User Panel
|
Fentanyl and Carfentanyl are killing people in record numbers.......So let's cut production of pharma grade stuff, so more of the junkies are using the really scary stuff
|
|
Quoted:
The DEA needs to severely restrict Narcan production & availability. It should be on the order of rare snake anti-venom. Want to do drugs? cool. Check out early & make room for someone with more brain cells. View Quote |
|
|
Quoted:
It's not just the DEA. It's the doctors and pharmacists themselves that have advocated for a huge reduction in prescriptions in some lame attempt to '...just save a single life...' View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Fuck the DEA. They're the reason patients in tremendous chronic pain get told to fuck off and don't get the pain relief they need. They've got doctors afraid to actually treat patients in the most effective and compassionate manner. DEA should be disbanded. It's the doctors and pharmacists themselves that have advocated for a huge reduction in prescriptions in some lame attempt to '...just save a single life...' Bullshit. You really must go out of your way to be factually incorrect on every single issue. |
|
Quoted:
Yet you're making more of an effort to avoid it than answer it. 2 posts, one with 3 different lines (for emphasis apparently) View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
|
Quoted:
Fuck the DEA. They're the reason patients in tremendous chronic pain get told to fuck off and don't get the pain relief they need. They've got doctors afraid to actually treat patients in the most effective and compassionate manner. DEA should be disbanded. View Quote |
|
Quoted:
You're forgetting doctors giving them out are the reason most teens (I'm guessing adults too) become addicts. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
So illegal manufacturing is going to go down 20% while legal also goes down? I think we can file you're assertion under "Stuff That never actually happens outside the fervid statist imagination". |
|
Quoted:
Well, I drive through the area of WV regularly that made the news for the number of rx filled. Something like millions of doses there isn't 1000 people living in the immediate area. I would imagine that maybe the DEA might be right that there was a problem with that pharmacy and the doctors writing the rxs. At a certain point even the local county cops knew they had a serious problem with that pharmacy. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Demand decreased because the DEA is prosecuting doctors for prescribing more painkillers than the government thinks is "necessary." Let *that* sink in a moment. The government bureaucrats decided that in order to stop opiate abuse it had to tell medical professionals to stop doing their jobs, then, in order to combat the growing black market for opiates (caused by the first encroachment) it has to tell the manufacturers to stop doing their jobs. Where, exactly, does it end? Until you answer that, I'm not prescribing any Schedule II opiates to any new patients. |
|
Quoted:
Fuck the DEA. They're the reason patients in tremendous chronic pain get told to fuck off and don't get the pain relief they need. They've got doctors afraid to actually treat patients in the most effective and compassionate manner. DEA should be disbanded. View Quote Opiates are massively abused, are a dead end long term, but some folks really need them to get by. |
|
Quoted:
So you would say that the doctors writing a tremendous number of scripts for spurious back injuries at pill mills were treating their patients in the most effective and compassionate manner? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Fuck the DEA. They're the reason patients in tremendous chronic pain get told to fuck off and don't get the pain relief they need. They've got doctors afraid to actually treat patients in the most effective and compassionate manner. DEA should be disbanded. |
|
Quoted:
On arfcom, we question the police plenty, why not doctors? I'd say many doctors are not properly doing their jobs. Recently many are over prescribing opioids, for a while now- antibiotics, and also recently putting guys on testosterone shots not as a last resort but because the patient wishes it. I'm not seeing the restraint that should be applied to these medications. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Demand decreased because the DEA is prosecuting doctors for prescribing more painkillers than the government thinks is "necessary." Let *that* sink in a moment. The government bureaucrats decided that in order to stop opiate abuse it had to tell medical professionals to stop doing their jobs, then, in order to combat the growing black market for opiates (caused by the first encroachment) it has to tell the manufacturers to stop doing their jobs. Where, exactly, does it end? On arfcom, we question the police plenty, why not doctors? I'd say many doctors are not properly doing their jobs. Recently many are over prescribing opioids, for a while now- antibiotics, and also recently putting guys on testosterone shots not as a last resort but because the patient wishes it. I'm not seeing the restraint that should be applied to these medications. |
|
I've never taken prescription painkillers except once for a bad burn when I was in high school.
I hope when I'm old, all the stuff that works isn't banned. Between my back, knees, and feet, I expect to be hurting when I'm 70. |
|
Quoted:
First you have to give me some evidence that you, personally, are qualified to define "over prescribing" of any drug, by a physician. View Quote JAMA study: Nearly one-third of antibiotics are prescribed unnecessarily |
|
Quoted:
Boxed yourself into a corner with that "argument" JAMA study: Nearly one-third of antibiotics are prescribed unnecessarily View Quote |
|
Quoted:
Boxed yourself into a corner with that "argument" JAMA study: Nearly one-third of antibiotics are prescribed unnecessarily View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
First you have to give me some evidence that you, personally, are qualified to define "over prescribing" of any drug, by a physician. JAMA study: Nearly one-third of antibiotics are prescribed unnecessarily |
|
Quoted:
Boxed yourself into a corner with that "argument" JAMA study: Nearly one-third of antibiotics are prescribed unnecessarily View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
First you have to give me some evidence that you, personally, are qualified to define "over prescribing" of any drug, by a physician. JAMA study: Nearly one-third of antibiotics are prescribed unnecessarily |
|
|
why not just ban painkillers from fed employees. Work for the irs and got a compound fracture? suck it up and take an advil.
|
|
|
Quoted:
So illegal manufacturing is going to go down 20% while legal also goes down? I thought it was the cartels and illegal druggies that are making the stuff are responsible for the OD's because they cut it with other shit. View Quote |
|
We're being Medellined. Or is it reverse-Medellined?
"And until somebody finds a way to convince 20% of the population to stop snorting and smoking that shit, reduction in production's |
|
|
Quoted:
And, the circle jerk of BS is now complete! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
No problem, the cartels will quickly fill that gap with cheaply produced fentanyl which is approx. 1000 times stronger than heroin. Another smart move by the Feds. How else will you justify increasing spending the war on drugs? |
|
|
this opioid "epidemic" is weird.
in the past we used to run a good mix of pill vs street drug issues in ems and rescue. In the last 3 years i have run 1 pill related call. our "drug calls" are up massively the last few years and 90% of it is heroin or heroin mixed drugs sold on the street. these junkies didn't go from a pain management mindset to heroine. they went from a desire to get high to a bigger desire to get high. pills don't do it for them. |
|
|
Quoted:
Not enough IMO. Opioid epidemic is getting worse. Glad they are focusing on the source. Most Teens Who Abuse Opioids First Got Them From a Doctor. View Quote |
|
Quoted:
this opioid "epidemic" is weird. in the past we used to run a good mix of pill vs street drug issues in ems and rescue. In the last 3 years i have run 1 pill related call. our "drug calls" are up massively the last few years and 90% of it is heroin or heroin mixed drugs sold on the street. these junkies didn't go from a pain management mindset to heroine. they went from a desire to get high to a bigger desire to get high. pills don't do it for them. View Quote This "epidemic " has been driven by the Feds tightening the control of hydro and Oxy prescriptions. The black market for those prescriptions was controlled by supply and demand. Diverting controled pills kept those who self medicated on a predictable path. Less ODs, more normal and less of a junkie lifestyle. The Feds stepped in 3 or 4 years ago and tightened up guide line for MDs then reschuled hydro along with new guide lines for supplying Oxy/Hydro to curtail diversion. Supply did dry up. Now people who were pill popping for years maintaining a normal lifestyle have turned to Herion or its street level equivalent. That equals a totally unpredictable path and full blown junkie lifestyle. His opinion is the Feds are damned if they do and damned if they don't. One thing is knows for sure is the Feds have negatively impacted the innocent patients who now are either denied pain relief or have to change MDs just get some sleep. The outcome is more ODs because junkie lifestyle and Herion go hand and hand. |
|
|
Quoted:
No problem, the cartels will quickly fill that gap with cheaply produced fentanyl which is approx. 1000 times stronger than heroin. Another smart move by the Feds. View Quote No self-respecting bureaucratic would believe that. |
|
Quoted:
Yep. I was close to someone who had severe chronic pain for years after a wreck. This person was not a junkie. I don't think I ever saw her ever even drink alcohol, she just had spinal damage and resulting pain. The last surgery she had luckily took away most of the cause of her pain. She went through a rehab program after and now lives a life without opiates. I personally believe she would have offed herself if opiates had not been available during the worst of it. I also heard horror stories of how medical staff treated her during a few kidney stone events. Their eyes would glaze over, "drug seeker" expression after they saw her medical history. Funny how they started stepping and fetching when the x-ray of a bloated kidney came back. Opiates are massively abused, are a dead end long term, but some folks really need them to get by. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Fuck the DEA. They're the reason patients in tremendous chronic pain get told to fuck off and don't get the pain relief they need. They've got doctors afraid to actually treat patients in the most effective and compassionate manner. DEA should be disbanded. Opiates are massively abused, are a dead end long term, but some folks really need them to get by. An easy way to control for drug seekers is simply not to prescribe them unless I actually do a procedure and even then limit the amount. Legitimate prescriptions are not fueling the overdose epidemic, massive amounts of heroin and fentanyl on the street are the cause. |
|
jeez....
it appeared that there were a lot of pot users here, but I didn't realize there were that many non legit pain med druggies here edit - here is a solution that most docs would approve of... acute pain meds limited to 3 days, no stronger than 5 mg hydrocodone, and your name goes on a list for having been prescribed pain meds. all chronic pain med users go to low cost privately run, but government authorized pain med centers. any deviation or misuse and the user's name goes on a government list so they can't get chronic meds anymore. this would solve the blame the doc game people are doing here, only legit pain med people get the meds, and docs don't have to keep screening for chronic pain med seekers, as if someone is drug seeking, they should show up on the list. |
|
Quoted:
Pure 'tardery that will only hurt people who have legitimate needs for the drugs. Addicts will find the stuff one way or another. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Pure 'tardery that will only hurt people who have legitimate needs for the drugs. Addicts will find the stuff one way or another. 1-trick ponies have a monopoly in govt. Quoted:
Quoted:
Artificial scarcity won't help the situation. Our nations drug policy makers are fucking idiots. |
|
|
|
Quoted:
You figured it all out bro. A fucking genius you must be. View Quote or get blamed for not prescribing pain meds, because the drug seekers are ruining the system. it sames time and effort to not prescribe pain meds to anyone. people complain about a pain med abuse problem. the government wants to cut back production, which many in the last thread had blamed big pharma for causing the problem, and people start screaming over regulation and limiting the drug supply. seems people are using the same arguements supply and regulation about pot, so..... |
|
|
Quoted:
jeez.... it appeared that there were a lot of pot users here, but I didn't realize there were that many non legit pain med druggies here edit - here is a solution that most docs would approve of... acute pain meds limited to 3 days, no stronger than 5 mg hydrocodone, and your name goes on a list for having been prescribed pain meds. all chronic pain med users go to low cost privately run, but government authorized pain med centers. any deviation or misuse and the user's name goes on a government list so they can't get chronic meds anymore. this would solve the blame the doc game people are doing here, only legit pain med people get the meds, and docs don't have to keep screening for chronic pain med seekers, as if someone is drug seeking, they should show up on the list. View Quote Why stop at pain medication, why not create an algorithm for all medical problems? Shit, I love non-doctors telling us doctors how to do our fucking job. It gives me a fucking hard-on. |
|
Quoted:
What if someone in the list breaks his leg. Are they still barred from pain medication? Why stop at pain medication, why not create an algorithm for all medical problems? Shit, I love non-doctors telling us doctors how to do our fucking job. It gives me a fucking hard-on. View Quote sure they pt. will complain about the return visit, but it will justify the refill. I don't know about you, but the drug seekers waste a lot of time and effort trying to keep them out. |
|
|
|
Quoted:
jeez.... it appeared that there were a lot of pot users here, but I didn't realize there were that many non legit pain med druggies here edit - here is a solution that most docs would approve of... acute pain meds limited to 3 days, no stronger than 5 mg hydrocodone, and your name goes on a list for having been prescribed pain meds. all chronic pain med users go to low cost privately run, but government authorized pain med centers. any deviation or misuse and the user's name goes on a government list so they can't get chronic meds anymore. this would solve the blame the doc game people are doing here, only legit pain med people get the meds, and docs don't have to keep screening for chronic pain med seekers, as if someone is drug seeking, they should show up on the list. View Quote |
|
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.