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In reply to the discussion: One short letter's huge impact on the opioid epidemic [View all]Kittycow
(2,396 posts)15. Agree with you about indifference to pain patients.
A pain forum I read really has some desperate people at times that will threaten to turn to heroin or suicide, not in the moment, but if they can't get their pain relieving drugs. It's frightening when the government threatens more sanctions.
Now the practitioner is pushing me to get a spinal cord stimulator. I don't want to because of the risks.I think it's becoming a medical device industry.
What's so simple in my case is that they forced me to go off Elavil so I haven't had a good nights sleep in a year now. Sleep is so restorative!
Sorry to go on and on but I feel like legit pain patients are invisible in this country overall.
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Oh bullshit. "Chronic severe pain" can be seen on an MRI when a patient has bone cancer or spinal
anneboleyn
Jun 2017
#13
I can't stand the anti-opioid hysteria as we have seen the suffering of REAL patients in our own
anneboleyn
Jun 2017
#11
Right. Fucking. ON, anneboleyn. Your fury and frustration towards every aspect of this
Leghorn21
Jun 2017
#18
Don't forget meditation! Oh! And also "counseling" to make you accept pain will be your life.
Coventina
Jun 2017
#44
This isn't tobacco. Real people, with real diseases, are suffering hideously, and if these drugs
anneboleyn
Jun 2017
#12
I'm sure if we make it harder for people in crippling pain to get relief, good things will happen
Warren DeMontague
Jun 2017
#22
I don't know the answer to this. I used oxycontin for weeks when I broke my shoulder 5 or so years
seaglass
Jun 2017
#37
Very soon a simple genetic test will identify people highly likely to be an addict.
AngryAmish
Jun 2017
#41