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Home Headlines

Teams Broke Drug Laws In Peddling Painkillers To Players

March 10, 2017
in Headlines
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National Football League teams violated federal laws on prescription drugs in peddling powerful painkillers and anti-inflammatories to players, according to sealed court documents from a federal lawsuit filed by former players, the Washington Post reported Friday.

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At issue is how NFL team doctors manage to keep players on the field while coping with the pain inflicted upon players in a hard-hitting game and the world’s richest sport league.

Without disclosing how it was able to review the material, the newspaper saw testimony and documents from team and NFL medical personnel describing multiple times when team and NFL officials were made aware of abuse, record-keeping issues and violations of federal law and were slow to respond or failed to comply.

NFL teams disregarded strict guidelines from the Drug Enforcement Administration on how to store, track, transport and distribute controlled substances, the report said.

“Every doctor deposed so far… has testified that they violated one or more” federal drug laws and regulations “while serving in their capacity as a team doctor,” the filing said.

Anthony Yates, the Pittsburgh Steelers’ team doctor and past president of the NFL Physicians Society, testified in a deposition that “a majority of clubs as of 2010 had trainers controlling and handling prescription medications and controlled substances when they should not have.”

Cincinnati Bengals head trainer Paul Sparling wrote in an e-mail: “Can you have your office fax a copy of your DEA certificate to me? I need it for my records when the NFL ‘pill counters´ come to see if we are doing things right. Don’t worry, I’m pretty good at keeping them off the trail!”

The filing revealed NFL teams dispense painkillers and prescription-strength anti-inflammatories in far larger amounts than every made public.

In 2012, the average NFL team prescribed nearly 5,777 doses of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and 2,213 doses of controlled medications to players, according to a 2013 internal document from Lawrence Brown, the NFL-employed medical adviser who oversees drug issues.

That could average out to six to seven pain pills or injections a week per player over the course of a typical NFL season, although sports medicine experts told the Post it was unlikely drugs were distributed evenly over a full roster or that team logs represented the full extent of medications players used to manage their pain.

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy told the Post the allegations “are meritless and the league and its clubs will continue to vigorously defend these claims,” saying to the Post in an e-mail that all NFL clubs and medical staffs are in compliance with the Controlled Substances Act.

Nevertheless, the revelations were worrying to the NFL Players Assocation, the union said in a statement Friday.

“The NFLPA is alarmed by the revelations in the lawsuit filed by former NFL players on the abuse of prescription drugs,” the statement said. “While we are not a party to the case, the reporting (is) cause for our continued concern and vigilance for holding the league accountable to its obligations.

Material was collected by lawyers representing more than 1,800 former NFL players as part of the discovery process in the lawsuit.

Long-time Buffalo Bills trainer Bud Carpenter admitted under oath he saw players injected by doctors without being told what drug they received or its side effects and given prescription drugs in violation of federal and state laws.

A staple for NFL players among painkillers is Toradol, a non-steroid anti-inflammatory used to manage short-term postoperative pain. The prescription drug deadens feeling and inhibits the body’s ability to sense injury, much like the more addictive opiate Vicodin.

The lawsuit claims teams would freely offer Toradol each Sunday to numb existing injuries and ahead of anticipated future post-game aches and pains.

Yates testified in his deposition that “even last season, he witnessed players lining up for the ‘T Train’ – Toradol injections before a game.”

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Tags: Anthony YatesBrian McCarthyBud CarpenterBuffalo BillsCincinnati BengalsClinical pharmacologyDrug control lawDrug Enforcement Administrationdrugsfederal lawheadhealthHealth careinjuriesinjuryKetorolacLawrence Brownmedical adviserMedical prescriptionNational Football LeagueNational Football League Players AssociationNFLNFL Physicians SocietyPainpainsPaul SparlingPersonal Services - NECPharmaceuticals policyPharmacologyPharmacyPittsburgh SteelersplayerPrescription drugpresidentspokesmansportsSports medicineThe NFLThe Washington Post

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