| Thank you for sharing this. Someone I love has chronic pain managed with (legally prescribed) opioids, and they have constant low-level anxiety that a bureaucratic mixup will result in their medication being denied (or heaven forbid they lose a prescription, or that they'll need a refill when their doctor is on vacation and the locum will be 'suspicious of drug seeking behavior'. They had to sign a document that if they lost a prescription, they understood that they would be denied a refill, even though (a) there isn't actually any reason to physically hand them the piece of paper, it could all be done between the doctor and pharmacy, and (b) people with chronic pain typically also exhibit various degrees of 'being distracted' due to that same pain. I could go on, and TBH, my friend hasn't had any gaps in getting their medication, but the current wave of anti-opioid hysteria is concerning. |
This is not the media's fault, nor is this is not chronic pain patients' faults. This is the result of criminal corruption and abuse in the pharmaceutical industry and distribution system. There is a real and enormous problem https://www.drugabuse.gov/related-topics/trends-statistics/o... (opioid overdose death rates have more than quadrupled in 20 years, are at a high level already versus other causes of death at 50k annually, and are accelerating). Opioids are some of the most dangerously addictive medicines that exist, and habituation and pill selling is a huge problem that is also ruining and ultimately costing lives.