Pubdate: Sat, 18 Oct 2003 Source: Star-Banner, The (FL) Copyright: 2003 The Star-Banner Contact: http://www.starbanner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1533 Author: Dr. C. Brooks Henderson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/limbaugh Rush Limbaugh Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) USER VS. ADDICT Rush Limbaugh, ordinarily not one of my favorite people, is to be congratulated on his frank admission of a drug problem and announcing his intention to seek treatment. Unfortunately, media commentary on the situation has used the rather nonspecific term "addiction" without clarification. When the cause of chronic pain is not amendable to cure and pain remains chronic in spite of alternative methods of treatment, various narcotics are the appropriate treatment. Most chronic pain patients use the medications as directed and do not require constantly increasing doses to obtain relief. They respect the hazards of overdose and rarely misuse the medication for recreational purposes. They may become dependent on of the narcotic, but their dependency is not technically different from that of some diabetics on insulin. It is a dependency that enables normal life rather than preventing it. Drug abuse is different, in that the drug is used for recreational or the relief of psychological miseries that would be more appropriately treated by "non-abusable" medications, such as anti-depressants. These individuals use steadily increasing doses far beyond any reasonable need in a doomed effort to find oblivion or bliss rather than address the psychological problems causing their distress. It is the latter group who take advantage of unwary physicians to obtain prescriptions for which there is no legitimate indication and whose perceived need for ever larger doses leads them to deal in the black market. It is these people who are appropriately described as addicts. Media's failure to discriminate these groups has caused confusion for patients. Too many refuse needed pain relief because of the mistaken belief that drug abuse will inevitably follow. Limbaugh's announcement and the subsequent media discussion have missed the opportunity to educate the public about the difference. Dr. C. Brooks Henderson, Dunnellon - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom