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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.

IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO COMMENT ON ANY POST, PLEASE CLICK ON THE TITLE TO LOAD THE INDIVIDUAL POST.


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 War on Drugs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War on Drugs. Show all posts

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

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Poppy seed ingestion as a contributing factor to opiate-positive urinalysis results

Poppy seed ingestion as a contributing factor to opiate-positive urinalysis results- PubMed
http://1.usa.gov/1ohUKpd

The DoD utilized higher cutoffs than NIH and most employers, which minimizes false positives, but some foods actually trigger the DoD cutoff for GC/MS urinalysis and many trigger the common cutoff of 300ng/ml of morphine or codeine. We, as a country, place far too much faith in these tests and RUIN people's lives over tests that aren't nearly as accurate as most people believe.

DoD cutoff- morphine 4000ng/ml
DoD cutoff- codeine 2000ng/ml
Standard cutoff- morphine & codeine 300ng/ml

Remember, most testing behind with an immunoassay and then confirmatory GC/MS testing is done, which most people treat as infallible, which it clearly isn't.

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

Medication Jeopardy - National Pain Report

A Pained Life: Medication Jeopardy - National Pain Report

http://bit.ly/1lGjvrJ

"I was concerned about being able to get methadone when I returned home to New York City.

“My mentor is there. He’ll give you the prescriptions. Don’t worry,” Friedman said.

Unfortunately, he was wrong.

When I told the doctor, “Dr. Friedman told me you would write the methadone prescriptions for me,” he stood up, said he would not, ended the appointment, and sent me on my way – with no prescription or instructions about stopping the drug."

My comments:
~~~~~ Comment #1 ~~~~~
I was cold turkeyed from methadone (although I had oxycodone, which helped with the mu-opioid activity, but not kappa-opioid or NMDA).

Methadone it's cheap and effective, but it is also misunderstood because of a few overdoses caused by uneducated physicians. Methadone should NEVER be increased more than once every 5-7 days. Other opioids can be increased every few days or even every few hours. If a doctor increases methadone as often as they increase oxycodone, oxymorphone, morphine, or fentanyl, the patient could overdose.

There is a irrational fear surrounding methadone and because it is about $10/month, there's no incentive for drug companies to spend money dispelling those myths. Some brand name drug companies will scare doctors away from methadone to boost sales of OxyContin (oxycodone ER - major culprit), Kadian (12 hr morphine ER), Avinza (24 hour morphine ER), Exalgo (24 hr hydromorphone ER), Opana ER (oxymorphone ER), and, now, Zohydro (12 hr hydrocodone ER).
Sorry, I don't mean to sound like a conspiracy theorist.

Duragesic/fentanyl patches 400mcg/hr have no effect on my neuropathic leg pain, but low dose methadone (even 5mg/day) can have huge effects.

Methadone is uniquely effective because it it's not a pure mu-opioid (like morphine, oxycodone, fentanyl, sufentanil, alfentanil/Alfenta, oxymorphone, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, codeine, and remifentanil). Methadone is a mu-opioid, but it's also a kappa-opioid, an NMDA receptor antagonist. Methadone is ideal for nerve pain, but it is also effective for back pain and cancer pain.

Steve
~~~~~end~~~~~

~~~~~ Comment # 2 ~~~~~
Robert is correct, this is medical malpractice.

Untreated and under treated intractable pain can and do kill, usually through cardiac over-stimulation and various changes in the cardiac, pituitary, and adrenal systems. Dr. Forest Tennant explains it best in 'The Intractable Pain Patients' Handbook for Survival', which is (legally) available for free.

http://bit.ly/PainGuidePDF

Dennis is correct, pain patients need to be given a voice among those who regulate pain treatment. To those who lost kids, I'm sorry, but you kids was an addict who broke the law and took powerful medications without any regard for the directions.  These kids toss random points in a "candy dish" and swallow handfuls, you can't regulate that kind of stupidity. We pain patients are completely different from the drug abusers who make our lives hell.
~~~~~end~~~~~

Steve

Thursday, March 6, 2014

BALANCED Opioid Article

It's unprecedented, but the media has finally realized that the patients' perspective in the debate over prescription opioids belongs in the article, not the comments section.

I urge you to read and pass along this well written, well thought out article...

Why are patients shut out of the debate over prescription pain medicine? - The Washington Post

http://wapo.st/P6xOuA

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Article: Fibromyalgia Mystery Finally Solved! Researchers Find Main Source of Pain in Blood Vessels

Fibromyalgia Mystery Finally Solved!
Researchers Find Main Source of Pain in Blood Vessels

http://bit.ly/1c4Q0yu

This is a more laymen-friendly version of an article from several months ago that explains that Fibromyalgia isn't Psychiatric, but neuropathic. The pain is the result of abnormal nerve fibers, which improperly manage the blood vessels. This article focuses on the fact that Fibromyalgia is not Psychiatric, but I'll repost the more in depth article later.

The worst part is that, thanks to the War on Drugs, War on Doctors, and the newest war, the War on Patients, Fibromyalgia patients will still be given useless SSRIs (Prozac/fluoxetine, Paxil/paroxetine, Zoloft/sertraline, etcetera), SSNRIs (Cymbalta/duloxetine, Effexor/venlafaxine, Pristiq/desvenlafaxine,  tramadol/Ultram/Ryzolt, Nucynta/tapentadol, Savella/milnacipran, etcetera), and mood stabilizers (antipsychotics & anti-epileptics; gabapentin/Neurontin/Gralise, Lyrica/pregabalin, Lamictal, Abilify/aripiprazole, Seroquel, etcetera). Unfortunately, antiopioid propaganda and the DEA are preventing most physicians from prescribing pain medications for pain. Opioids are the safest (especially in the longterm), most efficacious (with adequate dosing) solution for any chronic pain condition.

Remember, acetaminophen/paracetamol/Tylenol alone kills more people than all opioids combined. NSAIDs aren't as deadly as acetaminophen/paracetamol, but they're still more deadly than opioids. Actually, even diacetylmorphine/diamorphine/Heroin rarely kills on its own, drug abusers die from mixed drug toxicity (combining alcohol and/or sedatives with opioids). Of course, opioid related deaths are almost all drug abusers. The statistics are never deaths caused by opioids, they're "opioid related deaths" or "drug related deaths", meaning any death that occurs with a drug peripherally involved, even if it is completely unrelated to the actual cause of death.

Steve

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Walgreens is Ruining My Life - National Pain Report

My Story: Walgreens is Ruining My Life - National Pain Report
http://bit.ly/1dgNjnj

Okay, so I got a little carried sweaty with my comment, but that's no reason not to share it with you guys!

-------------------------
This is all part of the DEA's war on doctors and war on patients. Drug dealers aren't easy to go after and they fight back. Doctors have plenty of non-hidden resources and admit they dispensed the meds. The DEA is made up of a bunch of cops who are too ignorant to acknowledge their own medical ignorance who can't tell the difference between medical practice (which they are expressly forbidden from governing under the constitution- legitimate medical practice is exclusively governed by the states) and pill mills. Unfortunately, the DEA is left to determine what is legitimate medical practice with no medical training and AUSA (Assistant US Attorneys) have been know to later bribe "medical experts" up to $40,000 to say that the accused doctors are out of bounds.

Even if a doctor wins their case, they end up hundreds of thousands of dollars (easily $750,000) in the hole with NO MEANS TO REPAY THAT DEBT because they lose their medical licenses automatically.

Our entire legal system is BROKEN! The accused are GUILTY UNLESS PROVEN INNOCENT, instead of INNOCENT UNTIL & UNLESS PROVEN GUILTY. That's a big problem, but it can be fixed in pieces. For example, doctors should be judged by THEIR PEERS, OTHER DOCTORS, not cops. The DEA should have NO POWER over medical practice and allegations of overprescribing should be handled by state boards with criminal charges being decided by state DAs and this should be ONLY AFTER there medical board determined that their actions were outside of the scope of medical practice.

Doctors must stand up against the DEA's tyranny and we must stand up for our doctors. Enough of the DEA's games, enough of the scapegoats, enough of the lies from doctors, from pharmacists, from drug companies, and ENOUGH of the DEA's lies.

Knowledge is POWER and the DEA knows that and that is why they spread their propaganda. We must counter their lies with smart, level headed rebuttals. Statistics are powerful and we must remember to use specific statistics and clinical trial results because, while our individual stories are powerful, large trials sway opinion faster. Everyone who is comfortable doing so should call their local news stations and encourage them to do stories about the suffering of CP/IP (chronic pain/intractable pain) patients as a whole AND about our individual struggles. We must rebut the DEA's "Opioid Epidemic" and reminds the nation, and the world, that the true epidemic is underprescribing and undertreatment. The 'Epidemic of Undertreatment' is a threat to our national and economic security.

Our comments here are a start, but I encourage all of you to branch out beyond the CP/IP world. Post this and every other article and opinion publicly on your Facebook, Twitter, Google+, and every other site. Branch out beyond the internet (if you are able). Write to your elected officials, medical boards, medical societies, and anyone else who might listen.

Above all else, STOP BITING YOUR TONGUE WHEN YOU'RE LIED TO!!! When your doctor says that there is a "new law" causing him/her to reduce your meds, instead of admitting his/her cowardice, POLITELY inform him/her that you mean no disrespect and are not arguing with his/her decision, but there are no new laws governing prescriptions, however you understand that the DEA has been overly aggressive. You stop the lies, build a report (silent 'T'), and it can cause your doctor to consider more adequate prescribing because you can build trust through honesty.

Although I worded this all as "directions", I mean it all as suggestions and I hope that you all can understand my passion for this subject and not hold my wording against me.

Steve

If anyone knows of any articles or studies that I can add to http://bit.ly/IPkills in order to represent what chronic pain is really like for patients, physicians, pharmacists, nurses, caregivers, physician extenders, family members, etcetera, please email a link to me. I'm also working on a less personal site, essentially an encyclopedia of chronic/intractable pain. Any articles for that site are also welcome.
IntractablePainKills at gmail.com

Friday, December 6, 2013

PCP

Unfortunately, I didn't feel up to updating you guys after my appointment, but better late than never.

As always, my doctor was kind and logical (even more so that I expected) while, unfortunately, medically impotent.

I informed him that the oxymorphone was effective for the minor flares, but that my around the clock pain is still out of control. I didn't even ask for a increase in Duragesic, I knew that I wasn't going to get it, so I purposefully dismissed the possibility. Instead, I asked for an increase in clonidine and a switch to the patches (1mg pill only lasts me 4 hours each). Since I reported the lack of side effects and my blood pressure was still high enough, my doctor put me on 0.3mg/day clonidine patch, but I highly doubt that it will work at that dose. However, I can't say for sure because haven't tried our yet(pharmacy had to order it and now I'm waiting for ride to pick it up).

I informed him that a recent urine test of mine was positive for THC & 0.48ng/ml hydromorphone. However, my test was false negative for lorazepam, dextroamphetamine/Dexedrine (Like Adderall), and oxymorphone (among others). I had also informed him that my wife tested negative for everything, despite being on oxycodone, oxymorphone, fentanyl, alprazolam, Adderall, and several others. I semi-frantically attempted to explain that I was baffled as to how it was possible that hydromorphone was in my urine and explained my theories and why they're unlikely.

The first thing that he asked me was whether or not they did confirmatory testing (a strong sign of a good doctor), but I informed him that the original test was GC/MS (standard confirmatory testing method), although I'm unsure if it was ever run a second time.

He was at least somewhat concerned about the negative testing given our ample doses of several of those medications.

He was also amazed that the lab didn't know that Marinol (synthetic THC) causes a positive test for THC, even under GC/MS. They apparently don't know the difference between Marinol/dronabinol and "spice", aka K2.

I was extremely worried about my doctor's reaction to the above information because he isn't very comfortable with my need for high doses. I was also worried because he is also a Suboxone doctor and seeing multiple addicts every day tends to skew your point of view, but our PCP acted sanely, rationally, and even respectfully.

I had also informed him that I switched from ranitidine/Zantac to Tagamet/cimetidine a while back and needed a prescription for that so that my insurance would cover it and I could stop purchasing it OTC. Unfortunately, it is a strong CYP450 3A4 inhibitor which would boost the efficacy of several medications that I'm on by slowing the metabolism. Despite informing him that I've been safely taking cimetidine/Tagamet for months and months, he wasn't comfortable prescribing it, so I'm going to try famotidine/Pepcid, again.

Despite the lack of opioids and trying a failed drug, again, the appointment went better than I had expected and I was reasonably satisfied.

As a checked out at the front desk, I asked to talk to the head of Managed Care (referrals department), if she wasn't busy. Thankfully, she want and I was able to handle a lot of things and gain some piece of mind. Unfortunately, she informed me that I'm out of options for pain management and she's unable to try again without risking the office's relationship with this offices (they get blacklisted).

You may be asking why I am writing all of this, after all this is an everyday appointment. While these little appointments may seem insignificant, they are the threads that make up the fabric of pain management and living with pain care.

While on a mini-rant of frustration, she (head of managed care, who I've known since childhood) attempted to defend our PCP for his inadequate treatment regiment by reminding me that he puts his medical license at risk and he's already pushing it with what he's prescribing now. Of course, I already know this and understand it all too well, but it is well worth remembering that it takes a very strong person to stand up even to the extend that or physician has and their livelihoods are at risk by helping us. The medical establishment as a whole needs to fight this so that doctors are not required choose between breaking their oath by letting their patients suffer and risking their medical license (and even freedom) because they prescribed longterm, and high dose, opioids to pain patients.

Although we need to fight for reform, we must also be appreciative of, and thank, the physicians who do risk their livelihoods to prescribe the medications that give us a life worth living, even off they aren't prescribing enough. I'm not saying kiss their @$$ for prescribing tramadol/Ultram/Ryzolt (antidepressant), Nucynta/tapentadol (antidepressant), codeine, hydrocodone (weak opioid), Percocet (oxycodone paired worth poisonous acetaminophen), or low doses of morphine, oxycodone, oxymorphone, hydromorphone, or even fentanyl, but when they prescribe inadequate, but substantial doses of opioids, they deserve our gratitude.

My doctor irritated me when he refused to prescribe low dose methadone or continue to prescribe Actiq/OTFC/Fentora/Onsolis/Subsys/Lazanda/Abstral (immediate release fentanyl), but I owe him thanks for prescribing high dose Duragesic and moderately high dose oxycodone, and now oxymorphone. One of the more overzealous PMs that he sent me to told him to take me off potential drugs of abuse like lorazepam (seizures, anxiety, muscle spasms, pain, nausea, insomnia), dronabinol (nausea, vomiting, & wasting), Duragesic, OTFC (generic Actiq), oxycodone, and WELLBUTRIN XL (antidepressant). Thankfully, he completely discarded his advise.

Good luck to everyone out there and try not to overdo it this holiday season. Remember, Christmas is special without you overdoing it. Your friends and family need you healthy, the cookies, cleaning, cooking, and other baking van wait or be completely skipped.

Steve

Saturday, November 30, 2013

I'm pissed...

I'm pissed! In an effort to minimize the use of controlled substances, especially in children, doctors like to prescribe powerful more stabilizers (Lamictal, risperidone/Risperdal, Seroquel, etcetera) for pain and sleep. I myself was a victim of this kind of inappropriate prescribing.

Now, I'm bombarded with reports that THESE MEDICATIONS (Risperdal/risperidone, Seroquel, Lyrica/pregabalin, and gabapentin/Neurontin/Gralise/Horizant) ACTUALLY CAUSE PAIN!!!

I've known for years that Risperdal/risperidone is responsible for the painful facial tics, but the idea that these medications are actually causing or exasperating the conditions that they treat. That's like prescribing high dose acetaminophen/paracetamol/Tylenol for the pain of liver failure!

Do I believe that Risperdal is responsible for 100% of my pain? No, but my doctors are constantly telling me that my tumor on it's own should not be causing the severe, crippling pain that I'm experiencing on a daily basis and there isn't a doubt in my mind that this illegally marketed drug is responsible.

Risperdal could have been replaced with the following safer, cheaper alternatives:
1) melatonin (OTC supplement)
2) Z-drugs- zolpidem/Ambien/Intermezzo, Sonata/zaleplon,eszopiclone/Lunesta, zopiclone/Imovane/Zimovane/Imrest (Rx, controlled substances)
3) benzodiazepines, like lorazepam/Ativan (Rx, C4)- ideal for stress induced insomnia where you can't quiet your brain (exactly what I experienced)

Rozerem (Rx, non-controlled substance) was not approved at the time, but is currently very useful.

So why was I given an antipsychotic? Because the manufacturer illegal advertised off-label use and bribed doctors into prescribing it.

That is why the anti-controlled substances environment that we are living in is so dangerous.

Steve

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Paying for it

I spent a few hours volunteering at the local animal shelter yesterday. I WAY over did it yesterday, and now the nerves in my legs are on fire. I can practically trace the nerves because they're so inflamed. I missed our weekly outing with our daughter (museums, historical society, hikes, parks, carnival, Army war college, etcetera) this morning. This afternoon, I didn't get to go to the animal shelter (my wife still went and helped for two hours). And now, I'm missing out on going out with some of the people at the shelter (my wife got both of us invited while  I slept and she volunteered).

I'm not sure which is more frustrating
1) constant, unrelenting pain
2) inconceivable BTP (breakthrough pain) flares
3) missing out on everything (family stuff, social stuff)
4) NO ONE gets it

I think the worst part of this is that none of this is necessary! I'm in pain for no legitimate reason. My pain was under control (bad, but under control) with low dose methadone, Actiq, Duragesic, and oxymorphone. My pain was virtually eliminated with 3mg/day intrathecal morphine. I feel like the one sane person in a world of crazy. I feel like I'm screaming and no one is listening. I'm in excruciating pain, there's medication that can fix it, I'm insured, my insurance will cover Duragesic, Actiq, methadone, oxymorphone, AND an intrathecal pump, I have NO risk factors (including NO family history) for abuse, I don't smoke, I don't drink, I've never abused my medication, I've never been high, I have cancer, I'm dying, I've never run out of meds or needed an early refill, I've tried EVERY non-drug treatment recommended, I've tried every non-opioid, I've tried every single weaker opioid, I'm beyond compliant, I keep myself informed (as instructed, although it's being used against me now)... and, STILL, I'm treated like shit and get inadequate treatment.

How does this make any sense to anyone?

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

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Suboxone

Suboxone is NOT PAIN MEDICATION! It is for ADDICTS! It is buprenorphine and naloxone, but the naloxone/Narcan has no real effect when swallowed.

Below 0.2mg (like the buprenorphine patches) are for pain, above 2mg (like Suboxone) buprenorphine acts more like naltrexone. It prevents true opioids from working.

Sorry for the tone of this post, I'm frustrated, I've been seeing a lot of lies about Suboxone lately and it drives me nuts because most of the lies are started by DOCTORS!

Buprenorphine also seems to be much more habit forming than most opioids (likely due to the strong affinity for three mu-opioid receptors) and appears to create a much stronger physical dependence. It's harder to get off of than methadone, fentanyl, oxycodone, and morphine, especially for pain patients. For addicts, there's no high, so there's no temptation.

My last therapist specialized in pain patients and addicted patients, he told me that most of his patients that went on Suboxone regretted it. So many of them said that they'd rather stop heroin or methadone than stop Suboxone. I've also heard similar things from pain patients in my dozen different support groups after they were tricked into taking it.

I STRONGLY advocate AGAINST anyone starting Suboxone or Butrans
(buprenorphine patches) without FIRST researching them IN DETAIL.

Suboxone helps a few, but it hurts many. It is expensive, bad medicine. Methadone is 1/60th the price of Suboxone and it works for pain, dependence, or both at any dose.

Explanation of dependence, pseudo-addiction, addiction, and tolerance, for those interested
http://bit.ly/drugfallacies

Doctors can only LEGALLY prescribe Butrans for pain and Suboxone is only for opioid dependence. Accepting a prescription for Suboxone usually means that your chart will forever read "Opioid Dependence" or "opioid addiction".

Steve

Sunday, October 6, 2013

When It Comes To The Truth About Drug Addiction, Scientists Are 'Breaking Bad'

When It Comes To The Truth About Drug Addiction, Scientists Are 'Breaking Bad'
http://onforb.es/1bBgrvp

Please just take a few minutes to read it. It is a great article.

Quote from article that reiterates what I've been saying, groups like PROP are greedy, not concerned.

Dr. Hart explains why. According to the Times,

“Eighty to 90 percent of people are not negatively affected by drugs, but in the scientific literature nearly 100 percent of the reports are negative [affects],” Dr. Hart said.  “There’s a skewed focus on pathology.  We scientists know that we get more money if we keep telling Congress that we’re solving this terrible problem. We’ve played a less than honorable role in the war on drugs.”

Steve

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Walgreens' "secret checklist" reveals controversial new policy - 13 WTHR Indianapolis

Walgreens' "secret checklist" reveals controversial new policy - 13 WTHR Indianapolis

http://bit.ly/1fkEiOT

Someone actually got a copy of the policy. The PDF is available at:

http://bit.ly/1fkEPAs

Steve
IntractablePainKills@gmail.com