many physicians admit that they are not
confident about how to prescribe opioids safely, how to detect abuse or
emerging addiction, or even how to discuss these issues with their
patients.''
As a result, we have created a patchwork of prescribing practices
with tremendous variation both geographically as well as even within
the same field.
This bill would create an interagency task force on pain management
to review, modify, and update best practices on management and
development of a strategy to disseminate those best practices to
prescribers, pharmacists, and other stakeholders.
Those best practices will increase the tools available to providers
who prescribe opioids more safely and be able to detect and intervene
earlier in instances of substance use disorders.
I urge my colleagues to support this important legislation, which is
part of the opioid epidemic package that we are moving on the floor
today on suspension.
Mr. Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I yield 3 minutes to the
gentleman from Michigan (Mr. Upton), our chairman.
Mr. UPTON. Mr. Chairman, every 12 minutes someone in the U.S. dies of
a drug overdose. Abuse of prescription painkillers and heroin has
impacted every single community. It is an epidemic. It doesn't have
boundaries and doesn't discriminate.
We have lost a lot of good kids and a lot of good people in my State
and every State. As I travel back and forth to Michigan virtually every
week, I meet a family member who has lost somebody with this very
tragic story.
This last week it was a mother and a wife of a fellow who had
committed suicide in Mattawan, Michigan. It breaks your heart.
Yes, we know the numbers. They are staggering. The CDC reports that
nearly 260 million opioid prescriptions were written in 2012. That is
one for every single U.S. adult, as my friend Mr. Pallone said, with
another 20 million to spare.
A recent study from the Kaiser Family Foundation found that one in
five Americans say they have a family member who has been addicted to
prescription painkillers.
The epidemic is unique to the U.S., as Americans consume 80 percent
of the world's opioid prescriptions. It is not unique. It is a
frightening reality, but we have to face the epidemic head-on. That is
why today is an important step.
In the Energy and Commerce Committee, we have held a number of
hearings over the last year with testimony from so many experts on the
front lines. What we learned is eye-opening.
Federal policies toward opioid addiction in the past year have often
overemphasized a one-size-fits-all law enforcement approach. It is
clear through our listening sessions that it is a public health crisis
and that our strategy should reflect the complex dynamic between public
health and criminal activity. We know that we cannot simply incarcerate
our way out of this epidemic.
The bills that we are considering today touch on a spectrum of issues
driving the opioid crisis. While there is no one solution, these bills
represent good steps in addressing a problem that has rapidly grown.
I want to thank all of my colleagues on the Energy and Commerce
Committee and off for working to adhere in a bipartisan way these
important bills that will really make a difference in every one of our
communities.
The House leadership deserves recognition on both sides for their
swift consideration of these bills. I want to thank, in particular, my
good friend,
[[Page H2236]]
Mr. Pallone, for working with us to get these bills across the finish
line, through the committee process, and now on the floor.
Our work is going to continue. We owe this effort to the past,
present, and, sadly, future victims of this epidemic: our neighbors,
friends, and families across every part of the country, every
demographic group. We owe it to the families and we owe it to the
communities who are suffering from this addiction.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I yield such time as he may consume to the
gentleman from Massachusetts (Mr. Kennedy), who is the Democratic
sponsor of this bill and has worked a lot on the opioid epidemic
problem.
Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. Chairman, I want to thank Mr. Pallone for yielding,
for his leadership on this issue throughout his time on Energy and
Commerce, particularly over the last several months since I have been
on the committee trying to galvanize support from all of our colleagues
to recognize the impact that this is having every single day.
Mr. Chairman, I want to thank you for including H.R. 4641 in this
package of bipartisan opioid-related bills.
None of our districts has been spared the heartbreaking headlines
about lives lost to the opioid crisis. We have heard from each of our
constituents who have attended funerals for friends, neighbors,
classmates, colleagues, and family members. The bills we are
considering this week are a promising step forward as we find ways to
respond to this crisis.
To my colleague, Congresswoman Brooks, thank you for your partnership
on this issue and on so many others. We have both seen firsthand how
lack of access to treatment can lead those suffering from addiction to
our courts. With this bill, we are trying to change the course of their
path to stop addiction before it even begins.
Mr. Chairman, last week the Boston Globe wrote a series of articles
about the opioid crisis in my home State of Massachusetts. The
statistics are devastating. Nationally, heroin overdose rates have
tripled in the last 5 years. At home, our State faces a heroin overdose
rate that is twice the national average.
Last year alone, nearly 1,400 Massachusetts families lost loved ones
to opioid overdoses. Between 2013 and 2014, prescription opioid
overdoses nearly doubled. During that same time, the number of people
in Massachusetts who overdosed on a combination of heroin and
prescription opioids rose by almost 500 percent.
The Globe also noted that there has been a noticeable shift from
opioids to heroin with one exception, Bristol County, where many of my
constituents live. In trying to explain that exception, the reporter
included a haunting line that has stayed with me ever since.
He wrote that, in Bristol County, ``prescription opioids remain a
dominant killer, though it's not clear whether that's because this area
is somehow less susceptible to heroin or if it's merely a matter of
time.''
Mr. Chairman, we cannot accept a reality with a rise in heroin
overdoses as ``merely a matter of time.'' We have all said it over 100
times. When it comes to a Federal response, there is no silver bullet.
But H.R. 4641 tries to focus on what I believe offers us one of the
very best opportunities for combating this problem: stopping addiction
before it ever starts.
The bill will create a new task force dedicated to the job of
reviewing, modifying, and updating best practices for the management of
pain and the prescription of pain medication.
Voices from HHS, the VA, FDA, DEA, NIH, and other agencies will join
prescribers, substance use disorder professionals, patients suffering
from chronic pain, and patients who have lived through the
heartbreaking reality of becoming addicted to prescription pills.
These advocates and experts are on the front lines of this fight
every single day. Under their guidance, this task force will ensure we
implement the policies that balance responsible pain management with
the urgency that our opioid crisis requires.
Again, I am encouraged by the bipartisan progress we are making on
this issue; yet, our work is just beginning.
I urge my colleagues to support this bill and look forward to working
with each of them to build on this momentum.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I yield 3 minutes to the
gentleman from Oregon (Mr. Walden).
Mr. WALDEN. Mr. Chairman, I think, as you can see, Members on both
sides of the aisle know of people in our districts, our States, and
across our country that have been tragically affected by opioid abuse
and overdose.
I want to thank my colleagues on both sides of the aisle for their
work on this legislation, especially my friend from Indiana, Mrs.
Brooks.
I rise in strong support of H.R. 4641. This is a very important
bipartisan step forward to combat opioid abuse. This issue hits close
to home, all of our homes.
The State of Oregon ranked near the top or at the top for nonmedical
use of prescription pain relievers in the Nation. With opioid
prescriptions serving as a gateway to heroin, it is no surprise that
deaths from drug overdoses have surpassed those of car accidents in my
State.
Last week, in Medford, Bend, and Hermiston, I hosted roundtables with
community leaders and affected families to talk about what they are
seeing on the front lines.
Physicians, first responders, members of law enforcement, and
families all were there sharing their stories, talking about how
important the work we are doing here today is to them and our
communities. All of them are on the ground combating this problem every
day. We had excellent discussions.
H.R. 4641, in addition to the 17 other bipartisan bills we are voting
on this week, will help combat this epidemic. This bill will help
prevent lawful prescription use from spiraling into abuse by developing
best practices for the treatment of pain.
In Medford, I heard from a father who had seen the impacts of
addiction on his own family. His sister, who was a nurse, died of an
overdose after years of suffering from addiction and bouncing between
pharmacies, passing off forged prescriptions.
{time} 1400
He spoke about how better tracking and treatment could have helped
catch his sister's problem earlier and, perhaps, made counseling more
effective. As it was, she was only caught because two pharmacies in a
small town happened to check with each other. You see, by then, it was
too late.
Today, this man is working to help his son with an addiction that
started with a prescription for a high school sports injury that
drifted into a heroin addiction. He spoke to the importance of
counseling, support, and trying to avoid addiction through better
prescribing practices.
Echoing those sentiments, a therapist I spoke to in Hermiston
experienced 10 years of addiction of opioids after she was prescribed
painkillers for a broken foot. Then when she tried to overcome this
addiction, she could not find any help. So she traveled more than 5
hours, from Milton-Freewater, Oregon, to Marysville, Washington,
because she could not find a physician in her region to prescribe
Suboxone, an important medicine to help people break free from opioids.
Addiction is an equal opportunities destroyer. It crosses all
segments and regions of our country, and often the disease shows no
symptoms.
One emergency room physician relayed a story about a recent patient
he had no reason to believe had an addiction problem until he saw in
the database that the patient just received 60 pills the week before.
Opioids are highly effective at providing relief and improving the
quality of life for those in debilitating pain. But if we don't know
how to appropriately prescribe them, it's no wonder we got to this
place. We need to increase access to counseling, medication-assisted
therapy and treatment for those battling addiction. Echoing what I
heard from health practitioners across my district, opioid addiction is
a biopsychosocial disease--it's as complicated as diabetes and requires
a multi-pronged approach.
That's why it is so important that we pass H.R. 4641 and all of these
bills this week to give health providers, first responders, law
enforcement, and those battling addiction the tools they need to
overcome the epidemic of opioid abuse.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I yield 3 minutes to the gentlewoman from
[[Page H2237]]
New Mexico (Ms. Michelle Lujan Grisham).
Ms. MICHELLE LUJAN GRISHAM of New Mexico. I thank my colleague for
yielding time.
Mr. Chairman, opioid abuse has become, as we have heard today, a
critical national issue as 78 Americans are killed by heroin and
prescription drug overdoses each day, and drug overdoses are now the
leading cause of injury-related deaths in the United States.
The number of unintentional overdose deaths from prescription
painkillers almost quadrupled between 1999 and 2013; but as bad as the
opioid epidemic is across the country, it is much more severe in my
home State of New Mexico, which has had one of the highest rates of
overdose deaths in the country for several years. Unfortunately, it is
getting worse. From 2013 to 2014, the death rate from drug overdoses in
New Mexico increased 21 percent. Rio Arriba County, New Mexico, has the
highest overdose death rate in the Nation--one in 500 people dies from
overdose--which is about six times the national average.
The over-prescription of opioids for pain management is part of the
problem, and an increasing number of patients is becoming dependent on
these powerfully addictive medications. In fact, 259 million opioid
prescriptions were written in 2012--more than one for every adult in
the United States. Once addicted to these prescription opioids, many
then turn to heroin and to synthetic opioids due to their increased
availability, lower prices, and higher purity.
We must act to respond to this public health crisis, but we need to
do it in a balanced way. We need to be mindful of the millions of
Americans who suffer from chronic pain. We need to ensure that patients
and providers continue to have access to the best, most medically
appropriate course of treatment while cutting off access to those who
abuse the system.
This is why I strongly support H.R. 4641, which would establish an
interagency task force to review and update medical best practices for
pain management and prescribing pain medication; but we can't stop
here. We have to do more than just study the problem, because only 11
percent of Americans who need treatment for substance abuse are
receiving it. Many of those who remain find themselves in our criminal
justice system. Our prisons have become de facto treatment centers.
More than 65 percent of our prison population has a substance abuse
problem.
We have to provide the funds necessary to fully invest in opioid
prevention, rehabilitation, and treatment programs. We have to support
the placement of substance abuse treatment providers in the communities
that are most in need, like Rio Arriba County. We have to improve
access to the overdose reversal drug, naloxone, which can help save
countless lives every year.
I urge my colleagues to support this legislation, which will address
this disease that has destroyed the lives of so many.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I yield 1 minute to the
gentleman from Florida (Mr. Bilirakis).
Mr. BILIRAKIS. Mr. Chairman, I rise in support of H.R. 4641.
Prescription drug abuse, particularly with opioids, has become a
national epidemic. It affects all of our communities. The bill before
us today will authorize an important task force to determine and
disseminate best practices for pain management.
The need for best practice guidelines was highlighted last week
during a substance abuse panel I hosted in my district with Office of
National Drug Control Policy Director Botticelli. One woman shared her
story of addiction and struggle to receive help following a surgery she
had had as a 15-year-old gymnast. We must give people like her the
tools they need for prevention and treatment in order to stop the
spread of this epidemic.
I thank the gentlewoman for sponsoring this bill. Please support this
great bill.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the
gentleman from North Dakota (Mr. Cramer).
Mr. CRAMER. I thank Mrs. Brooks for her leadership on this--Mr.
Kennedy's as well--and for bringing this important legislation to our
committee and to the floor.
Mr. Chairman, I rise to support H.R. 4641.
With heroin addiction now being three times greater than it was a
decade ago, we know it doesn't matter where you come from. Whether you
are on an Indian reservation, on a farm, in the middle of a city, in a
suburb, in a small town, or whether you are in a Fargo high school, at
the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks, or at Bismarck State
College, it doesn't matter what your lot is in life. It doesn't matter
what your income level is. It doesn't matter what your social status
is. This opioid abuse crisis affects people from all walks of life, and
it is about time we acknowledged it and tried to deal with it at this
level.
This bill is pretty basic, but is pretty profound as well because it
takes advantage of the collective opportunity of the collective
talents, experiences, and backgrounds of the people on the ground who
are dealing with it every day. It brings it all together and
facilitates it at every level of government in every community and in
every State whether it is North Dakota or Indiana or Massachusetts. It
is the beginning, I believe, of a profound solution.
Just as much as anything, I applaud the efforts of the leadership who
brought this to us, and I grieve with so many parents as we have heard
their stories. This year, in the Fargo, North Dakota, area alone, there
have been a minimum of 10 fatal overdoses because of this crisis.
I will stand shoulder to shoulder with anybody and everybody in this
Chamber, as well as in the Chamber on the other side of the Capitol, to
help solve this problem.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the
gentleman from Georgia (Mr. Carter).
Mr. CARTER of Georgia. Mr. Chairman, I rise in support of H.R. 4641
so we can continue to involve the practices of pain management and the
prescribing of pain medication to fight the opioid abuse epidemic in
this country.
As a lifelong pharmacist, I have provided prescription medications to
Americans for over 30 years. In that time, I have personally witnessed
the struggles that both medical professionals and patients face with
prescription drug abuse.
There are many steps that must be taken to address this epidemic. One
priority should be to involve practices related to pain management and
the prescribing of pain medication. This bill does just that. This bill
creates an interagency task force to continually review, modify, and
update best practices for pain management and prescribing pain
medication. Through the new task force, experts in fields related to
prescription drug abuse and pain management will be able to involve
best industry practices that will give clarity to our fight against
this epidemic.
I commend Representative Brooks and the Committee on Energy and
Commerce for their work on this bill, and I encourage all of my
colleagues to support this measure.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I yield myself the balance of
my time.
I thank all of my colleagues. I thank particularly the leadership of
the Committee on Energy and Commerce. There have also been other
committees--the Judiciary Committee, the Committee on Education and the
Workforce--that have been working on bills. This is not something that
any one Member of this body has truly been a leader on. So many
different Members have been leading on this because it has affected our
communities, our families, our neighborhoods.
I urge my colleagues to vote ``yes'' on this important bill because,
as the gentleman from North Dakota said, the Federal Government has not
done enough yet. This will be an opportunity for us to bring together
all of the Federal agencies that are involved in this problem, which
have been part of the problem, and try to change the way our
prescribers throughout the country work on the pain management issues
the country faces, which, hopefully, will yield a much lower overdose
[[Page H2238]]
rate--a rate which now exceeds the motor traffic fatalities in this
country and which is the leading cause of calls to our poison centers.
More importantly, it has devastated so many parents and friends who
have found their friends who have overdosed from either heroin or
opioids.
I am so pleased that we are finally beginning to recognize that we
cannot arrest our way out of this problem. It is a disease. It is
something that so many people cannot stop on their own. They need help.
With all of these experts coming together on this task force to provide
the best practices for the country, I hope we can turn the tide and
save many lives.
I urge the bill's passage by my colleagues.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
I ask all of my colleagues to support this bill. As I said, this
interagency task force is an important part of this larger opioid
package that we produced in the Committee on Energy and Commerce on a
bipartisan basis. I know the rest of those bills are going to come up
on suspension--or most of them--this afternoon. I can't emphasize
enough the importance of this package, as well as this bill, as being
part of it.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The CHAIR. All time for general debate has expired.
Pursuant to the rule, the bill shall be considered for amendment
under the 5-minute rule.
It shall be in order to consider as an original bill for the purpose
of amendment under the 5-minute rule the amendment in the nature of a
substitute, recommended by the Committee on Energy and Commerce,
printed in the bill. The committee amendment in the nature of a
substitute shall be considered as read.
The text of the committee amendment in the nature of a substitute is
as follows:
H.R. 4641
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. DEVELOPMENT OF BEST PRACTICES FOR THE USE OF
PRESCRIPTION OPIOIDS.
(a) Definitions.--In this section--
(1) the term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary of Health
and Human Services; and
(2) the term ``task force'' means the Pain Management Best
Practices Inter-Agency Task Force convened under subsection
(b).
(b) Inter-Agency Task Force.--Not later than December 14,
2018, the Secretary, in cooperation with the Secretary of
Veterans Affairs, the Secretary of Defense, and the
Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, shall
convene a Pain Management Best Practices Inter-Agency Task
Force to review, modify, and update, as appropriate, best
practices for pain management (including chronic and acute
pain) and prescribing pain medication.
(c) Membership.--The task force shall be comprised of--
(1) representatives of--
(A) the Department of Health and Human Services;
(B) the Department of Veterans Affairs;
(C) the Food and Drug Administration;
(D) the Department of Defense;
(E) the Drug Enforcement Administration;
(F) the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention;
(G) the Health Resources and Services Administration;
(H) the Indian Health Service;
(I) the National Academy of Medicine;
(J) the National Institutes of Health;
(K) the Office of National Drug Control Policy; and
(L) the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration;
(2) State medical boards;
(3) physicians, dentists, and nonphysician prescribers;
(4) hospitals;
(5) pharmacists and pharmacies;
(6) experts in the fields of pain research and addiction
research;
(7) representatives of--
(A) pain management professional organizations;
(B) the mental health treatment community;
(C) the addiction treatment and recovery community;
(D) pain advocacy groups; and
(E) groups with expertise on overdose reversal;
(8) a person in recovery from addiction to medication for
chronic pain;
(9) a person with chronic pain; and
(10) other stakeholders, as the Secretary determines
appropriate.
(d) Duties.--The task force shall--
(1) not later than 180 days after the date on which the
task force is convened under subsection (b), review, modify,
and update, as appropriate, best practices for pain
management (including chronic and acute pain) and prescribing
pain medication, taking into consideration--
(A) existing pain management research;
(B) recommendations from relevant conferences and existing
relevant evidence-based guidelines;
(C) ongoing efforts at the State and local levels and by
medical professional organizations to develop improved pain
management strategies, including consideration of differences
within and between classes of opioids, the availability of
opioids with abuse deterrent technology, and pharmacological,
nonpharmacological, and medical device alternatives to
opioids to reduce opioid monotherapy in appropriate cases;
(D) the management of high-risk populations, other than
populations who suffer pain, who--
(i) may use or be prescribed benzodiazepines, alcohol, and
diverted opioids; or
(ii) receive opioids in the course of medical care; and
(E) the 2016 Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic
Pain issued by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention;
(2) solicit and take into consideration public comment on
the practices developed under paragraph (1), amending such
best practices if appropriate; and
(3) develop a strategy for disseminating information about
the best practices developed under paragraphs (1) and (2) to
prescribers, pharmacists, State medical boards, educational
institutions that educate prescribers and pharmacists, and
other parties, as the Secretary determines appropriate.
(e) Limitation.--The task force shall not have rulemaking
authority.
(f) Report.--Not later than 270 days after the date on
which the task force is convened under subsection (b), the
task force shall submit to Congress a report that includes--
(1) the strategy for disseminating best practices for pain
management (including chronic and acute pain) and prescribing
pain medication, as developed under subsection (d);
(2) the results of a feasibility study on linking the best
practices described in paragraph (1) to receiving and
renewing registrations under section 303(f) of the Controlled
Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 823(f)); and
(3) recommendations for effectively applying the best
practices described in paragraph (1) to improve prescribing
practices at medical facilities, including medical facilities
of the Veterans Health Administration and Indian Health
Service.
The CHAIR. No amendment to the committee amendment in the nature of a
substitute shall be in order except those printed in part A of House
Report 114-551. Each such amendment may be offered only in the order
printed in the report, by a Member designated in the report, shall be
considered read, shall be debatable for the time specified in the
report, equally divided and controlled by the proponent and an
opponent, shall not be subject to amendment, and shall not be subject
to a demand for division of the question.
Amendment No. 1 Offered by Ms. Brownley of California
The CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 1 printed in
part A of House Report 114-551.
Ms. BROWNLEY of California. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the
desk.
The CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 4, line 11, strike ``and''.
Page 4, line 13, insert ``and'' after the semicolon.
Page 4, after line 13, insert the following:
(M) the Office of Women's Health;
The CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Brownley) and a Member opposed each will control 5
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman.
Ms. BROWNLEY of California. Mr. Chairman, I rise to offer a very
straightforward amendment to H.R. 4641.
The amendment would include the Office of Women's Health in the
interagency task force created under the bill.
As we all know, the underlying bill includes a list of Federal agency
representatives to be included in the interagency task force, which
will review, modify, and update best practices for pain management and
prescribing pain medication.
However, the bill does not currently include the Office of Women's
Health. The Office of Women's Health, within the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, was established in 1991 to improve the
health of women by advancing and coordinating a comprehensive women's
health agenda to address healthcare prevention and service delivery.
The Office of Women's Health works with numerous government agencies,
nonprofit organizations, consumer groups, and associations of
healthcare professionals to coordinate and advance policies and
programs that best meet the unique healthcare needs of women.
[[Page H2239]]
{time} 1415
As a national leader in the health of women and girls, the Office of
Women's Health has critical specialized expertise that will help the
interagency pain management task force address the unique pain
management needs of women who may be pregnant or who may be nursing.
This expertise is desperately needed because opioid abuse among women
has increased substantially in recent years. In fact, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of women who
fall victim to an opioid-related fatality increased an alarming 400
percent from 1999 to 2010, totalling 48,000 women who have died during
that span of time.
During this decade, opioid abuse among women increased more than
abuse of any other drug, including cocaine and heroin. Shockingly, the
CDC reports that in 2010, 18 women per day died of a prescription
painkiller overdose, accounting for nearly 7,000 women in total.
It is critically important that we include experts on women's health
in the opioid task force. Women who are pregnant or who may be nursing
have specialized healthcare needs, and the Office of Women's Health is
uniquely qualified to ensure that the interagency task force takes the
needs of women and girls into account as it examines best practices for
pain management in prescribing pain medication.
I urge my colleagues to support this commonsense amendment.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I claim the time in opposition,
but I support the amendment.
The CHAIR. Without objection, the gentlewoman from Indiana is
recognized for 5 minutes.
There was no objection.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. At this time, I thank the gentlewoman from
California for the amendment. I think it strengthens the bill. I think
it is very important that the Office of Women's Health is added to the
task force. So many of us have had the opportunity to visit NICUs in
hospitals and have seen drug-addicted babies. So I do believe that
having the perspective of the Office of Women's Health would be
critically important.
So often women's health has not been given the proper attention that
it deserves, and I would ask for support of the amendment.
I yield back the balance of my time.
Ms. BROWNLEY of California. Mr. Chairman, I yield 1 minute to the
gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Pallone).
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I want to urge all my colleagues on this
side of the aisle to support the bill as well.
Ms. BROWNLEY of California. Mr. Chairman, I thank the gentleman from
New Jersey and the gentlewoman from Indiana. I think we all realize the
importance of ensuring that this interagency task force is effective
and works, and I think the eyes on specific healthcare needs of women
and girls is most important.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentlewoman from California (Ms. Brownley).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 2 Offered by Mrs. Brooks of Indiana
The CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 2 printed in
part A of House Report 114-551.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, as the designee of the
gentleman from Georgia (Mr. Carter), I offer amendment No. 2.
The CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 4, line 15, strike ``physicians'' and insert ``subject
to subsection (d), physicians''.
Page 4, line 18, strike ``pharmacists'' and insert
``subject to subsection (d), pharmacists''.
Page 5, after line 10, insert the following:
(d) Condition on Participation on Task Force.--An
individual representing a profession or entity described in
paragraph (3) or (5) of subsection (c) may not serve as a
member of the task force unless such individual--
(1) is currently licensed in a State in which such
individual is practicing (as defined by such State) such
profession (or, in the case of an individual representing an
entity, a State in which the entity is engaged in business);
and
(2) is currently practicing (as defined by such State) such
profession (or, in the case of an individual representing an
entity, the entity is in operation).
Page 5, line 11, strike ``(d)'' and insert ``(e)''.
Page 7, line 1, strike ``(e)'' and insert ``(f)''.
Page 7, line 3, strike ``(f)'' and insert ``(g)''.
The CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentlewoman from
Indiana (Mrs. Brooks) and a Member opposed each will control 5 minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Indiana.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, this amendment simply would
require that any of the individuals who are appointed to the task force
under H.R. 4641, whether they be a physician, a dentist, a nonphysician
prescriber, or pharmacist who is eventually appointed by the lead of
Health and Human Services, that that individual shall be a licensed
prescriber and practicing in their appropriate State or that they, at a
minimum, should have an active license and that they should be a
practicing prescriber in that State.
I urge my colleagues to adopt this amendment.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I claim the time in opposition, but I
support the amendment.
The CHAIR. Without objection, the gentleman from New Jersey is
recognized for 5 minutes.
There was no objection.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I urge my colleagues to support the
amendment.
I yield back the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my
time.
The CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentlewoman from Indiana (Mrs. Brooks).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 3 Offered by Mr. Grayson
The CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 3 printed in
part A of House Report 114-551.
Mr. GRAYSON. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
The CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 4, after line 18, insert the following (and
redesignate the subsequent paragraphs accordingly):
(6) first responders;
The CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentleman from
Florida (Mr. Grayson) and a Member opposed each will control 5 minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Florida.
Mr. GRAYSON. Mr. Chairman, my amendment would ensure that first
responders are included for membership on the Pain Management Best
Practices Interagency Task Force. This is a commonsense amendment.
First responders, like police officers and other emergency room
staff, are the first on the scene when a person overdoses. And they are
the first to administer emergency treatments and resuscitation
programs. These are the people who have the first contact with victims
of opioid overdose.
It would make sense that if we are putting together a task force to
address the terrible opioid problem--and specifically pain management
best practices--we should include the views and opinions of those who
are first on the scene and in the best position to save lives.
Being first on the scene to overdose emergencies, first responders
often interact with patients in pain. Yet, most first responders,
especially EMS responders, have no pain management standards as part of
their accreditation.
The Commission on Accreditation of Ambulance Services does not
include a pain management standard as part of its clinical assessment,
nor is pain management a major part of EMS education. As a result,
first responder attitudes vary. According to a 2012 Yale study, there
is a widespread reluctance within the EMS community to administer
opioids to those who legitimately need it out of a fear--perhaps
unfounded--that patients could be addicts seeking drugs.
First responders certainly do encounter people who are not
prescription painkiller dependent. However, it is often not possible
for paramedics to know with certainty if a patient is an addict or even
whether the addict is also experiencing legitimate pain.
This level of uncertainty and varying degrees of attitudes within the
first responder community, along with the
[[Page H2240]]
unique experience and insight into the opioid epidemic, warrants the
inclusion of first responders to the Pain Management Best Practices
Interagency Task Force membership.
Mr. Chairman, this is very simple, we are putting together a Pain
Management Best Practices Interagency Task Force. We should include
police officers. We should include paramedics. We should include people
who are on the front lines of fighting this battle every day that is a
battle of life and death.
I urge the support of my amendment.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I claim the time in opposition.
The CHAIR. The gentlewoman from Indiana is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, for the record, I support the
amendment.
I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. GRAYSON. Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
The CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the gentleman
from Florida (Mr. Grayson).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 4 Offered by Ms. Clark of Massachusetts
The CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 4 printed in
part A of House Report 114-551.
Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the
desk.
The CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 4, after line 20, insert the following:
(7) experts in the fields of adolescent and young adult
addiction research;
Page 4, line 21, strike ``(7)'' and insert ``(8)''.
Page 5, line 6, strike ``(8)'' and insert ``(9)''.
Page 5, after line 7, insert the following:
(10) a person in recovery from addiction to medication for
chronic pain, whose addiction began in adolescence or young
adulthood;
Page 5, line 8, strike ``(9)'' and insert ``(11)''.
Page 5, line 9, strike ``(10)'' and insert ``(12)''.
Page 6, line 13, strike ``and''.
Page 6, after line 13, insert the following:
(E) the distinct needs of adolescents and young adults with
respect to pain management, pain medication, substance use
disorder, and medication-assisted treatment; and
Page 6, line 14, strike ``(e)'' and insert ``(f)''.
The CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentlewoman from
Massachusetts (Ms. Clark) and a Member opposed each will control 5
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Massachusetts.
Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts. Mr. Chairman, a special thanks to
Congresswoman Brooks, Congressman Kennedy, and Congressman Pallone for
introducing this important bipartisan bill to address a devastating
public health crisis.
The opioid epidemic is a scourge on this country. In my district
alone, 400 people have died in the last 4 years as a direct result. As
we all know, there is no silver bullet to fix this problem. But what we
can do and what we must do is find every possible way to help those
people already affected and stop it from reaching more victims.
When substance use disorder starts in adolescence, it affects key
development and societal changes in young people's lives. It can
interfere with the brain's ability to mature properly and have
potentially lifelong consequences.
We know that a large majority of adults in substance abuse treatment
start using prior to the age of 18, and we need to make sure that the
voices of adolescents and young adults are heard in this conversation.
The underlying bill establishes a pain management task force that
will include many different stakeholders and experts. This amendment
would add an expert in adolescent and young adult addiction and a
person in recovery from addiction to medication for chronic pain that
began in adolescence or young adulthood to the bill's list of experts.
This amendment would also call on the task force to consider the
distinct needs of adolescents and young adults as it develops best
practices for pain management and medication.
Mr. Chairman, this is a commonsense amendment to help our young
people dealing with this epidemic. I urge its passage.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I claim the time in opposition,
but I do support the amendment.
The CHAIR. Without objection, the gentlewoman from Indiana is
recognized for 5 minutes.
There was no objection.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I very much want to thank the
gentlewoman from Massachusetts (Ms. Clark). I believe that this does
strengthen the task force. I appreciate and welcome the attention and
focus on adolescents.
We had the opportunity to travel to the NIH and to learn so much
about the research that is being done there. I believe in having an
expert in adolescent and young adult addiction because we do know that
that is where it so very often begins. So I appreciate and thank the
gentlewoman for strengthening the bill.
I yield back the balance of my time.
Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts. Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of
my time.
The CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentlewoman from Massachusetts (Ms. Clark).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 5 Offered by Mr. Pallone
The CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 5 printed in
part A of House Report 114-551.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I rise as the designee of the gentleman
from Massachusetts (Mr. Moulton) to offer amendment No. 5.
The CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 5, line 3, strike ``and''.
Page 5, after line 3, insert the following:
(E) veteran service organizations; and
Page 5, line 4, strike ``(e)'' and insert ``(f)''.
The CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentleman from New
Jersey (Mr. Pallone) and a Member opposed each will control 5 minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New Jersey.
{time} 1430
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, this amendment by the gentleman from
Massachusetts (Mr. Moulton) would basically add representatives of
veterans service organizations to the Pain Management Best Practices
Inter-Agency Task Force that we have discussed and that we support on a
bipartisan basis. I urge support for Mr. Moulton's amendment.
Mr. Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I claim the time in opposition,
but I support this amendment.
The CHAIR. Without objection, the gentlewoman from Indiana is
recognized for 5 minutes.
There was no objection.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, while the task force was
designed with the Veterans Administration as a key member of the task
force, I do believe that this bill would strengthen the task force in
that representatives from veterans service organizations often speak on
behalf of and are the first line of defense and advocates for veterans.
Obviously, as we know, veterans seek their medical treatment often
from VA hospitals and VA facilities. We know that there has been a
significant problem with overprescribing at some of our VA facilities.
I believe that this amendment will strengthen the task force and the
bill. I urge passage or adoption of the amendment.
I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I yield such time as he may consume to the
gentleman from Massachusetts (Mr. Moulton), the sponsor of the
amendment.
Mr. MOULTON. Mr. Chairman, the addiction epidemic has touched every
community and demographic in America, but our veterans have been hit
particularly hard. Veterans suffer from chronic pain at a higher rate
than the civilian population, often due to injuries they sustained
during their service. This puts our veterans at high risk of developing
addiction and presents unique challenges as they search for ways to
cope with the pain caused by the wounds of war.
The results of veteran addiction are tragic. Approximately 68,000
veterans struggle with opioid use. Veterans are also almost twice as
likely to die from accidental opioid overdoses than nonveterans.
We need to do more to ensure that we are not losing veterans to the
disease of addiction, while also ensuring that
[[Page H2241]]
they get the absolute best care possible when they return home. That is
why it is imperative that the veteran community has a seat at the table
as we begin the process of reviewing and updating our pain management
best practices.
By adding a representative of a veterans service organization to the
interagency task force created by this bill, my amendment will ensure
that the unique challenges our veterans face are part of the
conversation.
In closing, I would like to thank my colleagues, the gentleman from
New York (Mr. Zeldin) and the gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Walz), for
their bipartisan cosponsorship and the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of
America, Vietnam Veterans of America, American Legion, Paralyzed
Veterans of America, and Boston Scientific for their support of this
amendment.
I urge my colleagues to support this amendment.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Chairman, I urge support for the amendment.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the gentleman
from New Jersey (Mr. Pallone).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 6 Offered by Mr. Nolan
The CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 6 printed in
part A of House Report 114-551.
Mr. NOLAN. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
The CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 5, line 8, strike ``and''.
Page 5, after line 8, insert the following:
(10) an expert on active duty military, armed forces
personnel, and veteran health and prescription opioid
addiction;
Page 5, line 9, strike ``(10)'' and insert ``(11)''.
The CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentleman from
Minnesota (Mr. Nolan) and a Member opposed each will control 5 minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Minnesota.
Mr. NOLAN. Mr. Chairman, Members of the House, my amendment simply
would ensure that the concerns and the interests of Active-Duty members
of our Armed Forces and veterans have their interests and concerns
taken into consideration by the interagency task force.
The simple truth is that there is a greater need and use of opioids
among Active Duty and veterans of our Armed Forces simply because of
the many serious accidents and injuries that they incur in combat and
in training.
Over half of the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans have had to use
opioids as painkillers from the accidents and the injuries that they
have suffered. That is well over half a million of our finest and
bravest citizens here in this country, and an 80 percent increase in
its use over the last decade.
I would be remiss if I didn't point out as well that overdose from
opioids is twice the rate among our Active-Duty servicemembers and
veterans of that of the general population. Also, I would be remiss if
I didn't point out that, because of problems that we have been seeing
in the Veterans Administration with veterans having a difficult time
sometimes getting appointments to get their prescriptions filled, they
have been tragically forced to go to alternative street measures,
including heroin, with disastrous consequences for our soldiers and our
veterans. Our veterans, our men and women of the Armed Forces, deserve
better.
This is a growing problem, a growing concern, and my amendment would
simply require that they be represented on this interagency task force
so that their interests, their concerns can be properly reflected and
reported in the findings and results of this interagency task force.
Mr. Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I claim the time in opposition,
but I support the amendment as well.
The CHAIR. Without objection, the gentlewoman from Indiana is
recognized for 5 minutes.
There was no objection.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I want to thank the gentleman
from Minnesota, again, for strengthening the representation on the task
force. While I do feel that the VSOs are a strong voice for veterans
and will continue to be, I believe the addition specifically of Active-
Duty military is something that would be a very strong voice. While DOD
is represented on the task force, I think actually having specific
Active-Duty military personnel and those who are currently serving and
are currently dealing with their pain as a result of their service
would be an important addition.
I thank the gentleman, and I urge passage of the amendment.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. NOLAN. Mr. Chairman, I want to thank the gentlewoman from Indiana
(Mrs. Brooks) for her leadership on this important issue and her
support for this important amendment, most importantly the great work
she is doing here on behalf of our veterans and our men and women in
the Armed Forces.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
The CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the gentleman
from Minnesota (Mr. Nolan).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 7 Offered by Mrs. Watson Coleman
The CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 7 printed in
part A of House Report 114-551.
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
The CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 5, line 8, strike ``and''.
Page 5, after line 8, insert the following:
(10) an expert in the field of minority health; and
Page 5, line 9, strike ``(10)'' and insert ``(11)''.
The CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentlewoman from New
Jersey (Mrs. Watson Coleman) and a Member opposed each will control 5
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from New Jersey.
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. Mr. Chairman, this amendment would simply ensure
that, as we address what has rightly been called an epidemic, we
consider the unique impacts and issues of drug addiction for minority
communities by adding an expert on minority health to the task force
that is created by this bill.
The dangers of opiate addiction are apparent across the board. Abuse
of prescription opioids has contributed to a flood of cheap heroin to
all communities.
Over the past 4 years, we have seen a 269 percent increase in heroin
overdose deaths in White communities, but also a 213 percent increase
in Black communities, 137 percent increase in Latino communities, and
236 percent in Native American communities.
With that in mind, it is important to remember that the opiate
epidemic--both heroin and its prescription painkiller counterparts--
looks very different from the perspective of communities of color. The
compassion and clemency that we are showing now and the evidence-based
solutions we are embracing were needed long ago, way before abuse by
predominantly White and suburban communities.
As we craft the tools to solve this crisis, we must ensure the
policies we create will help everyone affected. Adding an expert in
minority health to this task force helps to make sure that the diverse
needs of all Americans are represented at the table. We still live in a
world of significant biases.
Just last month, the University of Virginia released a study that
found that White medical students and residents genuinely believed that
Black patients were less sensitive to pain and had less sensitive nerve
endings than White patients, bearing out at least one reason for the
consistently documented lack of pain management provided to Black
patients.
As we give this task force the vital task of improving how we
prescribe some of the most powerful and still-critical medication for
pain management, let's do our part to eliminate as much bias as
possible. This amendment takes an important step toward reaching that
goal. I hope my colleagues will support it.
Mr. Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I claim the time in opposition,
but I support the amendment.
The CHAIR. Without objection, the gentlewoman from Indiana is
recognized for 5 minutes.
[[Page H2242]]
There was no objection.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I thank the gentlewoman from
New Jersey for this important addition to the task force. I think that
she has brought forth some interesting points and some statistics with
respect to the opioid abuse and addiction problems facing the minority
community. A minority health expert that is very focused on this would
add tremendous expertise to the depth of this task force. I support the
amendment.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. Mr. Chairman, I thank the gentlewoman from
Indiana for her leadership and for her support of this initiative.
Let me close by adding this. We are considering a number of bills
this week aimed at curing the opioid and heroin epidemics ravaging so
many American families. As we do so, we need to consider two things:
First is that communities of color have unique needs that deserve
just as much consideration. That is why I have offered this amendment,
and it is a theme I hope to see continued in other legislation we will
debate.
The second is that, when we head back to our districts on Friday
after completing consideration of these bills, we should not wash our
hands and walk away from this issue. We need to fund the programs we
have authorized. We need to look back with a critical eye at the ways
we criminalized addictions in the past and offer those whom we failed
solutions that will allow them to reenter society. Our work cannot stop
there. I urge my colleagues to support this amendment.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
The CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentlewoman from New Jersey (Mrs. Watson Coleman).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 8 Offered by Ms. Kuster
The CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 8 printed in
part A of House Report 114-551.
Ms. KUSTER. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
The CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 5, after line 18, insert the following:
(B) research on trends in areas and communities in which
the prescription opioid abuse rate and fatality rate exceed
the national average prescription opioid abuse rate and
fatality rate;
Page 5, line 19, strike ``(b)'' and insert ``(c)''.
Page 5, line 22, strike ``(c)'' and insert ``(d)''.
Page 6, line 6, strike ``(d)'' and insert ``(e)''.
Page 6, line 14, strike ``(e)'' and insert ``(f)''.
The CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentlewoman from New
Hampshire (Ms. Kuster) and a Member opposed each will control 5
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from New Hampshire.
Ms. KUSTER. Mr. Chairman, the underlying bill before us authorizes
the creation of an interagency task force to combat the opiate
epidemic. I want to commend the gentlewoman from Indiana (Mrs. Brooks)
and the gentleman from Massachusetts (Mr. Kennedy) for their hard work
on this issue.
This important legislation will make it easier to tackle this crisis
in a holistic way that addresses all angles of the crisis, including
law enforcement, education and prevention, and, most importantly,
treatment and lifelong recovery.
I thank Congresswoman Brooks and Congressman Kennedy for their great
work on this bill, as well as the leadership of the chair and the
ranking member.
{time} 1445
In fact, a similar provision to this legislation was included in the
STOP ABUSE Act that I introduced with my colleague, Mr. Guinta, last
year. Today he has joined me in introducing this important bipartisan
amendment that will further improve the scope of the task force's
effort.
In New Hampshire and across the country, four out of every five
heroin users started out misusing prescription opioid medication. Last
year more than 25,000 people died across this country from overdoses on
prescription drugs.
There are complex reasons for why we have seen such a dramatic rise
in prescription drug misuse, but one of the causes that we must examine
more closely is prescribing practices and overprescribing.
I recently joined my colleague, Congressman Mooney of West Virginia,
in introducing legislation that would address this problem. This
amendment with Mr. Guinta would help to shine more light on
prescription drug misuse by requiring the task force to research
addiction trends in communities with high rates of prescription drug
misuse and overdoses.
This research will be invaluable in the effort to identify why this
crisis is hitting certain regions of our country particularly hard and
in identifying further potential corrections to prescribing practices
that can be made.
I thank my colleagues for taking up such important legislation this
week, and I urge support for this amendment.
I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from New Hampshire (Mr. Guinta).
Mr. GUINTA. Mr. Chairman, I rise today in support of the amendment
offered by my colleague, Congresswoman Kuster, and myself, originally
part of the STOP ABUSE Act that we authored earlier this year, as
previously mentioned.
This amendment would simply require the task force to research
addiction trends in communities with high rates of prescription drug
abuse.
In our home State of New Hampshire, much of the heroin abuse we have
seen today can be traced back to the overprescribing of narcotic drugs.
This trend, which began in the 1990s, paved the way for the rampant
heroin abuse that we are seeing today.
Last year, as you know, 430 people in our State died of an opioid
overdose. This year that number is expected to be exceeded. So this
amendment would research these trends so we can work to resolve the
problem before the epidemic continues and expands. I would urge my
colleagues to support this important amendment.
Again, I want to thank the gentlewoman from New Hampshire for her
tireless work not just here, but on the Bipartisan Task Force to Combat
Heroin Epidemic. We are clearly providing options and solutions to help
those families in need.
Ms. KUSTER. Mr. Chairman, I will just close by thanking Mrs. Brooks
of Indiana for her leadership, Mr. Kennedy for his leadership in
offering this legislation, and thank Mr. Guinta for this amendment.
I urge our colleagues to support this bipartisan amendment that will
allow us to understand the underlying increase in the use of opioid
medication and prescription drugs that are leading people into
substance use disorder and, ultimately, sadly, into the use of heroin
and fentanyl that is killing so many people in our homes and
communities.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR (Mr. Byrne). The question is on the amendment
offered by the gentlewoman from New Hampshire (Ms. Kuster).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 9 Offered by Mr. Schiff
The Acting CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 9
printed in part A of House Report 114-551.
Mr. SCHIFF. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 6, line 3, strike ``and''.
Page 6, line 5, before the semicolon insert ``and the
coordination of information collected from State prescription
drug monitoring programs for the purpose of preventing the
diversion of pain medication''.
The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentleman
from California (Mr. Schiff) and a Member opposed each will control 5
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from California.
Mr. SCHIFF. Mr. Chairman, I rise today to offer an amendment to H.R.
4641 that will require the interagency task force created by this
legislation to study and report on the coordination of information
collected from state prescription drug monitoring programs, or PDMPs,
as part of its effort to update best practices for pain management
strategies.
[[Page H2243]]
State PDMPs play a critical role in preventing the diversion of pain
medication as well as other controlled substances. Chief among their
benefits, access to a State PDMP provides an invaluable resource to
prescribing physicians by allowing them to review a patient's history
of prescription drugs and to spot signs of opioid abuse so that they
may proactively refer a patient to substance abuse treatment, if
appropriate. They allow medical professionals to intervene before an
addiction spirals out of control.
Now active in 49 States, PDMPs can also inform prescribing physicians
if a patient has recently accessed pain medication elsewhere and help
to detect potential doctor-shopping activities by individuals with no
legitimate medical need. Further, PDMPs also play an important role in
identifying forged or stolen prescriptions.
While information sharing between some adjacent State PDMPs currently
exists to prevent illicit doctor-shopping activities from occurring
across State lines, I believe it is time that we boost efforts to
strengthen the sharing of information across all State PDMPs.
I recently met with physicians from my district who described from
their experience how prevalent the issue of doctor shopping is,
particularly in the State of California, and how it is becoming more
and more common for individuals with histories of opioid abuse to
attempt to receive illicit prescriptions in nearby States.
With passage of this amendment, I urge the task force to explore the
benefits of potentially establishing a national PDMP that will vastly
approve our ability to prevent and disincentivize doctor shopping in
all regions of the country, and I look forward to working with other
concerned Members on this important topic.
By requiring that the interagency task force include State PDMP
information as it formulates its expert input and improves prescribing
guidelines, we will be able to better understand what is and isn't
working and how we may be able to harness the power of State PDMPs to
develop an effective national response to the opioid crisis that has
devastated communities across the country.
It is beyond doubt that prescription drug monitoring programs serve
an invaluable purpose, and any effort to address overprescription must
include consideration of important data that is gleaned across State
PDMPs.
While I hope that this Congress will ultimately provide the necessary
resources to assure we are able to develop and implement a
comprehensive plan to prevent opioid addiction and increase access to
treatment, the recommendations developed by the task force created
under this bill are an important initial step that must come to pass
before achieving that goal.
I urge support for this amendment and for the bill.
Mr. Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I claim the time in opposition,
but I am in support of the amendment.
The Acting CHAIR. Without objection, the gentlewoman is recognized
for 5 minutes.
There was no objection.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I would like to thank the
gentleman from California for offering this amendment.
We know from talking to a lot of physicians and medical educators as
well that the use of these PDMPs is a critically important tool in
their tool chest to combat against those patients who might be doctor
shopping.
We know, though, that not all States use it. Not all prescribers
actually check that PDMP system like they should. So I appreciate the
Congressman's concept of a feasibility study as to whether or not there
should be a national PDMP system, and I urge its passage.
I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. SCHIFF. Mr. Chairman, I thank the gentlewoman for her support as
well as all of her good work in trying to address the opioid crisis in
the United States.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentleman from California (Mr. Schiff).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 10 Offered by Ms. Clark of Massachusetts
The Acting CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 10
printed in part A of House Report 114-551.
Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the
desk.
The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 6, after line 5, insert the following:
(D) ongoing efforts at the Federal, State, and local levels
to examine the potential benefits of electronic prescribing
of opioids, including any public comments collected in the
course of those efforts;
Page 6, line 6, strike ``(d)'' and insert ``(e)''.
Page 6, line 14, strike ``(e)'' and insert ``(f)''.
The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentlewoman
from Massachusetts (Ms. Clark) and a Member opposed each will control 5
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Massachusetts.
Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts. Mr. Chairman, my amendment is simple. It
directs the task force to consider any potential benefits from
increasing the electronic prescribing of opioids.
We know that, with the increasing sophistication of health
information technology, we have an opportunity to use that information
for the benefit of our public health. We also know that paper
prescriptions are subject to being stolen, copied, and misused.
While that is a fact, 67 percent of prescriptions nationally are
ordered electronically, but the rate for controlled substances is less
than 1 percent.
Electronic prescribing of opioids has the potential to provide data
to help us identify problems, whether from a user or a prescriber, and
focus our interventions on saving lives and preventing addiction.
Back home in my district, Cambridge Health Alliance has adopted
electronic prescriptions for controlled substances and have found it
reduces fraud and allows administrators to track prescription patterns
and detect overprescribing. Electronic prescriptions can be a key tool
in fighting this epidemic. I urge my colleagues to support this
commonsense amendment.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentlewoman from Massachusetts (Ms. Clark).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 11 Offered by Mr. Rothfus
The Acting CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 11
printed in part A of House Report 114-551.
Mr. ROTHFUS. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 6, line 13, strike ``and''.
Page 6, after line 16, insert ``and'' after the semicolon.
Page 6, after line 16, insert the following:
(F) the practice of co-prescribing naloxone for both pain
patients receiving chronic opioid therapy and patients being
treated for opioid use disorders;
The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentleman
from Pennsylvania (Mr. Rothfus) and a Member opposed each will control
5 minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Pennsylvania.
Mr. ROTHFUS. Mr. Chairman, I want to thank my good friend from
Indiana for her leadership on this very important piece of legislation
as well as the chairman and ranking member of the committee for working
together to bring it to the floor today.
The United States is being ravaged by skyrocketing levels of
prescription opioid and heroin abuse. This brutal epidemic has
accounted for more than 28,000 American deaths in 2014, destroying
families and devastating local communities alike.
My constituents in western Pennsylvania have been particularly hard
hit. In the past two decades, there has been a 470 percent increase in
drug overdose deaths. The vast majority of these have been heroin and
opioid related.
Two weeks ago, at a local hospital in my district, five overdoses
were treated in 1 day alone. In February, the same facility treated 20
overdoses in just 2 days.
We need meaningful and evidence-based solutions to combat this
scourge. I have worked to help develop those solutions as part of the
Bipartisan Task
[[Page H2244]]
Force to Combat the Heroin Epidemic and by holding roundtables with
stakeholders in my district.
I strongly believe that the legislation we are considering today is
another step forward in that process by creating an interagency task
force to review and update best practices for pain management and
prescribing pain medication.
As part of its work, the task force will consider various types of
data and practices. For example, it must consider the existence and
availability of different classes of opioids, including those with
safety measures such as abuse deterrent technology. It must also
consider how high-risk populations are managed by medical
professionals.
The legislation has been entirely silent on the issue of naloxone,
however. Thus, the amendment that I offered with my friend from
Massachusetts (Mr. Keating) simply seeks to have the task force take
into consideration the practice of coprescribing this lifesaving drug
as part of its work.
Naloxone has the ability to revive a victim who has suffered an
overdoes within minutes. It is both safe and effective and has been
used successfully to counteract more than 26,000 overdoses between 1996
and 2014. First responders who have seen what naloxone can do have
referred to it as the miracle drug.
The American Medical Association and many community, State, and
national groups have supported coprescribing naloxone to patients who
are taking opioids as a critical part of the solution to the rising
epidemic of opioid overdose-related deaths.
Considering the practice of coprescribing naloxone, particularly for
high-risk populations or when other avenues of treatment have been
tried and failed, it is an essential part of addressing the opioid and
heroin epidemic.
By reviewing and updating best practices with respect to
coprescribing naloxone, the interagency task force can ensure that
health professionals at all levels, both inside and outside of
government, are fully informed when prescribing and treating patients.
Simply put, Americans who are struggling with opioid and heroin
addiction cannot be treated if they lose their lives to drug overdose.
It is essential that we get naloxone into the hands that need it the
most in a safe and effective manner. My amendment would ensure that the
task force takes a close look at this.
Mr. Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
{time} 1500
Mr. KEATING. Mr. Chairman, I rise in support of Mr. Rothfus'
amendment to H.R. 4641.
The Acting CHAIR. Without objection, the gentleman from Massachusetts
is recognized for 5 minutes.
There was no objection.
Mr. KEATING. Mr. Chairman, I would like to thank my colleague from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Rothfus).
I rise today in support of this amendment, our amendment. It is an
amendment that I believe will move the task force to consider the
practice of coprescribing of overdose reversal drugs such as naloxone
as part of the review of its best practices for pain management and for
prescribing pain medication.
Importantly, the medical community now realizes the need for having
these important guidelines in place and having them being addressed, as
over 80 percent of the AMA members have indicated they see the need for
these guidelines now and the importance in terms of saving lives.
As a former district attorney, I took a public health approach a
decade and a half ago, starting an Anti-Heroin Task Force. At the time,
in our State, two people, on average, were dying every day from these
overdoses. In just the last 6 years, that number has increased to
almost four people a day.
As a Congressman, this hits really close to home to me because our
latest stats in 2014 indicate that a quarter of the overdose deaths in
Massachusetts occurred in counties in my district. Over 60 percent
occurred in the cities of Fall River and New Bedford alone.
In fact, nearly twice the statewide average in Cape Cod, where the
highest percentage of per capita rate of opioid-related overdoses
occurs, represents a significant part of the epidemic in our
Commonwealth.
Going forward, Mr. Rothfus and I introduced Co-Prescribing Saves
Lives Act legislation to require Federal health agencies, including
HHS, the Department of Defense, and the VA, to create guidelines for
coprescribing naloxone alongside opioid prescriptions and making
naloxone more widely available.
Our legislation creates a grant program as well, so the States will
have the resources to do the same.
As our partnership shows, in an often divided Congress, we are coming
together. We are coming together to confront a uniquely American
epidemic.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. ROTHFUS. Mr. Chairman, to close, increased access to naloxone,
particularly for patients who are at high risk, has been identified as
one of the most powerful tools for reducing the number of opioid and
heroin-related overdose deaths.
Let's ensure that our health professionals are fully informed of this
option when prescribing and treating patients.
I urge my colleagues to support this commonsense, bipartisan
amendment.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Rothfus).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 12 Offered by Ms. Clark of Massachusetts
The Acting CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 12
printed in part A of House Report 114-551.
Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the
desk.
The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 6, line 13, strike ``and''.
Page 6, after line 16, insert the following:
(F) research that has been, or is being, conducted or
supported by the Federal Government on prevention of,
treatment for, and recovery from substance use by and
substance use disorders among adolescents and young adults
relative to any unique circumstances (including social and
biological circumstances) of adolescents and young adults
that may make adolescent-specific and young adult-specific
treatment protocols necessary, including any effects that
substance use and substance use disorders may have on brain
development and the implications for treatment and recovery;
(G) Federal non-research programs and activities that
address prevention of, treatment for, and recovery from
substance use by and substance use disorders among
adolescents and young adults, including an assessment of the
effectiveness of such programs and activities in--
(i) preventing substance use by and substance use disorders
among adolescents and young adults;
(ii) treating such adolescents and young adults in a way
that accounts for any unique circumstances faced by
adolescents and young adults; and
(iii) supporting long-term recovery among adolescents and
young adults; and
(H) gaps that have been identified by Federal officials and
experts in Federal efforts relating to prevention of,
treatment for, and recovery from substance use by and
substance use disorders among adolescents and young adults,
including gaps in research, data collection, and measures to
evaluate the effectiveness of Federal efforts, and the
reasons for such gaps;
The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentlewoman
from Massachusetts (Ms. Clark) and a Member opposed each will control 5
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Massachusetts.
Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts. Mr. Chairman, my amendment would direct
the task force to consider the programs and research relative to
adolescents and young adults.
We know that addiction and recovery often start early, and we need to
focus research on how to address the unique needs of our adolescents
and young adults.
We need to understand how years of opioid abuse can affect the
development of the brain, how it affects the development of coping
skills, and how we can best support our kids in long-term recovery.
Most importantly, there are many gaps in research on this subject,
and we need to know the status of the current research and where we
need to focus our resources.
[[Page H2245]]
Recently, I met a constituent named Ryan. In seventh grade, he
started taking drugs. When he did, he told me he felt like he finally
fit in, like he had found the answers to the problems he felt and the
pain he felt.
By the time he was 13, he started drinking, taking pills, and
stealing money from his family. His mother was panicked. The minute he
walked out of the house he had to get high. He also felt powerless.
At 15, he became convinced he was a bad person. He felt ashamed that
he couldn't change, not even for his mother.
The last time he relapsed, his mom told him he couldn't see friends
anymore, and he threw a piece of glass at her.
She looked him in the eyes and said: I don't know who you are
anymore.
He went into treatment for three additional months, and that
treatment is what changed his life. He said that it saved him. One day
at the sober house he remembers sincerely laughing for the first time,
and he thought: There's hope for me.
All these little things he forgot about himself, like humor, kindness
and empathy. He said: I no longer felt like the shell of a person.
He asked for our leadership for two things: the people in recovery
need not to be ashamed. It is not what defines them, even when their
addiction starts very young; and that we need to come up with funding
for treatment.
Ryan is an inspiration to me, and we owe it to the young victims of
this epidemic to focus on the unique impact of this public health
crisis on adolescents and young adults.
I urge my colleagues to support this commonsense amendment.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I claim the time in opposition,
but I support the amendment.
The Acting CHAIR. Without objection, the gentlewoman is recognized
for 5 minutes.
There was no objection.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I would like to, once again,
thank the gentlewoman from Massachusetts for this important amendment.
As she spoke, she reminded me of a visit that I made to a recovery high
school; and there are more recovery high schools being created across
the country.
But I think when I visited the recovery high school in Indianapolis,
called Hope Academy, it reminded me, as I listened to these young
people, of the very different needs, but the very, very serious desire
that they have to find themselves again, as the gentlewoman just
stated.
A young woman who was turning 17 the next day shared that it was
going to be her first birthday in 3 years where she would be sober, and
she thanked her classmates and her colleagues there as they sat in that
circle, and asked that they help her make sure that she didn't go home
that night and relapse because she couldn't remember a birthday,
really, where she had been sober.
So I do believe that having more studies specifically with respect to
the programs and the research about adolescents and young adults is
critically important because that is where it all starts.
I support this amendment.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts. Mr. Chairman, again, I just want to thank
the gentlewoman from Indiana for all her leadership and advocacy, and
my good friend and colleague from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
(Mr. Kennedy) for his as well. This bill and their work will make an
incredible difference to families across the country.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentlewoman from Massachusetts (Ms. Clark).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 13 Offered by Ms. Esty
The Acting CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 13
printed in part A of House Report 114-551.
Ms. ESTY. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 6, line 19, strike ``and''.
Page 6, line 25, strike the period and insert ``; and''.
Page 6, after line 25, insert the following:
(4) review, modify, and update best practices for pain
management and prescribing pain medication, specifically as
it pertains to physician education and consumer education.
Page 7, line 15, strike ``and''.
Page 7, line 20, strike the period and insert ``; and''.
Page 7, after line 20, insert the following:
(4) the modified and updated best practices described in
subsection (d)(4).
The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentlewoman
from Connecticut (Ms. Esty) and a Member opposed each will control 5
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Connecticut.
Ms. ESTY. Mr. Chairman, I rise today in support of my amendment,
which would empower the interagency task force to help communities
spread awareness about the dangers of drug addiction through consumer
education, and help medical providers more effectively and safely
address patient pain management.
Along with my colleague, Representative Knight, I proudly introduced
this amendment that was inspired by bipartisan legislation that I
introduced earlier this year, with Representatives Knight and Costello,
and that was identified as a legislative priority by the Bipartisan
Task Force to Combat the Heroin Epidemic that I proudly serve on with
so many of my colleagues here in this House.
Mr. Chairman, there is not a community in this great country that
hasn't been touched by drug addiction, not one. Addiction knows no
bounds. It knows no race, no gender, no economic status, no party
affiliation.
In January, I was honored to have James Wardwell, the Chief of Police
in New Britain, Connecticut, join me for the President's State of the
Union Address, and he came to join me because of his leadership and his
concern about the need to address this growing public health crisis.
Chief Wardwell, and many other first responders, medical
professionals, substance abuse counselors, family members, and
recovering addicts, have worked with me to help craft legislation to
address our growing epidemic of prescription drug and heroin addiction.
I am glad that today, this House is taking action. Today's
legislation is an example of what we, in Congress, are supposed to be
doing. Our job is to work together, Democrats and Republicans, to
address the needs of the American people.
Whenever I go home to central and northwest Connecticut, at community
forums in Torrington, at Congress on Your Corner events in Waterbury
and the Farmington Valley, constituents come up to me and ask: What are
you in Congress doing to help our families with the heroin epidemic?
The families in Connecticut and across this country who are losing
loved ones to drug addiction cannot afford for us to wait. We need to
act now.
Recovering from addiction is possible, but it is hard. So much of our
effort to combat drug addiction is focused on helping folks get the
treatment they need, and that is important, but it is not enough to
treat the crisis. We must help prevent people from getting addicted in
the first place.
Our bipartisan amendment does just that by directing the interagency
task force to establish guidelines that help prescribers more
effectively and safely manage their patients' pain, and that
strengthens consumer education about opioid addiction.
Our amendment takes an important step toward preventing drug
addiction. Those who prescribe narcotics would benefit from an
increased education about the dangers of addiction and ways in which
they can help minimize the risks associated with prescribing narcotics.
Those hardest hit by this epidemic would benefit from having access
to educational materials in our schools, community centers, and from
local law enforcement, that help warn people about the dangers of
opioid use and possible addiction.
I am very encouraged that the House and Senate are taking action to
address this public health crisis, and I will continue doing everything
within my power to make addiction prevention a priority.
Opioid and heroin addiction have already taken so many young lives
and
[[Page H2246]]
needlessly torn apart so many families. We can't wait for more lives to
be destroyed before we take action.
So let's work together today to prevent our children, our students,
our patients, our neighbors, our families, and our friends, from
becoming victims of this terrible public health crisis. Let's work
together today to stop drug addiction before it begins.
Mr. Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I claim the time in opposition,
but I support the amendment.
The Acting CHAIR. Without objection, the gentlewoman is recognized
for 5 minutes.
There was no objection.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, I would like to thank the
gentlewoman from Connecticut for this important amendment.
Certainly, the job of the interagency task force, besides producing
best practices and reviewing and modifying and talking about them, is
not just to generate a report that Congress will have, as I have said,
sitting on a shelf someplace, and that our staff or the Congressional
Research Service can look at and study; it is really meant to educate
the public, to educate the public, whether or not they are people in
schools, whether or not they are in our hospitals.
But I think, most importantly, we need to make sure that our
prescribers are being educated. We have had roundtable discussions with
our medical educators, and there is a push around the country, and I
applaud that push around the country of our medical educators, whether
it is in our med schools for physicians or for nursing programs, dental
programs, but to try to start at a much earlier level in their medical
education about the research and the studies and the best practices
around opioids.
Certainly, as being a lawyer, we are required to do continuing
medical or continuing legal education, and it is something that I know
that physicians and prescribers are certainly required to get
continuing medical education. I just want to continue to encourage and
applaud them for seeking out that medical education around opioids. I
think it is critically important.
With this amendment, I think it will strengthen and educate our
prescribers about the need to continue to educate themselves on pain
management practices and the use of opioids.
I urge the amendment's passage.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
{time} 1515
Ms. ESTY. Mr. Chairman, again, I would like to thank my colleague,
Representative Knight, for cosponsoring this amendment. I would like to
thank the bipartisan leadership for taking up this issue, and my good
friend, the gentlewoman from Indiana, Representative Brooks, for her
leadership. I would like to thank the advocates in Connecticut who have
worked so tirelessly with me, Chief Wardwell and Shawn Lang, among
others. Shawn Lang recently was recognized by the White House for her
advocacy and leadership on this issue for many, many years.
Mr. Chairman, I urge my colleagues to support this amendment.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentlewoman from Connecticut (Ms. Esty).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 14 Offered by Mr. Welch
The Acting CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 14
printed in part A of House Report 114-551.
Mr. WELCH. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 6, line 19, strike ``and''.
Page 6, line 25, strike the period and insert ``; and''.
Page 6, after line 25, insert the following:
(4) examine and identify--
(A) the extent of the need for the development of new
pharmacological, nonpharmacological, and medical device
alternatives to opioids;
(B) the current status of research efforts to develop such
alternatives; and
(C) the pharmacological, nonpharmacological, and medical
device alternatives to opioids that are currently available
that could be better utilized.
Page 7, line 15, strike ``and''.
Page 7, line 20, strike the period and insert ``; and''.
Page 7, after line 20, insert the following:
(4) the results of the examination and identification
conducted pursuant to subsection (d)(4), and recommendations
regarding--
(A) the development of new pharmacological,
nonpharmacological, and medical device alternatives to
opioids; and
(B) the improved utilization of pharmacological,
nonpharmacological, and medical device alternatives to
opioids that are currently available.
The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentleman
from Vermont (Mr. Welch) and a Member opposed each will control 5
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Vermont.
Mr. WELCH. Mr. Chair, on January 8, 2014, an extraordinary thing
happened in Vermont. Our Governor, Peter Shumlin, giving a State of the
State Address, devoted its entirety to the opioid epidemic in Vermont.
I remember how stunned people were that a Governor would take such a
difficult topic and spend his entire address on it. I remember the
reaction of many of my colleagues here, who said: Peter, isn't that
dangerous? You are talking about something that is not great for the
reputation of the State.
What, in fact, was great for the reputation of the State was that our
Governor and our leaders acknowledged the existence of a problem that
was creating heartbreak and heartache in all of our communities; and a
problem acknowledged is the first step in dealing with a problem to be
solved.
Since then, Vermont has been extraordinary in its efforts to attack
this problem. Communities like Rutland, St. Albans, Barre, and
Burlington have coordinated with the police force, with our medical
providers and our hospitals to provide a treatment-based approach to
helping folks who have an addiction to opioids--many of them coming by
it as a result of prescriptions for legitimate medical needs.
We had, in Rutland, a community coming together to create Project
VISION, which has faith-based groups, the police, and the medical
community doing everything they can to basically give individual
attention to folks who are trying to help themselves get off of
opiates.
The problem continues to be severe, but what we have is a community
that is fully engaged in it, including our State legislature, which
provided funds for treatment--a treatment-based approach--to helping
people with a hub-and-spoke system that is really working well. Folks
who are getting prescriptions, folks who have a problem, an addiction,
are getting access to methadone or other prescribed products, take that
in a hub so it is supervised, and they are able then to go to work.
So this has been a situation in Vermont where, as a result of the
Governor's focus on the problem, we have had community engagement to
stem the tide of this issue.
It has been working, but challenges remain because we don't have
enough treatment funds. This legislation is an important acknowledgment
on the part of Congress that we are getting it, that across this
country we are all being affected by the challenges that our
communities face.
I thank the sponsors of this legislation, Mr. Pallone, and Mr. Upton,
too, for their leadership.
My hope, by the way, is that we get the message, too, in Congress
that we have got to send some funds back to our communities that are
struggling with these programs. We can't micromanage the treatment
here. It is up to the courageous people in our communities to do it,
and some of the tax dollars that they send to us we have got to send
back to them. That is why I, among others, am supporting an emergency
appropriation of $600 million. That would help quite a bit.
The amendment that I have on this bill, which establishes an
interagency task force to review, modify, and update the best practices
for pain management, would ask that we also review developing nonopioid
forms of pain relief. If opioids diminish pain but they create misery,
let's find another way to do it and help our folks who need pain relief
to get it.
The second thing, it would examine existing nonopioid alternatives
that could be better utilized.
So this is tremendous that there has been such a bipartisan coming
together
[[Page H2247]]
to sponsor practical steps that we can take. I see us in Congress as
essentially acknowledging what Governor Shumlin identified as a real
problem for us and we are hearing about in our communities. But I hope
we are ready to take some next steps and actually focus on getting
resources back to our communities that are doing the very, very
challenging work at the local level where it needs to be done to help
folks relieve themselves from the addiction of opioids.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentleman from Vermont (Mr. Welch).
The amendment was agreed to.
Amendment No. 15 Offered by Mr. Sessions
The Acting CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 15
printed in part A of House Report 114-551.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Page 6, after line 25, insert the following (and
redesignate the subsequent subsections accordingly):
(e) Consideration of Study Results.--In reviewing,
modifying, and updating, best practices for pain management
and prescribing pain medication, the task force shall take
into consideration existing private sector, State, and local
government efforts related to pain management and prescribing
pain medication.
The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 720, the gentleman
from Texas (Mr. Sessions) and a Member opposed each will control 5
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Texas.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. Chairman, I want to take time to recognize the
gentleman from New Jersey, representing the Energy and Commerce
Committee, and the gentlewoman from Indiana (Mrs. Brooks) for their
service not only to this conference, but also to the issues and the
ideas that are being brought forth.
The gentlewoman from Indiana has served our Nation as a United States
attorney in Indiana. She has been on the front line of battles, albeit
a few years ago, but the front line of battles that the American people
face, how we protect the American public from all sorts of things that
get in our way as families and communities. But in this case today, she
is serving as a Member of Congress firsthand to fight a problem with
opioids. Opioids are a synthetic heroin, Mr. Chairman, and synthetic
heroin is a national problem. It is a national problem and one which
this Congress is undertaking.
We are following up today on the United States Senate bill and this
bill that came through regular order in the House of Representatives
under two primary committees. The Judiciary Committee and the Energy
and Commerce Committee have addressed bills that are being debated
today that will be passed, will be done in a bipartisan way, and will
bring the best ideas of the House of Representatives to the plate. With
that in mind, that is what I stand for today, sir, to do.
I join in, as my colleague from Vermont has done, in adding to this
interagency task force with an amendment that I brought forth that I
would ask us to consider. I will offer this amendment to ensure that
the existing best practices of State and local governments, as well as
the private sector, are specifically considered as the task force which
was established by H.R. 4641 conducts their business.
Mr. Chairman, the opportunity for us to understand the amendment
process means that not only I, but also other Members of this body,
bring forth ideas that we think are the best ways to combat this
problem. I believe in State and local governments. I believe in the
private sector. I think they are the essence of, really, where the
rubber meets the road on the solution of problems, not to kick around
ideas and to find something that doesn't work, but to kick around ideas
that do work.
Local communities, local governments, and the private sector
collaborate back home daily. They do this in Dallas, Texas, which is my
home, which I represent, and we have something that is called the
Dallas Area Drug Prevention Partnership. It was established in 2007,
and it represents what I believe is the best collaborative effort
between local communities focusing on preventing drug abuse.
A few years ago, Dallas, Texas, the epicenter of something that was a
heroin epidemic, was looking at a marketing effort by Mexican drug
dealers with something that was called cheese. Cheese was a marketing
effort, but it was heroin, and it was being packaged and sold as
cheese. In fact, it caused the death of some 25 people in Dallas,
Texas, very quickly before law enforcement recognized what the problem
was.
Law enforcement worked with community leaders, church leaders,
religious leaders, Boy Scout troops, Girl Scout troops, youth groups,
YMCAs, and we got a handle on what the problem was. But it was not
solved by the Federal Government. It was not done just by an
interagency departmental group of people in Washington, D.C. It was
solved with Washington, D.C., and with people back home who saw the
problem firsthand, who took responsibility for the problem firsthand.
In this case, what we are trying to say is we are dealing with a
nationwide epidemic, a nationwide epidemic which we have spoken very
plainly about today that is one that is caused through opioid use and
then the transition to heroin at some point in a person's life. It is
creating thousands of deaths across our country. Something must be
done. But the something to be done is a collaborative effort between
the Federal Government, interagency responsibility up in Washington and
other places back home, but with State and local organizations and with
private sector organizations that really will be not just the boots on
the ground, but many times with the best expertise about the best way
to do it in the best place.
Mr. Chairman, I bring forth this amendment. I urge my colleagues to
support this amendment and the underlying bill.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentleman from Texas (Mr. Sessions).
The amendment was agreed to.
The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the committee amendment in the
nature of a substitute, as amended.
The amendment was agreed to.
The Acting CHAIR. Under the rule, the Committee rises.
Accordingly, the Committee rose; and the Speaker pro tempore (Mr.
Sessions) having assumed the chair, Mr. Byrne, Acting Chair of the
Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union, reported that
that Committee, having had under consideration the bill (H.R. 4641) to
provide for the establishment of an inter-agency task force to review,
modify, and update best practices for pain management and prescribing
pain medication, and for other purposes, and, pursuant to House
Resolution 720, he reported the bill back to the House with an
amendment adopted in the Committee of the Whole.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the rule, the previous question is
ordered.
Is a separate vote demanded on any amendment to the amendment
reported from the Committee of the Whole?
If not, the question is on the committee amendment in the nature of a
substitute, as amended.
The amendment was agreed to.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the engrossment and third
reading of the bill.
The bill was ordered to be engrossed and read a third time, and was
read the third time.
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Byrne). The question is on the passage
of the bill.
The question was taken; and the Speaker pro tempore announced that
the ayes appeared to have it.
Mrs. BROOKS of Indiana. Mr. Speaker, on that I demand the yeas and
nays.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 8 of rule XX, further
proceedings on this question will be postponed.
____________________