Pubdate: Sun, 12 Sep 2004 Source: Greenville News (SC) Copyright: 2004 The Greenville News Contact: http://greenvillenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/877 Author: Ed Leap DOCTORS CHALLENGED WITH BALANCING PAIN, ADDICTION Hurricane Frances had an unforeseen effect on a patient I recently saw. It forced him to flee Florida without bringing any of the narcotics he chronically took for back pain. It was so ghastly a storm that he drove all the way from Florida without so much as a driver's license for identification. Even if I had given him a narcotic prescription, he would have needed some form of picture identification to purchase them. The fear inspired by a hurricane is a terrible thing. But then, so is prescription drug abuse. It's a battle every doctor fights. From day one in medical school, we want to believe people. We want to help them, and part of helping is accepting the truth of their complaints. When we are first lied to, young and new to medicine, we are angry and disturbed. Later, when we have been sufficiently jaded, it's just a fact of life. By now, almost every day that I work, someone presents me with a half-truth or frank lie in order to get narcotics. The battle is harder now than before. Medical science recognizes the unique character of pain in every individual, and the fact that some pain syndromes are hard to quantify. Many can't be found on physical exams, can't be measured by X-rays or lab tests. Furthermore, many organizations now exist to advocate for chronic pain sufferers, from professional organizations of pain management doctors to grass-roots patient groups. Also, large groups like the Joint Commission for Accreditation of Hospital Organizations (JCAHO) have taken up the cause, and look carefully at every hospital's plan to manage pain, trying to make sure that it's liberal enough, watching to see if we use a pain scale (is your pain a 1 or a 10?), and giving facilities a professional frown if the pain care seems inadequate. There's a reason. For a long time, many doctors were poorly educated in the recognition and treatment of pain. Too many broken bones in children were treated with only ibuprofen. Too many cancer victims down the years were told to take acetaminophen. All because of an inappropriate fear of causing addiction. Having experienced severe pain in the form of a kidney stone, I can say that there are times when only a narcotic will cut it. Still, there are people who want prescription drugs just because they like the way it feels to ride on a wave of euphoria. Some of them have pain, but could use other modes to treat it; injections, biofeedback, non-narcotic substances. Some once had severe pain and needed prolonged treatment, but want the feeling of the drugs even though the pain is now gone. And every year, our hospital sees a few who love it so much they fall asleep and stop breathing forever. A huge number of these people come to hospital emergency rooms for their substance of choice. Some pain advocates (even physicians) say to us, "You can't create an addict in the emergency room, so just give them what they say they need." Most of us who write the prescriptions feel that to do so, freely, contributes to the gradual dissolution of lives, and also to the enormous pool of prescription drugs sold on the street. It just feels wrong. Furthermore, there are other organizations at the opposite pole from JCAHO and others, notably the Drug Enforcement Agency and the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control, that take a dim view of over-prescribing, and that will take away licenses (and livelihoods) in response. Personally, I'd almost prefer to legalize narcotics over the counter. Not because there wouldn't be problems, but because it would take doctors like me out of the middle. Advocates say that only a fixed number will become addicted anyway. Fine, let them do it on their own, without fabricating stories for me to tease apart. But then there would be families with nowhere to turn for help. Occasionally, in the midst of trying to decide if someone's pain is real or ruse, I explain my concern that the patient is addicted. Typically, they get angry and want to file a complaint. But as I leave the room, their spouse, girlfriend, boyfriend or parent slips out with me. "Thank you for doing that, I've been trying to get them to stop for so long now! Maybe what you said will help," they tell me. And then I know that for some, the drug battle is worth fighting. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek