West Virginia's new drug czar was once addicted to opioids himself
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[September 26, 2024]
By LEAH WILLINGHAM
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia’s new drug czar has a very
personal reason for wanting to end the state’s opioid crisis: He was
once addicted to prescription painkillers himself.
Dr. Stephen Loyd, who has been treating patients with substance use
disorder since he got sober two decades ago, says combating opioid
addiction in the state with the highest rate of overdose deaths isn’t
just his job. It's an integral part of his healing.
“I really feel like it’s been the biggest driver of my own personal
recovery,” says Loyd, who became the director of West Virginia’s Office
of Drug Control Policy last month. “I feel that the longer I do this,
the more I don’t mind the guy I see in the mirror every morning.”
Loyd is no stranger to talking about his addiction. He has told his
story to lawmakers and was an inspiration for the character played by
Michael Keaton in the Hulu series, “Dopesick.” Keaton plays a mining
community doctor who becomes addicted to prescription drugs. Loyd was
also an expert witness in a case leading to Tennessee's first conviction
of a pill mill doctor in 2005, and has testified against opioid
manufacturers and distributors in trials spelling out their culpability
in the U.S. opioid crisis, resulting in massive settlements nationwide.
West Virginia was awarded nearly $1 billion in settlement money, and a
private foundation has been working with the state to send checks to
affected communities to support addiction treatment, recovery and
prevention programs.
Loyd says he is ready to help advise the foundation on how to distribute
that money, saying the state has a “moral and ethical responsibility” to
spend it wisely.
The doctor started misusing painkillers when he was chief resident at
East Tennessee State University hospital. He was given a handful of
hydrocodone pills — opioid painkillers — after a dental procedure. He
says he threw the pills in his glove compartment and forgot about them
until he was stopped at a red light, driving home after a particularly
hard day at work.
Anxious and depressed, he was struggling to cope with his more than
100-hour-a-week hospital schedule.
“I thought, ‘My patients take these things all the time,’” he says. “And
I broke one in half and took it. By the time I got home, all my ills
were cured. My job wasn’t as bad, my home life was better. And I wasn’t
as worried.”
Within four years, he went from taking half a 5-milligram hydrocodone
pill to taking 500 milligrams of oxycodone — another opiate — in a
single day.
He understands the shame many feel about their addiction. To fuel his
addiction, he stole pills from family members and bought them off a
former patient.
“Back then, would I steal from you? Yes,” he says. “I would do whatever
I needed to do to get the thing I thought I would die without.”
But he didn't understand he was addicted until the first time he felt
the intense sickness associated with opiate withdrawal. He thought he
had come down with the flu.
“And then the next day, when I got my hands on pills and I took the
first one, and I got better in about 10 minutes," he says. “I realized I
couldn’t stop or I’d get sick.”
It was a “pretty devastating moment” that he says he can never forget.
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In this photo provided by Will Price, West Virginia Office of Drug
Control Policy Director Dr. Stephen Loyd speaks to state lawmakers
on the Joint Committee on Health during interim meetings at the
state Capitol in Charleston, W.Va., Aug. 26, 2024. (Will Price/West
Virginia Legislature via AP)
A family intervention ended with
Loyd going to the detox unit at Vanderbilt University Medical Center
in July 2004. After five days, he joined a treatment program and, he
says, he has been sober ever since.
In recovery, Loyd threw himself into addiction
medicine with a focus on pregnant heroin users who often face
judgment and stigma. He said his own experience enabled him to see
these vulnerable women in a different light.
“I couldn’t believe that somebody could just keep sticking a needle
in their arm — what are they doing? — until it happened to me,” he
says.
It was when he was in the detox unit that Loyd first noticed
disparities in addiction treatment. There were 24 people on his
floor, and the then-37-year-old doctor was the only one who was
referred for treatment. The rest were simply released.
“I get a pass because I have MD after my name, and I’ve known that
for a long time,” he says. “And it’s not fair.”
He calls this “the two systems of care” for substance use disorder:
A robust and compassionate system for people with money and another,
less effective model “basically for everybody else.”
He’s intent on changing that.
He says he also wants to expand access to prescription drugs such as
methadone and suboxone, which can help wean people with substance
use disorder off opioids. Loyd says he was never offered either
medication when he was detoxing 20 years ago “and it kind of makes
me angry that I suffered unnecessarily.”
One of Loyd's priorities will be working out how to measure
meaningful outcomes — something he says happens in every field of
medicine except addiction medicine.
A cardiologist can tell a patient with heart disease about their
course of treatment and estimate their chances of a recovery or of
being pain free in a year or 18 months, he says.
“In addiction, we don’t have that. We look at outcomes differently,”
Loyd says.
When people are referred for treatment, the metrics are not the
same. How many showed up? How many engaged in the program and
graduated? How many continued to recover and progressed in their
lives?
“We don’t know how effective we’ve been at spending our money
because I don’t think that we’ve really talked a lot about looking
at meaningful outcomes,” he says.
As for his own measurable outcomes, Loyd said there have been a few,
including walking his daughter down the aisle and serving as his
son’s best man.
And on his phone he has a folder of baby pictures and photographs
celebrating recovery milestones, sent to him by former patients.
“It’s what drives me,” he said. “The great paradox is you get to
keep something by giving it away. And I get to do that.”
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