Pubdate: Sun, 18 Dec 2005
Source: Oklahoman, The (OK)
Copyright: 2005 The Oklahoma Publishing Co.
Contact:  http://www.oklahoman.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/318
Author: Beth Gollob
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain)

PAIN SUFFERER TAKES MESSAGE ON THE ROAD

A Boston man walking cross-country to raise awareness about chronic pain 
stopped in Oklahoma City last week to talk about treatment options and 
roadblocks during an OU Medical Center forum. Attorney General Drew 
Edmondson complained during the forum about law enforcement efforts that 
restrict doctors from prescribing controlled medication for chronic pain.

Dennis Kinch, a chronic pain sufferer and spokesman for the National Pain 
Foundation, talked during Thursday's forum about the health problems that 
took away everything he loved. Kinch left Chicago in September on a walking 
trip along U.S. Highway 66 to raise awareness about chronic pain and 
options available.

"As I watched them (other pain sufferers), I said I couldn't let any more 
families be broken up over pain. I couldn't let any more people be 
suicidal, because that's where I was," Kinch said.

Kinch said he had chronic pain for four years before he was diagnosed with 
Paget's disease and ankylosing spondylitis -- degenerative spinal bone and 
joint diseases. By that time he had lost his job, children, insurance and 
home and began losing his ability to walk.

After moving from Colorado to Boston, he received treatment at the 
Massachusetts General Hospital Pain Center, where he learned how to cope 
with his pain and how to walk again.

Relief roadblocks Because controlled painkillers are the top method of 
controlling chronic pain, doctors often face scrutiny from the legal world, 
Edmondson said.

Edmondson said doctors often hesitate to prescribe pain management drugs to 
avoid investigations by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration or the 
state department of Narcotics and Dangerous Drug Control.

"If I ever have serious health problems, the last thing I want to see 
between me and my doctor is a DEA agent," Edmondson said.

Such investigations have instilled a climate of fear among doctors, said 
Dr. Gretchen Wienecke, an OU Physicians pain specialist.

New treatments such as spinal cord stimulation, Botox injections and killer 
sea snail venom injections have shown promise as alternatives to narcotic 
analgesic therapies, she said.

"There is no magic bullet, unfortunately. I tell my patients I can't cure 
their pain, but I can try to make it more bearable," Wienecke said.

Insurance is another roadblock to pain management, Kinch said. One company 
recently made him wait two weeks for a Neurontin prescription, so doctors 
gave him Percoset in the meantime. He immediately went to the streets and 
traded the pills for what he needed, he said.

"I have to spend a lot of time fighting with the system. It isn't right," 
he said.

Despite the problems, Kinch said proper treatment of his pain has helped 
him regain the hope sufferers usually lose.

"Pain's a dark tunnel, but there's light at the end of that tunnel," he 
said. "With this walk I'm trying to show if you do it little by little and 
string it all together, look how productive you can be."
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