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Their Chronic Pain Program started me on opiods 8 years ago. I developed tolerance to my current dose, of course, several months ago and my doc said she won't increase my dose and eventually I'm going to have to withdraw from my opiod pain meds.
She sighted "studies" that said opiods are "dangerous" long term. I asked what the danger was and she said heart disease.
I can't take NSAIDS because I have moderate kidney disease.
So where does that leave me? Oxycontin has been the only drug to reduce my pain. Has anyone else had this problem?
I'm 55 and have Fibromyalgia, Mixed Connective Tissue Disease, Degenerative Disk Disease, Severe Sciatica, kidney disease, Hashimoto's Thyroiditis, Adrenal insuffiencency, Tinnitus, Rosacea, and toe nail fungus!
We were told that opioid therapy is safe for us if we take our medicines as ordered, and that the rate of addiction, under these conditions, if we do not have an addiction history, is low.
We were encouraged to confide in our MDs about the effect of our medicines and to tell them if our pain is not reduced to tolerable levels by the doses we were prescribed.
Our MDs assured us that tolerance is a normal physiological phenomenon and we will require medicine-dose increases periodically as time progresses.
Now, we are being told that long-term use of these same medicines can cause heart disease, brain damage, make us more-sensitive to pain, make us difficult for anaesthesiologists to sedate us for surgeries, that our immune systems are damaged and we are in a higher risk for infections.
These same MDs who encouraged us to take opioid medicines, are now telling us that we will be fine without them, they want to reduce or discontinue our therapies, and , to our utmost nightmare and horror:
We are now being referred to drug and alcohol rehabilitation units in psychiatric hospitals by these same MDs who encouraged our opioid use not-so-long ago.
We were persons in chronic pain who were prescribed medicines to help make our hell a little-less intolerable.
Now, we are called addicts.
When persons experiencing chronic, severe, relentless pain with no medical relief, there will be suicides.
Our blood will be on the hands of the same MDs who, initially, were significant in our relief.
And we trusted them!
I have trusted my pain management MD for years; I have, many times, posted how fortunate I am to have such a wonderful pain management team working with me.
Now, I do not trust any member of my pain management team- they clearly do not care about me.
So, what will become of all-of-these pain management MDs when they no loner have patients?
Frankly, I don't give a damn! Let them rot in hell!
I feel your pain, JoMully. I'm right there beside you.
What did she suggest, anything?
Kaiser doctors, unfortunately, are often between a rock and a hard place. Kaiser is their employer and signs their checks, they must go along with Kaiser's program. They don't always get to provide input with Kaiser's decisions.
Take care, Annette
.PS. They say that the count of prescribed medications overdoses have increased ? What about the number of the population as a whole over the years, are we to stay at the same number of citizens over the next 15 years. I can't say that any of us expected the number of younger male & female age's would rise with injury's but look at the statistics form 16-28 yrs old have been in some kind of trauma situation. Over the years 30 we forget how fragile the human body really is when younger. I'm tired of seeing myself and others being mistreated for all the wrong reasons from the DR Nurses and Pharmacy's .
And Beth, are they doing you the same way?
Actually, my MD and neuro-surgeon are fine, BUT there is a PA in my MD's office who is horrible!
It was she, three months ago, who told me a pure lie about a "new" program at a drug and alcohol rehab that has a program to reduce tolerance in NON ADDICT chronic pain patients.
I considered this, then did my own research on the "hospital".
There is no "new" program. It's an addiction treatment program that takes non-addicts in their program.
I spoke with the director of the program and he assessed that I am NOT a proper candidate for their program.
The PA bold faced lied to me. This was a few months ago and I'm over it, I will NEVER see this PA in my care again and my MD knows this.
Other than that, my SCS battery is dead and I'm miserable.
I have an appt with the neuro-surgeon to change the battery, but it'll be weeks before this happens, with insurance company approval and all.
I don't see the neuro-surgeon, whom I adore, until 26 Feb. He's done five of my surgeries already and I trust him 100%. I have almost no sensation in the area where the incision is made, so the battery change is pretty easy for me, but the wait is very difficult.
I think you may be confusing Medical Assistant with Physician Assistant
The majority of physician assistant programs graduate programs leading to the award of master's degrees in either Physician Assistant Studies, Health Science, or Medical Science, and require a bachelor's degree and GRE or MCAT scores for entry.
Professional licensure is regulated by the medical boards of the individual states .
Physician assistant education is based on medical education, although unlike medical school, which lasts four years plus a specialty-specific residency,
PA training is usually 2 to 3 years in duration, completed as post-graduate studies, for a total of 4—7 years of post-secondary education.
Yes, the health care situation for chronic pain is in a difficult state.
No, we are not living in a Communist regime.
Can you tell more about the Medicaid "Lock-In' program?
I think that Medicaid is a state, rather than a federal program and I know nothing about your part of the country.
Medical care is worse in most EU nations, and better in Sweden, which is a socialist country, as you most probably know.
Please do explain the "lock-in" program.
Thanks.
I was looking up PA programs in USA and UK.
The UK requires less time requirements, thus the 4-7 years:
Less in UK; more in US
Sorry for the mis-understanding.
Lori
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