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Public Policy Presentation

The NOPAIN Act (H.R. 5172) aims to address the opioid epidemic by requiring insurance coverage of non-opioid pain treatments. It was introduced in November 2019 in response to high rates of opioid addiction, misuse, and overdose deaths. If passed, the bill would require coverage of alternative treatments like physical therapy, acupuncture, and implantable devices to give patients freedom of choice for post-operative pain management. Supporters argue this promotes distributive and utilitarian justice by increasing access to effective non-opioid options, while opponents like CMS worry about increased costs. Nurses could help educate patients on risks to promote self-determination under this legislation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
156 views14 pages

Public Policy Presentation

The NOPAIN Act (H.R. 5172) aims to address the opioid epidemic by requiring insurance coverage of non-opioid pain treatments. It was introduced in November 2019 in response to high rates of opioid addiction, misuse, and overdose deaths. If passed, the bill would require coverage of alternative treatments like physical therapy, acupuncture, and implantable devices to give patients freedom of choice for post-operative pain management. Supporters argue this promotes distributive and utilitarian justice by increasing access to effective non-opioid options, while opponents like CMS worry about increased costs. Nurses could help educate patients on risks to promote self-determination under this legislation.

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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

House of Representatives

Bill 5172
NOPAIN Act: Non-
Opioids Prevent
Addiction in the Nation
Alex Wheeler
Azusa Pacific University
Background
• 12% of patients reported addiction or
dependency to opioids after operation
• 18 million people in the past year reported
opioid misuse
• 130 American deaths/day from opioid
overdose
• Economy spends over $78 billion a year in
prescription opioid misuse
• Insurance companies refuse monetary
coverage for non-opioid pain treatment
• Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMC)
create financial incentives to use opioids [Link]

(CDC, 2018; GovTrack, 2020; H.R. 5172, 2019; National Institute on Drug Abuse [NIDA], 2018)
Health Policy
• First introduced in November 2019 – in the first
stage of the legislative process waiting to be
sent to subcommittees
• Requires coverage of non-opioid pain
treatments for outpatient post-op pain
• Non-opioid treatments are successful
• Physical therapy, implantable devices, non-
opioid medication, acupuncture, etc
• Gives patients the freedom to choose

[Link]

(GovTrack, 2020; H.R. 5172, 2019)


Supporters/Opponents

Supports Opposes
• American Society of Addiction • Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Medicine (ASAM) has founded the
Coalition to Stop Opioid Overdose
(CSOO)
• Many supporters including:
• American Psychological
Association
• American Association of Nurse
Anesthetists
• Voices for Non-Opioid Choices

(American Society of Addiction Medicine [ASAM], 2020; GovTrack, 2020)


Justice

Distributive justice Utilitarian theory of justice:


• All have the same access to both fair • Seeks to promote a cost-benefit
and appropriate benefits analysis
• All patients have the right to • 191 million opioid prescriptions
appropriate healthcare benefits • 11.5 million Americans misusing
opioid prescriptions
• Seek to decrease this number to
promote positive value

(Beauchamp & Childress, 2013; CDC, 2018; H.R. 5172, 2019)


Justice
The Other Side
Fair Opportunity Rule
• “Should not be denied social benefits on the
basis of undeserved disadvantageous
properties, because they are not responsible
for these properties,” (Beauchamp & Childress,
2013, p. 262)
• Could be applying past patient history to create
a bias towards all future patients
• Physician concern with losing license
increased monitoring patients for opioid
misuse biased treatment [Link]
justice/news/2018/02/27/447225/revolution-values-u-s-criminal-justice-
system/
• Not treating every patient with human dignity
(Beauchamp & Childress, 2013; Webster et al., 2019)
Beneficence

Positive Beneficence Paternalism


• Demands that we act to help others • Medical paternalism:
• Physicians determine their
• NOPAIN Act fights for the outcome
that will most benefit the patient opinion overrides their patient’s
desires
• “Remove conditions that will cause • Physicians think they know best
harm to others,” (Beauchamp & and want to “protect” they’re
Childress, 2013, p. 202) patients
 Loss of autonomy

(Beauchamp & Childress, 2013; H.R. 5172, 2019; Manworren & Gilson, 2015)
Nursing and H.R 5172

Provision 1:1 Provision 1:4


• Human Dignity • Self Determination
• Every patient has the right to • Nurses must provide patients
human dignity  treated as an with adequate information to
individual promote self-determination
• Hooten et al. (2017) suggests • Educate patients on opioid risks
algorithm upon assessment including addiction, overdose,
• Individual pain action plan and death

(Fowler, 2015; Hooten et al. 2017; Manworren & Gilson, 2015)


Nursing and H.R
5172
Provision 9:1
• Social justice
• Nursing promotes health, prevents illness,
relieves suffering in a holistic way of healing
• Social justice gives patients the freedom of
choice
• Non-opioid pain treatment clinically proven to
be successful
• Denying patients a successful treatment option
 not acting under the provision of justice
[Link]

(Fowler, 2015; Jaiteh, Steinauer, & Frei, 2019)


Cultural
Considerations
• Physicians create their own bias based off
cultural research that shows a relationship with
African American culture and higher risk of
drug addiction
• Providers more closely monitor African
American patients
•  Caucasian patients monitored less
Increased opportunity for Caucasian
patients to misuse and become addicted
• Under the Fair Opportunity Rule – this is unjust

[Link]

(Anastas, Hollingshead, Miller, Ashburn-Nardo, & Hirsh, 2017; Becker et al., 2011; Hollinshead, Matthias, Bair, & Hirsh, 2016).
Own Perspective
• Patients fear addiction
• Order for opioids  nurses freely offer the
opioid for pain

This bill calls for change:


• Pain treatments not covered by insurance:
• Physical therapy, acupuncture,
chiropractor visits

[Link]

(H.R. 5172, 2019)


References
• American Society of Addiction Medicine. (2020). Coalitions. Retrieved from
[Link]
• Anastas, T., Hollingshead, N., Miller, M., Ashburn-Nardo, L., & Hirsh, A. (2017).
Patient race and socioeconomic status influence providers’ recommendations about
opioid therapy and workplace accommodations for chronic pain. Journal of Pain,
18(4), S33. [Link]
• Badzek, L. Henaghan, M., Turner, M., & Monsen, R. (2013). Ethical, legal, and social
issues in the translation of genomics into health care. Journal of Nursing
Scholarship, 45(1),15 – 24.
• Beauchamp, T. L., & Childress, J. F. (2013). Principles of biomedical ethics. New York,
NY: Oxford University Press.
• Becker, W. C., Starrels, J. L., Heo, M., Li, X., Weiner, M. G., & Turner, B. J. (2011).
Racial differences in primary care opioid risk reduction strategies. Annals of Family
Medicine, 9(3), 219–225. [Link]
• Center for Disease Control and Prevention. (2018). Understanding the Epidemic.
Retrieved from [Link]
• Fowler, M.D.M. (2015). Guide to the code of ethics for nurses: With interpretive
statements (2nd ed.). Silver Springs, Maryland: American Nurses Association.
References
• GovTrack. (2020). H.R. 5172 – 116th Congress: NOPAIN Act. Retrieved from
[Link]
• Hollinshead, N. A., Matthias, M. S., Bair, M., & Hirsh, A. T. (2016). Healthcare
providers’ perceptions of socioeconomically disadvantaged patients with chronic
pain: A qualitative investigation. Journal of Health Disparities Research and Practice,
9(3), 35-44. Retrieved from
[Link]
cle=1410&context=jhdrp

• Hooten, M., Thorson, D., Bianco, J., Bonte, B., Clavel Jr, A., Hora, J., …Walker, N.
(2017). Pain: assessment, non-opioid treatment approaches and opioid
management, eighth edition [PDF file]. Institute for Clinical Systems Improvement.
[Link]
• Jaiteh, C., Steinauer, R., & Frei, I. A. (2019). Individuals with opioid dependence
using polysubstances: how do they experience acute hospital care and what are
their needs? A qualitative study. Journal of Addictions Nursing, 30(3), 177–184.
[Link]
References
• Malone, R. E. (2005). Assessing the policy environment. Policy, Politics, & Nursing
Practice, 6(2), 135–143. [Link]
• Manworren, R. C. B. & Gilson, A. M. (2015) Nurses’ role in preventing prescription
opioid diversion. American Journal of Nursing, 115(8), 34-40.
[Link]
_ID=54030&Issue_ID=3152763

• National Institute on Drug Abuse. 2018. Misuse of Prescription Drugs. Retrieved


from
[Link]
gs

• NOPAIN Act, H.R. 5172, 116th Cong. (2019). Retrieved from


[Link]
• US Department of Health and Human Services. (2018). Introduction: About HHS.
Retrieved from
[Link]
• Webster, F., Rice, K., Katz, J., Bhattacharyya, O., Dale, C., & Upshur, R. (2019). An
ethnography of chronic pain management in primary care: The social organization
of physicians’ work in the midst of the opioid crisis. Plos One, 14(5), e0215148.
[Link]

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