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I've been looking for some other CP/IP (Chronic/Intractable Pain) patients who would like to contribute to this site, whether one time, sporadic, or regularly. If anyone is interested, please email me at IntractablePainKills@gmail.com

I'm also open to any suggestions about improving the blog.

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DUE TO A GLITCH IN BLOGGER, MY POSTS DO NOT ALWAYS POST IN ORDER BECAUSE THEY POST USING THE TIME THAT I STARTED THE INITIAL DRAFT. I DO MY BEST TO CORRECT THIS WHENEVER POSSIBLE, HOWEVER SOME SLIP BY, SO PLEASE REMEMBER TO READ THE TITLES OF MORE THAN JUST THE MOST RECENT POST IF YOU DON'T WANT TO MISS ANYTHING.
Showing posts with label Government Lies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Government Lies. Show all posts

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Opinion: Bill Would (Have) Force(d) Drug Makers to Make Painkillers Tamper Resistant

Bill Would Force Drug Makers to Make Painkillers Tamper Resistant- National Pain Report
http://bit.ly/1kYSnVB

I know that this story is about two years old, but there is talk of reviving this bill in light of the Zohydro (non-tamper-resistant hydrocodone ER).

There are several problems with tamper-resistant opioids:
1) tamper-resistant opioids don't always work as well (or at all)- they're tested on healthy people who have an easier time absorbing them (the healthy people have to absorb them within a 30% tolerance)
2) they don't stop people from abusing them, but it does weaken the "high", which causes them to go to diacetylmorphine/diamorphine/heroin
3) they increase pharmacy prices, which makes it harder for pain patients to afford their medications
3b) increased pharmacy prices lead to increased street prices, which causes addicts (& sometimes even pain patients) to switch to heroin
3c) street heroin has unknown potency, unknown impurities, & poor oral absorption causing people to resort to intravenous injections

The ONLY way to reduce the harm caused by drug addiction is to switch from the law enforcement model to a treatment based model and to LEGALIZE ALL DRUGS (private prisons and the DEA would lose money, so they spend a small fortune fighting this). Legalization (& the drop in prices that this would cause) would eliminate the violence, crime, and disease (people inject heroin because it HA poor oral absorption & injecting is cheaper- same high from less drug; legal drugs also lack the dangerous impurities found in street heroin).

Rat Park

Rat Park Comic
Please check out the comic version of the Rat Park experiment, which shows that opioids are not the addictive demons that we've been told that they are.
Be sure to check out the "Links/Articles" page on there right for more great resources, such as the Intractable Pain Patients' Handbook for Survival.

Steve
IntractablePainKills@gmail.com

Monday, May 26, 2014

Distinguishing Intractable Pain Patients from Drug Addicts


Distinguishing Intractable Pain Patients from Drug Addicts
By Joel S. Hochman, MD

http://bit.ly/IPvsAddict


Maybe one of you will better understand what appears to me to be nothing but an excuse to keep pain patients from getting their meds. It seems to me that fear of Diversion is a poor excuse for denying legitimate pain patients access to opioids, especially when nothing else works. The DEA has NO AUTHORITY to regulate medicine, they can only go after a doctor if (s)he prescribes "outside of medical practice", meaning that they were intentionally writing prescriptions that were not intended to treat a legitimate medical condition. Unfortunately, doctors don't decide which doctors are prescribing in the "due course of medical practice", and neither do any other medical professionals. DEA agents (glorified cops) and prosecutors make these decisions. They've scared doctors to the point where the doctors have started to lie to their patients in order to reduce the number of controlled substances (especially opioids) that they prescribe.

My biggest question is this....
If physicians can distinguish so easily between addicts and legitimate pain patients (which I do believe that they can), why is it that the DEA can't tell the difference between prescriptions to legitimate patients and prescriptions written to addicts?

-Steve

Friday, May 9, 2014

Rat Park

Rat Park Comic

Please check out the comic version of the Rat Park experiment, which shows that opioids are not the addictive demons that we've been told that they are.

http://bit.ly/ratpark

Steve
IntractablePainKills@gmail.com

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Naloxone Part 2

To clarify... The government is advocating it's use in pain patients who are BELIEVED to be in overdose. The problem is that most people can't tell an overdose from fatigue or the flu. Intractable pain patients on opioids are usually opioid tolerant and naloxone/Narcan/Evzio causes abrupt withdrawal. In a patient who actually needs opioids (intractable pain patient, not drug addict), this abrupt withdrawal can trigger a heart attack.

This is unnecessary because...
If pain patient (or addict) overdoses, the symptom is respiratory depression, which can be overcome with oxygen, BiPAP, and/or CPR. This product is intended to reverse believed overdose while waiting for an ambulance, but CPR has been fine for years.

Naloxone/Narcan/Evzio reverses the opioids, which is fine for an opioid-naive patient, but this device is only for opioid tolerance patients.

With so many family members not understanding us and many being called druggies, would you really want them wielding an opioid blocker? I can easily see easy access to naloxone leading to pain patients (& addicts) being forcefully injected with naloxone against their will to "prove" to them that they're an addict (those people never understand the different being addiction and tolerance & physical dependence).

This product should only be prescribed directly to the addict or pain patient, not "concerned family members" WITH THEIR PERMISSION. It should be treated like Antabuse (giving to someone without permission is forbidden and legally considered poisoning, and carries a black box warning).

Steve

Monday, April 7, 2014

FDA: Naloxone Injector Not Just for Drug Abusers - National Pain Report

FDA: Naloxone Injector Not Just for Drug Abusers - National Pain Report

This is SCARY! This device would be scary enough, but to advocate its use on pain patients is somewhere between malpractice & medical terrorism. Instead of reposting my thoughts here, I've included the comments that say it all.
Even if unconscious, it is illegal to administer naloxone unless you are a doctor or an EMT being actively advised by a physician. I doubt that these laypeople will bother along for consent. Without significantly training (like the REMS programs for Accutane & Xyrem), this is scary.
Why was this rushed through approval?
~~~~~
Kurt says:
April 4, 2014 at 7:14 pm
I guess I need a new Medic Alert tab for my necklace in case I faint the next time I am in Safeways shopping for dinner, and succumb to shock over the high prices they’re charging these days for a pound of hamburger.
I am a chronic pain patient maintained on opiates.
DO NOT INJECT WITH NALOXONE. I am opiate tolerant and not likely to overdose on opiates. Naloxone could put me into immediate opiate withdrawal causing a health crisis.
Lord keep us safe from do-gooders.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Steve says:
April 7, 2014 at 6:36 pm
Exactly, Kurt! Thank you!...
[trimmed]
...I’m considering a permanent tattoo claiming allergy to naloxone. I already have a DNR refusing naloxone, but where I live DNRs are ignored in the prehospital setting (ambulance, etcetera), which is why I’m thinking about the allergy tattoo, I’d love your thoughts.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Steve says:
April 7, 2014 at 6:29 pm
Naloxone only reverses opioids, but the vast majority of overdose deaths are not opioid only, they usually involve alcohol and/or benzodiazepines (Valium/diazepam, Xanax/alprazolam, Ativan/lorazepam, etcetera)
This is deeply rooted in opiophobia.
Also, of they really wanted to help people, it would be OTC or OTC worth log book (like pseudoephedrine/Sudafed), but then they wouldn’t benefit from Rx insurance reimbursement. This should be “Pharmacy Only Medicine”, like Imitrex in the UK, where you don’t need a doctor’s prescription, just counseling with the pharmacist (slightly more restricted than Sudafed because training should be required).
This product is used to COMPLETELY reverse opioids, which is fine for an opioid-naive overdose, but would kill an opioid tolerant IP patients like myself. Without dose control, it could kill. Without dose control, I’d imagine most Heroin addicts will refuse a dose because every documentary that I’ve seen involves a human going around with naloxone and they always have trouble convincing these people to take the naloxone. They frequently convince them to take half of a dose.
Pain patients rarely overdose. Family members who can’t mind their own business and don’t know ANYTHING about opioids will abuse this and/or abuse their pain patient family members.
This is all about money, generic naloxone is ~$0.50/dose
Steve

Friday, March 28, 2014

Drug Maker Blames ‘Misinformation’ for Zohydro Controversy - National Pain Report

Drug Maker Blames ‘Misinformation’ for Zohydro Controversy - National Pain Report

http://bit.ly/1peed85

Excerpt:
...“Without justification, inaccurate allegations have been made that Zogenix paid a university to arrange meetings with the FDA to secure approval of Zohydro ER,” wrote Hawley.

“The university in question has declared for the record that, in the meetings it arranged with FDA officials, no representation from Zogenix was present, nor was the company or its products ever discussed. In fact, Zogenix did not even exist as a company at the time of these meetings.”

Some pain patients who want access to Zohydro have told National Pain Report that it is Sen. Manchin who has a conflict of interest.

The senator’s daughter, Heather Bresch, is the CEO of Mylan Inc. (NASDAQ:MYL) a Pittsburgh-based pharmaceutical company that is one of the largest generic drug manufacturers in the world. One of Mylan’s top-selling drugs is a hydrocodone product containing acetaminophen.

Campaign records show that political action committees or individuals associated with Mylan have donated $127,000 to Manchin in the last five years — making Mylan the senator’s second largest corporate contributor...

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

New Harvard paper slams FDA, says agency 'cannot be trusted'

New Harvard paper slams FDA, says agency 'cannot be trusted'
http://bit.ly/1eEj15e

This link was posted on a support group and I started to reply, but that turned into a rant, which sent off-topic. Essentially, it's about the problems with the FDA, and the system as a whole specifically as it relates to pain management, opiophobia, the epidemic of undertreated pain, and how money in medicine is a conflict of interest.

Sorry for the length, but, like I said, it just spilled onto the page. Yes, this has hurt me directly, but it's really hurt me the most indirectly. I've had to sit idly by as my wife, friends, and fellow support group CP/IP sufferers suffer needlessly from crippling diseases including EDS, Fibromyalgia, CFIDS/CFS/ME, IP, cancer pain, lupus, MCTD (mixed connective tissue disease), various autoimmune diseases, CPS (Central Pain Syndrome), Rheumatoid Arthritis, RSD/CRPS (Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy/Complex Regional Pain Syndrome) and so much more.

This is emotional and disorganized, for that I apologize (I'm too sleep deprived to correct it).

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I've known that we can't trust the FDA since Lyrica and Cymbalta were approved for pain. Yeah, they help some people, but they're statistically irrelevant. That, and their constant denials of efficacious drugs like Xyrem/sodium oxybate for Fibromyalgia (the Fibromyalgia formulation wouldn't be called Xyrem) and several pain medications despite superior evidence than many other approved drugs.  I'll eat my hat if they ever approved Sativex.

The DEA is in charge of diversion, the FDA is not supposed to deny drugs because of abuse potential, but they do it all the time.

Don't get me started on the untested abuse deterrent OxyContin, Opana ER, etcetera.

Plus, they don't make any generic manufacturer test the extended release mechanism on anything but the lowest dose, the test are statistical estimates. The worst part is that the FDA approved monographs parade these estimates as trial results.

The problem is our system, profit is put ahead of people and that's why we all suffer. If FDA approval was based on efficacy and adverse reactions, medicine was about helping patients, and not the almighty dollar, cannabis, Sativex, sodium oxybate for FM, 90 day sufentanil implants, diacetylmorphine/diamorphine, ibogaine, countless other medications would be readily available, and many, many other medications would never have been approved. Actiq would be available for any patient that can't get relief from pills, not just well insured cancer patients (although even we cancer patients can't get prescriptions anymore because writing opioids prescriptions isn't cost effective for doctors because of poor reimbursement and excessive paperwork).

Kids sbouldn't be given $20/pill (over $60,000/yr) antipsychotics for insomnia (melatonin, zolpidem, benzodiazepines, barbiturates, Rozerem, all more effective, safer, and cheaper), behavioral issues (discipline), autism, Asperger's Syndrome (TALK to your children and work with them, you can overcome it without toxic antipsychotics, and in many cases, no drugs at all; insomnia must be treated, but many respond to melatonin).

The FDA is owned by the drug companies, their profits, not our best interests are at heart.

Occasionally, Opiophobia or similar irrational fears of abuse overcome profits, but it's extremely rare. Usually, it's profits.

Ibogaine is more effective that methadone or buprenorphine, but out only requires one treatment and can't be patented.

Methadone is $10-15/month, but it can only be used to treat addicts in expensive, inconvenient clinics. They could allow doctors to prescribe it for addiction like they do for pain management, but that's not in Suboxone's best interests. Sparse methadone clinics, daily visits, high costs, limited hours, and overall inconvenience push people from methadone to Suboxone. Many of my friends with CP/IP have faked addiction to get methadone and/or to get buprenorphine (never at the same time) when their states effectively banned effective pain management, I've researched this for many friends in Florida, Texas, Washington, Oregon, and several other opiophobic states.

AVERAGE monthly costs (excluding initial methadone/Suboxone intake fees; $150-300+)
methadone Rx $10-15
Methadone clinic $60*-600
30 day Suboxone $600-900
*$60 are state funded clinics and not really average

Legalized Cannabis is a drug company's worst nightmare, effective, safe, and NATURAL (no patent). Not only that, but people can GROW IT THEMSELVES, no need for drug companies at all. Even generics make them big money.

Methadone is a great pain drug, but terriers prescriber education. Also, when used for pain management, it only lasts 6-8 hours. They could make a once daily version, but the drug is so cheap that insurance companies aren't going to pay 20-50x more for methadone ER and drug companies aren't going to sell methadone ER for anywhere near its current price
*~Breakthrough Med Pricing~*
135 methadone 10 mg (45mg/day)<$12 (cash), ~$6 (Medicare D)
180 oxycodone 30mg (30mg 6x/day) ~$300 (cash), ~$75 (Medicaid rate)
1080 oxymorphone 10mg (20mg 6x/day) ~$11,000/90 day (cash), ~$6000/month (Medicare)
270 oxymorphone 10mg (15mg 6/day) ~$3000/month (cash), ~$1600 (Medicare)
Is it surprising that OxyContin and Opana ER are pushed by drug companies? Those are GENERIC prices. Why bother with ER methadone, especially when it's exclusivity would be much more limited than OxyContin.

*Wholesale prices per pill*
Oxymorphone 10mg $5.65
Opana 5mg $3.60
Opana 10mg $6.53
Oxymorphone ER 5mg $1.74
Oxymorphone ER 40mg $11.13
Opana ER 5mg $2.39
Opana ER 40mg $15.31

Oxycodone 30mg $0.36-1.45
OxyContin 30mg $6.93
OxyContin 80mg $16.33

Morphine 30mg $0.23
Kadian 30mg $6.37
Kadian 200mg $43.01
Avinza (morphine) 30mg  $5.77
Avinza (morphine) 120mg $19.89
MSContin 30mg $4.04
MSContin 200mg $21.39
Morphine Sulfate ER 30mg $0.82-1.70
Morphine sulfate ER 200mg $3.95-8.99

Methadone 5mg $0.0852-0.0868
Methadone 10mg $0.1410-0.1920
Methadone 40mg solutab $0.2976-0.3316 (methadone clinics only)
Dolophine 10mg $0.2026
Methadose 40mg solutab $0.3300

Fentora 0.6mg $82.24

Methadone ER isn't going to happen in our system.

Prialt/ziconotide intrathecal (cone snail neurotoxin) was only approved to discourage abuse proof intrathecal morphine. They actually put a neurotoxin closer to your spine than an epidural. It causes psychosis and death in way too many patients, including several of my friends.

Actiq was $1-2/dose and extremely effective, but the opiophobic FDA refused to approve it for over 20 indications. They shut the company up by going from moderate to severe BTP (breakthrough pain) to the incredibly narrow severe breakthrough cancer pain. This indication got it to the market and physician's wrote prescriptions off-label for desperate patients who had tried everything else. Unfortunately, the prove started to rise. Eventually, the price got high enough to cancer insurance companies to require prior authorization and limit coverage to cancer patients, effectively banning off-label use. This caused further prove increases. GENERIC OTFC (Oral Transmucosal Fentanyl Citrate) is now $20-80/lozenge and patients are limited to four lozenges (2 flares per day). My prescription was $60/dose, $240/day, $7200/month, & $21,600/90 day Rx. Thankfully covered by Medicare (they negotiated ~$6,000/month ~18,000/90 day Rx). Unfortunately, the FDA furthered the EPIDEMIC of undertreatment and underprescribing of opioids by instituting an extremely overzealous class-wide REMS on TIRF (transmucosal immediate release fentanyl; Actiq/OTFC/Fentora/Onsolis/Subsys/Lazanda/Abstral). This seems like just Opiophobia, but there is also a financial motive. While it would seem that restricting such an extensive drug would be detrimental,  a second generic manufacturer finally broke the duopoly, which would have allowed competition if demand hadn't been decimated. Also, despite fentanyl lozenges being extremely high profit thanks to fentanyl citrate being DIRT cheap, even more money can be made with interventional pain management, antipsychotics, antidepressants, anti-epileptic mood stabilizers, and overpriced NSAIDs, like the cox2 inhibitor, Celebrex.

I can take an effective dose of opioids, or I can get less relief and more side effects by taking a conservative dose of opioids plus OVER a DOZEN non-opioids.

Last, but not least, the lack of FDA approved treatment for CFIDS, despite clear evidence that Rituxan/rituximab and Ampligen are both effective. Unfortunately, they're expensive, very expensive. Antidepressants are cheap and so many people believe the CDC propaganda. CFIDS research funding has been frozen for 20 years. In order for it to have kept up with inflation alone, it should have doubled.

The US clinical trials for CFS/ME are less conclusive than they should be because the FDA requires the use of there CDC CFS criteria instead of the more specific ME criteria and too many misdiagnosed patients end up trials. The FDA uses this as an excuse to block approval. If you exclude the patients that don't resound at all, the drugs are miraculous for the remaining patients.

The real reason that that hasn't been approved is two-fold.
1) it treats CFIDS as a physical illness
2) Ampligen is owned by a tiny Philadelphia biopharma company, Hemispherx. They don't have the money to have have the FDA in their pockets and aren't rich enough to get away with bribery

Posted 12/25/2013 08:57:00 AM
Edited March 16, 2014 7:42 am
Edited March 16, 2014 6:05 pm

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Despicable- California GOP creates fake health care website to discourage constituents from obtaining insurance

Daily Kos :: California GOP creates fake health care website to discourage constituents from obtaining insurance
http://bit.ly/1eMeHg4

What more can I add?...
Got forbid they protect themselves and keep health care costs down. God forbid even a penny of healthy policy holders premiums goes to us unhealthy "leeches".

As a pain (& cancer) patient and a citizen, I find this the lowest of low. Disability is not a crime, or even a choice.

Steve

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Cops force doctors to commit assault

Fuck this War on Drugs and everyone who participates in it, perpetuates it, and/or profits off it.
The doctors need disciplinary action and the DA needs no file charges against the officers who forced these doctors to commit forcible sexual assault.

I guess they forgot:
"I will not use my medical knowledge to violate human rights and civil liberties, EVEN UNDER THREAT"

Steve

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Rat Park Comic

Please check out the comic version of the Rat Park experiment, which shows that opioids are not the addictive demons that we've been told that they are.

http://bit.ly/ratpark

Steve
IntractablePainKills@gmail.com

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

It's not the morphine, it's the size of the cage: Rat Park experiment upturns conventional wisdom about addiction

It's not the morphine, it's the size of the cage: Rat Park experiment upturns conventional wisdom about addiction

http://bit.ly/1aUzVKW

The government (especially DARE) lied to us. Just like they did with cannabis. Does anyone remember the study that "proved" that cannabis kills brain cells? The one where they suffocated monkeys with smoke over and over again, then dissected their brains and pointed to the suffocation damage and said that cannabis kills brain cells, even though it actually heals the brain.

We really can't trust our government to study anything (CFIDS, cannabis, opioids, the majority of drugs approved by the FDA in the past decade).

Steve
IntractablePainKills@gmail.com

Sunday, September 15, 2013

RSO/cannabis & other cancer cures


Cancer is worth more than our lives. Cannabis both prevents and treats cancer, including the most deadly childhood cancer, DIPA/DIPG

Essex tea is another potential treatment that got shut down.