Judy
Hall's Letter
to Congresswomen and Senstors.
I
saw you and eleven of the other female senators on the Larry
King Show a few weeks back and thought that the power of all
of you female senators together may be able to help us. So
I am writing this same letter to all of you on behalf of the
30 to 40 million chronic pain patients in our country today.
It doesn't
even matter what our diagnoses are as pain is what we live
with everyday, high levels of continuous chronic intractable
pain. According to many credible sources, the term chronic
pain refers to a person having continuous intractable pain
for a minimum of five months. Medline, a website devoted to
medical issues of all kinds, defines chronic pain as: "a
condition that is continuous or persistent over an extended
period of time. a chronic condition is one that is long-standing
and not easily or quickly resolved."
In an
effort to help you understand what chronic pain is like, I
want you to think about having a toothache that continues
day after day as the dentist tells you there is nothing that
can be done to fix it and that you'll just have to live with
it.
What
would you do?
I want
you to think about being in child bearing labor pains day
after day and your doctor keeps telling you it's all in your
mind or you're just going through a crisis and once you've
figure out how to resolve it the pain will go away.
What
would you do?
I want
you to think about after having had back surgery to relieve
your pain, the pain persists, but the doctor keeps telling
you that you shouldn't be having any pain at all as the surgery
fixed it.
What
would you do?
This
is what we, chronic pain patients, go though every day of
our lives and more; this is what chronic pain feels like.
The reason
I am contacting you and the rest of the female senators is
that chronic pain patients in this country have become increasingly
disturbed and frightened by the government's position and
continued restriction of a classification of lifesaving medications
called opioids that we must take in order to have any quality
of life. In particular, is the recent focus regarding the
prescribing of the drug Oxycontin, manufactured by Purdue
Pharma. This drug is taken by many of us, without consequence,
to control our pain.
Yes,
there are a few people who take our lifesaving medications
and abuse them, but according to all of the reports, that
were only a few hundred, while we chronic pain patients are
in the millions. Also, according to the coroner's reports,
the people who died from inappropriately ingesting this drug
were also taking other drugs with it, including alcohol. To
punish the chronic pain patient by continuing to restrict
our access to this drug and other opiates creates in the chronic
pain patient and in our doctors, fear that is not only unnecessary,
but also cruel.
Yes we
take high levels of opiates including other drugs consistent
with our diagnoses. We can take these high levels of opiates
as our doctors increase our dosages slowly over long periods
of time, which is medically termed "titration."
We do build a tolerance to the opiate, which requires increasing
our dosages slowly until we reach the point where our pain
is controlled. With the chronic pain patient, our levels of
pain often go up and down depending on our lifestyles and
diagnoses.
Research
such as that reported in the April 5th issue of the Journal
of the American Medical Association (JAMA) validates that,
high levels of opiates titrated appropriately, do not hurt
us in anyway physically. In fact opiates are among the safest
drugs on the market today in regard to the affects on our
body systems. Opiates do no tissue damage to the body at all
unlike many other prescriptions and over the counter drugs.
According to another article also published in the journal
of the American Medical Association, more than 100,000 Americans
die every year from bad reactions to FDA-approved drugs. Researchers
from a Toronto study stated: "serious adverse drug reactions
are frequent ... more so than generally recognized. Fatal
adverse drug reactions to prescribed and over the counter
drugs appear to be between the fourth and sixth leading cause
of death."
If someone
looked at a chronic pain patient's pharmacy records, it does
look like we take huge amounts of opiates, but because of
the slow increases in our dosages, we don't overdose, nor
do we get "high" or feel "euphoric." Only
our pain levels drop to the point where we can have a decent
quality of life and in some cases, we can even return to work.
Some
of us have been told by our government that since we are taking
such high levels of opiates we would overdose and die, and
therefore we must be selling them. This attitude is just wrong,
as any true chronic pain patient wouldn't think of giving
up their medications and it is a misunderstanding of the concept
of titration. Yes, anyone taking the levels of opiates we
take, without slowly increasing the dosage, would die.
Also,
there are many other categories of non-opiate drugs such as
antidepressants, tranquillizers, blood pressure medications,
insulin, Ritalin and antipsychotics to name just a few, that
all require slowly increasing or decreasing the dosage. Depending
on how long you have been on, for example, an antidepressant
you can't just stop taking it; you have to have your dosage
decreased slowly or withdrawal symptoms will appear. In fact
there is a recent lawsuit filed by Nguyen & Farber against
the SmithKline Beecham Corporation states that "antidepressant
drugs, including selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors 'SSRI'
such as Paxil, are similarly hazardous, even more so in many
instances. Medical risk taking of this nature would be acceptable
if the habit-forming nature of Paxil were fully divulged to
physician and patient prior to selection of Paxil.
But it
is not. Serious habit forming characteristics are formed,
and the Paxil patient is unable to wean himself/herself off
the drug after therapeutic use is no longer needed. Physical
and psychological dependency on Paxil is the result. Withdrawal
problems of many varieties occur. When withdrawal problems
arise, the patient often feels entrapped, in despair, and
desolate. Hope fades. Addiction worsens. Even "suicide
occurs." Several years ago opiate prescribing was very
different in our country. The following is what has happened
since, due to our government's actions:
1.
Opiates cannot be refilled. This means we must see our
doctors at least once a month to get our prescriptions.
For many
of us this means we cannot work, as employers won't let us
off either a morning or afternoon once a month to see our
doctors and often we have to search for a pharmacy that stocks
our drugs. Many pharmacies have stopped stocking these medications
out of the same fears the doctors have or fear they will be
robbed.
2.
If the pharmacy doesn't have the number of pills prescribed
by our doctors, we are just shorted. This means if our
doctors prescribed 60 and the pharmacy only has 40, we can't
get the remainder when the pharmacy reorders. We are just
stuck with the amount. This doesn't happen with any other
drug category as in those cases, pharmacies will either contact
you when the remainders are in, or they mail them to you.
With
the controversy over Oxycontin, our government is proposing
the following even more restrictive approaches:
1.
Fingerprinting chronic pain patients. This takes away
our dignity and respect and that if it happened to any other
patient taking any other kind of drug, you would hear screaming
from all quarters of the country.
2.
Restricting the prescribing of Oxycontin to only the 4,000
pain specialists in the country. See the attached USA
Today article dated June 20th 2001, titled "DEA Goal:
Protect the People," and the rebuttal commentary article
also from that issue. Since there are 30 to 40 million chronic
pain patients in this country today, where does that leave
the poor pain patient or the rural pain patient? Pain specialists
are expensive and neither Medicare nor Medicaid will pay for
these doctors. Because of this, we, chronic pain patients,
usually end up in financial disaster due to our inability
to work and some of us do not have someone who could support
us financially. It is also difficult to prove to social security
disability that pain in and of itself is debilitating so we
are denied the benefits we so badly need.
3.
Our government is sending in undercover agents to doctors
who are trying to help us in an effort to catch them prescribing
to non pain patients. This has so frightened our physicians
so much, that in many cases they have stopped prescribing
our lifesaving medications. Physicians all over this great
land of ours are losing their licenses or worse being prosecuted.
As pain is subjective, how can a physician truly know if someone
is faking it or not? Our doctors take many precautions to
weed out these types of people, but sometimes they slip through.
Should our physicians be punished for this? Just one example
of many is Dr. Joan Lewis of Albuquerque New Mexico who has
now lost her license and is pending prosecution solely for
helping pain patients. Her story can be found in the Albuquerque
Tribune issue of July 5th 2001, titled "Pain Relief On
Trial." There are several supportive letters in the article
from her patients who feel she brought them back to the living.
I have included a copy of the article for your review. There
are many other similar situations that make every other doctor
fear treating us. Pharmacists often face the same scrutiny.
Our physicians
often tell us that pain doesn't kill. Tell that to Barry Levin,
the famous attorney or the wife of former Germany's Chancellor,
Helmut Kohl who suffered from chronic intractable pain and
who both recently committed suicide. There are many stories
about ordinary people, not famous, who have decided they can't
take the daily high levels of chronic pain and have ended
their own suffering. Research indicates that at least one-third
of under medicated or non-medicated chronic pain patients
commit suicide.
We
are also told that these medications are "highly addictive"
and say they are bad for us. According to a National Institute
of Health (NIH) study, it was determined that only 7 out of
24,000 of chronic pain patients studied, showed any signs
of addictive behavior. Let me state that again, only 7 out
of 24,000.
Aside
from this study, NIH also stated that 17,000 people die each
year from complications from all the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
medications. They literally bleed to death. Even the commercials
on television that talk about drugs like Celbrex and Vioxx
state that. Where is the balance here?
Research
such as that reported in the April 5th issue of the Journal
of the American Medical Association (JAMA) validates that
high levels of opiates titrated appropriately, do not hurt
us in anyway physically. In fact opiates are among the safest
drugs on the market today in regard to the affects on our
body systems. Opiates do not cause tissue damage to the body,
unlike many other prescriptions and over the counter drugs.
It's
important for you to know, that even though I take high levels
of opiates plus other drugs that assist in lowering my pain
level, I'm neither "high" nor "euphoric."
It's important that you know that chronic pain patients are
normal looking people. We do not look like addicts with eyes
glazed over and our chins on our chests, nodding out from
overdosing on opiates that are intended to relieve our suffering.
Even
though these levels of opiates do not have the same effect
on us as they do on addicts, again because of the slow increasing
of our medication. We are dependent on our drugs and would
suffer a physical withdrawal if we were suddenly cut off from
them and due to our government's actions, many have been cut
off and have gone through withdrawal unnecessarily or they
have chosen to end their lives to prevent withdrawal and return
to level of pain that are intolerable. Chronic pain patients
don't suffer both a physical and a psychological withdrawal
that an addict would if suddenly cut off from their supply.
We also don't have "drug-seeking" behavior. We don't
go to multiple doctors for the same prescription and we don't
"crave" increasing amounts of drugs like an addict
would. Our pain level just increases when we build a tolerance
to our opiates. It is true that often the chronic pain patient
must see anywhere from 5 to 10 doctors trying to find one
who will help us, but that is not the same as an addict what
an addict would do. We also take as few opiates as possible
and even then our pain is never fully relieved, it just drops
our level of pain to where can tolerate it. An addict wouldn't
do that.
Chronic
pain patients also have what is known as "flare-ups"
or times that the opiate doesn't fully keep our pain level
at this tolerable level. For this we are given, by our physicians,
what are called "break-though medications" that
may also be opiates, which again, bring our pain levels back
down to tolerable. When the flare-up is over, we stop taking
the break-through medications. An addict wouldn't do that.
They would take as much as they could to achieve their high.
We also
use other approaches to decrease our pain so that we are not
so dependent on just opiates or other drugs. Many of us, if
appropriate, use approaches such as biofeedback, massage therapy,
chiropractic, stretching exercises and non-weight bearing
swimming to name just a few. We do everything we can to reduce
our need for opiates. An addict wouldn't do that.
There
are ways of separating the addict from the true chronic pain
patient and in many states, but not all, there are controls
in place that monitor what drugs and what doctors we see.
In these states, pharmacies are connected to computers at
the state level so that if we were seeing multiple doctors
for the same prescription, we would be caught and possibly
prosecuted. This should be the standard throughout the country.
Chronic
pain patients also would not mind being registered so that
our treatment isn't interfered with and we can continue our
lives without living in constant fear that we will be labeled
or mistaken for addicts, which often, we are. We are just
trying to relieve our pain, that's all. We have no desire
to get "high," just enjoy life as everybody else
does.
If the
government continues with this approach in trying to control
how much medication we can take and who we can see to get
them, there will, come a time, not might, when many of us
will come to a crossroad. One path would lead to going through
withdrawal and returning to levels of pain that are unbearable,
or the other path that would lead to ending our suffering
in the way that will take us out of this life and to a world
we hope will not be filled with the pain we currently endure.
This
approach by our government also affects our spirits and leaves
us feeling hopeless, helpless and exhausted.
Please
help us in anyway you can so that we, the chronic pain patients
of this country, won't have to come to that crossroad. We
pray we will never have to make that decision.
Sincerely,
Judy
Hall