Nailed It

I just read something on this blog that, for me, sums up the problem with pain management in the U.S. The entry discusses a new time-release hydrocodone-based painkiller that some people oppose because "abusers" might crush and snort it:

[I]t is maybe not the coolest thing to render invisible folks who might need or benefit from the medication by focusing instead on people who would not even pretend to take it as prescribed. I get that potential for abuse is a real factor to consider for any medication, but "moderate to severe pain" is also a real thing in the world. Saying, "We just don't need this on the market," is at best ill-informed and at worst dishonest and cruel.

The plain fact is that the powers that be care more about theoretical drug abusers than they do about real people in pain. I've known this for years, but the blog (found via [info] chronic_pain ) made me see a new facet of it, somehow. And I say this as someone who hopes never to use hydrocodone or any of its relatives again.
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Published on December 30, 2011 07:25
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message 1: by el (new)

el There is another part of that discussion...and it is the fact that many of the "powers to be" are not familiar with extreme ongoing pain. It is hard to understand something that you yourself do not know. The other sub subject here is the unconcious bias in the medical community. Doctors dramatically are less likely to prescribe pain medication for woman or for blacks.


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