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Friday, July, 25, 2008

Chronic Pain Management and the DEA

by  Rob Streno
Tuesday, January 09, 2007
Rob Streno
Rob Streno
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Hello, my name is Rob, and I suffer from migraine headaches.
...

Rob Streno

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Stupidity (particularly when it isn’t my own stupidity) makes me angry. Governmental stupidity makes me even angrier. Judicial stupidity has a special ability to raise my ire above a threshold unknown to any individual who has ever ticked me off to any degree whatsoever. So pardon me while I r...
  1. Untitled Comment
    VV
    Thursday, January 11, 2007 at 02:30 PM
    I can't take opiods but I suffer terrible from migraines. Sometimes they stay with me for weeks on end. If I could take the meds I would hope they could be prescribed for me. Heck, I wished there was something that could be prescibed for me now. ;-( The DEA needs to go after the real drug trafficers and leave the people in pain alone.
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  2. Untitled Comment
    Ann
    Thursday, January 11, 2007 at 02:49 PM
    I have proof that doctors fear the DEA! My primary care physician told me he could not give me more pain meds for fear of being investigated!!
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  3. Untitled Comment
    Country Pain
    Thursday, January 11, 2007 at 05:55 PM
    I have CPS, CFS, Migraines, Fibromyalgia, Osteoarthritis, IBS, GAD, and Depression. When I lived in a small Eastern KY town my MD told me to make pain my best friend and wouldn't give me the pain meds I needed, because of DEA stunts just as described. There are a few bad doctors and more bad patients, but if everything is well documented then I don't see the problem. Now I'm in a bigger metropolitan area and getting barely enough to live on, but my MD here said it is getting harder to treat chronic pain due to crazy government restrictions requiring them to see the patient every month, which limits the number of patients they can have because it leaves no room for new ones. It is a no win for people like me who have worked hard all our lives, now we have to be in pain the rest of the time. I can no longer work(no social security yet either 3 yrs now), clean house, play with my grandchildren, or shop due to any exertion making the pain so much worse I can't move for 2 or 3 days. If we quit letting big government give all our tax dollars to study animal sex or pay immigrants to come over here and have 5 American babies for us to feed, then the pain they would feel from the lobbyists might make them open their eyes.
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  4. Untitled Comment
    Brian
    Friday, January 12, 2007 at 07:37 PM
    The US medical system does an abysmal job of pain management. Nowhere is this worse than in terminal care, where problems from addiction are moot.
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  5. Untitled Comment
    Bill
    Saturday, January 13, 2007 at 07:37 AM
    the people at DEA should suffer the pain then they might learn to understand the purpose of pain medication and what is real criminal acts vs. desperate need for pain relief. And any doctor who doesn't treat the patient should lose their license.
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  6. Untitled Comment
    Robert Engelbardt
    Saturday, January 13, 2007 at 04:05 PM
    For people having problems receiving a sufficient amount of narcotic medication from their regular physicians to control their chronic pain, I suggest that they search for a pain management clinic or a physician who specializes in this field. They are generally more experienced in dealing with the drug control authorities. In addition to being able to more freely write narcotic prescriptions, they can offer advanced chronic pain control treatments such as an implanted morphine pump which can provide relief at much lower doses of narcotic medications because they are applied directly into the spinal canal. Pain management specialists may also be aware of drugs for pain control that may be more effective than the typically prescribed medications.
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  7. Untitled Comment
    Gretchen
    Tuesday, January 16, 2007 at 01:02 PM
    The Miss. State Board of Medical Licensure sent a warning letter to doctors a couple of years ago. My internist (primary care) doesn't prescribe opiods in his practice. He had one patient get out of control, and he has decided to refer a patient to a specialist who will treat the entire pain-causing condition. It's been inconvenient at times, but I respect him for it. My neurologist will not call in opiod refills or prescriptions. They have to be mailed or picked up at his office. He now gives me 30 Hycodan a month, but when he was prescribing Lorcet, it was a once-every-three-or-four months deal. He was worried about acetaminophin toxicity. A pain, because if I was calling, I was in the middle of a monster that hadn't responded to a triptan and was in no condition to either drive or wait 2 days for a prescription to grind through the cross-town mail.
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  8. Untitled Comment
    SHARON
    Friday, January 19, 2007 at 11:11 AM
    i am so mortified that richard has to spend 25 yrs in prison for doing nothing but waking up one morning and finding out he has a disease that will not only leave him in need 24/7 but will live in chronic pain the same 24/7. why am i so intensely angered? i too suffer from chronic disabling intense pain 24/7 and have done so for these past 38 yrs but more so in the past 16 yrs. my life too has been turned upside down. one moment you are vital and running around and the next moment you can not get out of bed or move one single inch due to horrific horrendous searing pain. have you ever sat on the burner of your stove or decided to lie on your barbeque? i think not, but we who suffer this pain feel as though we are on those burners and we can not get off them. how dare the government choose to do this to us the people who make this country what it is today. how many of them live in pain and take these same drugs. i am so mad there is not words for me to describe my total feelings. thank you for listening.
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  9. Doctors and the law
    Cynthia
    Saturday, March 03, 2007 at 03:42 AM
    I KNOW the doctors take into consideration the DEA. It is an outrage that they have to check with them before taking proper care of a patient in any kind of pain. This has been intolerable for a few years now. It is still easier to get drugs around the corner where I live in a town of 3000 than to get a doctor to give me what I need. The police stopped arresting the drug dealers even after I kept calling and calling and went for the easy ducks. The doctors who were trying to help. I've had too many doctors tell me upfront "don't ask me for pain meds". That, before they even knew what I was there for which happened to be a kidney stone! I understand how they feel. Why they aren't complaining more I don't know except they are afraid to stick their heads above water and draw the attention of the DEA to them. The DEA is running the medical situation is this country. That should not be allowed. Other countries think we have gone insane with this.
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  10. Do Doctors Understand That Morphine Kills Pain, Not Patients?
    Anonymous
    Tuesday, March 13, 2007 at 08:37 PM
  11. Pain care
    JW
    Wednesday, November 14, 2007 at 07:20 PM

    What A shame! It seems that all doctors are in fear of prescribing too much pain medication because of prosecution. why do people need too suffer? Not all people abuse medication! Doctor generally don't over- prescribe just a few "bad apples".

     

    JW


    reply

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