Pubdate: Sat, 02 Feb 2002
Source: Sun News (SC)
Copyright: 2002 Sun Publishing Co
Contact:  http://web.thesunnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/987
Author: Lenore Skenazy (New York Daily News)

PRESCRIPTIONS SAFELY EASE NEEDLESS PAIN

Last week, my friend Joan had a hernia operation, which means that she was 
sliced open, stitched up and sent home with a handful of painkillers - 
which she didn't take. Howling agony seemed preferable to the peace her 
doctor had prescribed. Why? "I was afraid I'd get addicted," says Joan.

This is a myth so prevalent - even among some medical doctors - that it 
must be addressed before Joan or anyone else suffers one more pain-racked 
night. Or day. Or life.

"There is a deep-seated belief that mere exposure to [a narcotic] causes 
addiction," says Richard Chapman, a pain researcher at the University of 
Utah School of Medicine. "But there is no good evidence for this. There are 
about 23 million people who have surgery every year, and we just don't see 
people who have had their gallbladders out going out onto the street trying 
to buy drugs."

Study after study has shown that when people take drugs to relieve pain, 
that's all that happens: pain relief. When the pain goes away, so does the 
desire for the drug.

This is true even among people with long-term or chronic pain, says June 
Dahl, a pharmacology professor at the University of Wisconsin. "People can 
be on a particular dose of drugs for years without needing an increase," 
says Dahl.

When they do need more, it's generally because the disease - say, cancer - 
has progressed, and so has the pain.

Now, it is true that anyone who abruptly stops taking a narcotic will 
experience the miseries of withdrawal - but this is not a sign of 
addiction. It's just a normal bodily response, explains Bill McCarberg, 
director of pain services at Kaiser Permanente in San Diego. People will go 
into withdrawal even if they stop taking something as innocuous as blood 
pressure medicine or antihistamines.

So from whence comes this notion that narcotics will corrupt anyone 
unfortunate enough to pop a few pills after surgery or a sprain? The pain 
docs blame the media.

"Any supermarket tabloid will yield a story about some star who has gotten 
addicted to painkillers and says, 'I'm a victim! I became addicted!"' says 
Chapman. "But this is absurd, because millions of Americans take 
[painkillers] without becoming addicted."

Generally, the addled star "is somebody who abused alcohol and a whole 
variety of substances [before] and now blames the doctors," Chapman says.

Another fear-inflaming factor is the country's anti-drug campaign. "Nancy 
Reagan's policy of 'just say no' made patients believe that if you ever 
take one pill, you're going to get hooked," says McCarberg. "So instead of 
just saying no to drug dealers, they started saying no to their doctors."

What a sad mistake! Here we are, lucky enough to be living in a time of 
safe, proven painkillers, yet millions of agonized Americans are afraid to 
take them.

When it comes to doctor-prescribed drugs, my pain-racked readers, just say yes.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth