Thursday, March 30, 2006

Prescription Pain Killers Becomming Major Killers Themselves

Video Eyewitness News at 10

Prescription Pain Killers Becoming Major Killer
March 30th, 2006 @ 10:00pm

John Hollenhorst Reporting

If something you can buy at the store suddenly started killing 250 Utahns a year, you'd think there'd be a huge public outcry. You'd think, but there's been no public outcry at all. That's a real body count, with a trend that's getting drastically worse.
The killer is prescription pain-medicine. The victims are not drug abusers on the street, but average Utahns under the care of a doctor. Legally prescribed pain-killers came out of nowhere in the last six years to become a leading cause of death.
It's the miracle in a bottle and a potential death trap for people like Kay Brown. He suffered from chronic back pain so severe he says it was like nothing else in the world mattered. Then he got relief from Morphine, Methadone, Oxycodone.
Dr. M. Kay Brown, Pain Victim: "They don't really solve it. They ameliorate it. I can bear it. I can stand it. I can function both in my family and in my profession."
But Utah's Medical Examiner Todd Grey has noticed a severe side-effect, death, in growing numbers.
Dr. Todd Grey, Utah Medical Examiner: 'What I consider spectacular numbers now. Spectacularly bad."
Epidemiologist Christy Porucznik has been giving presentations on the rising death toll to pain doctors.
Christy Porucznik, Epidemiologist, Utah Dept. of Health: "I can just see their faces get white because they know they're prescribing these drugs pretty commonly."
Through the 1990's, a couple of dozen Utahns a year died from legally-prescribed pain-killers. In 1999 it turned steeply upward; 249 last year, who knows how many in 2006.
Dr. Todd Grey: "Quite frankly, I think it's an epidemic."
The deaths are thought not to be suicides. It's mostly accidental overdoses by people who are not chronic abusers.
Dr. Robert Finnegan, Univ. of Utah Pain Clinic: "We're talking about average folds, white collar workers, blue collar folks."
Pain doctors used to steer away from narcotics because of worries about addiction and abuse.
Dr. Robert Finnegan: "We didn't want to give much."
But the medical culture shifted as the benefit to pain patients like Kay Brown became clear.
Christy Prucznik: "Pain is managed much more aggressively, which is a good thing because we don't want people to be in pain. But at the same time, I think the pendulum might have swung a little bit too far."
Some pain victims simply use too much; they get relief and want more. Doctors sometimes prescribe multiple drugs that interact in poorly understood ways.
Christy Prucznik: "And so there's not going to be one easy solution."
Kay Brown worries that if the pendulum swings too far the other way, he'd be pushed back into his own personal Hell.
Dr. Kay Brown: "That's where I'd be, I'd be locked in that little dark room with no escape."
The same trend is beginning to get noticed in other states. Experts predict it will trigger serious re-thinking about the best way to control severe pain.

2 comments:

Tatyanna (and Dorian too) said...

Watch out. Here in Illinois, the pain medicine pendulum has definitely swung in the opposite direction. I suffer from a chronic pain disorder, and pain killers saved my life. But now that teens with irresponsible parents and the like have gotten hold of them for fun, and a person like me has to beg, plead, and resort to visiting the e.r.

I'm sure the general position in Utah is much more conservative. But I believe that a reasonable individual adult should be free to choose whatever method of treatment he/she would like. No one else should worry about the reason. A human being should be free to make his own decisions.

Anonymous said...

Well, these people have a good point. I myself was being treated by a 'pain manager' huh, try internal medicine doctor, Elena Goncharova. They got me hooked on Oxy-80; Fentora 600mcg;tabs, Actiq 800mcg. This was at Utah Pain & Rehab. Thanks A Lot. Now, last week, she decided to give me absolutely NOTHING. Not even considering minimizing so that I could get OFF the narcotics without having the most painful withdrawals a person can possibly immagine. How about a doctor taking these meds? How about a doctor being shut off from them Cold turkey? What are the side affects of that????? Where am I supposed to go for my Degenerative Disc/joint disease my father died from, plus my Fibromyalgia, that no one seems to care about or believe, or how about the 4 discs that are slipping in my lower back, two pinched nerves, the most painful pain I can imagine. NO ONE WILL HELP ME. All they say is go to rehab, sure, they won't take you off slowly enough to avoid withdrawal and then give you non-narcotics. They just want to throw you in a room & let you suffer it out. Well, let me tell you, I would rather DIE before I did that.
And, Thank you Dr. Finnegan for not being there at Utah Pain & Rehab last Friday, April 27, to help me. NO, you had to quit. Good job. What happened to the law that a patient is to be kept comfortable??? If I was old, no one would give a darn about anything I took. So, I will, Find a way to get what I need to bring myself down. I am NOT an addict. I am dependent. And it is NOT FAIR that all of the sudden all the doctors are afraid to treat patients, to help them come off the meds slowly & start them on the non-narcs. My 5th Wedding anniversary was just ruined today by Utah Pain Specialists. Specifically, Rajiv Shah, M.D. And, my own PCM who is supposed to help me, Dr. Kevin Gardner. Thanks to all. There are other ways to get meds without you all. And, I guess I will just have to take that route. My pain is real. I have MRI's; I have knee surgery next week, I may even have back surgery soon for my disc in the low back area & possibly in the mid-back. What then? Nothing??? Why don't you doctor's go back to school and learn about FIBROMYALGIA AND MYOFASCIAL PAIN SYNDROME!!! IT IS REAL!!! And, I have been trying for 3 years for help & to get SSDI. I cannot walk without a cane, and I have a scooter. My PCM & Insurance authorized this. I am DISABLED. WHAT IS WRONG WITH YOU PEOPLE YOU CALL YOURSELF'S PAIN SPECIALISTS, YEAH? TRY AGAIN. HELP THE PEOPLE THAT NEED HELP. NOT THE DRUG SEEKERS, THEY GET WHAT THEY WANT. WE GET NOTHING BECAUSE THEY OVERDOSE, NOT US!!