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Quoted: The people going through withdrawal are hurting just as bad. Sure, it's self inflicted, but that pain is jsut as real. Are we a compassionate society, or do we punish people in pain becasue someone might be able to escape their miserable lives for a few moments a day? View Quote |
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Yeah the junkies have made it worse for everyone. I had to go to the ER a couple of times for a kidney stone. Got treated like a junkie till I told them all I wanted was Toradol, Allopurinol and IV Fluids to help flush the stone out. Then, I got the red carpet treatment. I got asked several times if I needed something stronger than Toradol. My ER nurse and doc told me they got a lot of people claiming they had a kidney stone asking for dilauded. I was one of the very few asking for stuff that actually works for kidney stones.
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I've been prescribed pain pills a handful of times at the local primecare. Pretty much any time I needed them. I asked them once about the "We Do Not Write Narcotic Prescriptions" signs hanging on the walls. They said "Oh, they're just there for the pill seekers." Guess I got them because I never asked for them. Sucks that it works that way these days.
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What is pain? How do you know they are not experiencing it? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Quoted: The people going through withdrawal are hurting just as bad. Sure, it's self inflicted, but that pain is jsut as real. Are we a compassionate society, or do we punish people in pain becasue someone might be able to escape their miserable lives for a few moments a day? That’s why every non-narcotic pain medicine they are offered “doesn’t work.” They work just fine for pain. But they don’t work for making them have the feeling they want from taking a narcotic. There is a whole subculture of recreational narcotic users that have become addicts making up shit they don’t have in order to be given narcotics in emergency departments. To the point they catch people injuring their urethra in the bathroom to make their urine show a bunch of blood in it, then finding out they have been to seven ERs with negative CT scans in the past month. Or the patient saying they are having a sickle cell crisis don’t have sickle cell anemia. Or the guy with cancer with Mets to the bone ends up having totally normal labs and no cancer. If I am talking about people lying about shit they don’t have to score narcotics. |
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So you're saying that non-narcotic NSAIDS and acetaminophen are equal to opiates for relief of intense pain? Yeah... your newsletter... it's a clusterf#ck. P.S. My kidneys and liver aren't real happy about 8.5 years of the NSAIDS and Tylenol I've shoveled at them. There is NO comparison about the effectiveness of those drugs compared to opiates in treating the pain of a messed-up spine. The biggest problem with opiates for me is that the relief from pain is only short-lived. It is what it is. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Quoted: The people going through withdrawal are hurting just as bad. Sure, it's self inflicted, but that pain is jsut as real. Are we a compassionate society, or do we punish people in pain becasue someone might be able to escape their miserable lives for a few moments a day? That’s why every non-narcotic pain medicine they are offered “doesn’t work.” They work just fine for pain. But they don’t work for making them have the feeling they want from taking a narcotic. Yeah... your newsletter... it's a clusterf#ck. P.S. My kidneys and liver aren't real happy about 8.5 years of the NSAIDS and Tylenol I've shoveled at them. There is NO comparison about the effectiveness of those drugs compared to opiates in treating the pain of a messed-up spine. The biggest problem with opiates for me is that the relief from pain is only short-lived. It is what it is. Saying every pain medicine but the ones they want don’t work or that they are allergic to them. They are not in pain. They want a fix of narcotics. I am not talking about the guy with 27 rods and screws in their leg, hip, and back, Or the poor bastard with cancer that has spread to the bone. Or the guy that just landed after a parachute jump and has a broken femur sticking out of his thigh. I thought this thread was about drug seekers lying about shit trying to get narcotics. There is a huge percentage of ER visits for that. As for your messed up spine, there are likely people with the exact same findings on X-ray or MRI getting through life just fine without being on narcotics every day. What is different about you versus them? |
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Wait... what? Not true (unless I read your statement wrong). NPs and PAs can (and do) prescribe schedule 2 substances in my state. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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LOL. NPs can't even prescribe controlled substances in all states, so I guess they won't fall for any shit will they. Not crazy doses. IIRC, they were 5mgs each. Normally 30-60 pills for the month. That part was always kind of odd. I never asked for a specific quantity. And each time I’d call for a refill, she’d write it for a different quantity. Like a box of chocolates, I never knew what I was going to get |
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Do the world a favor and hand them extra.
Narcan? I know I have the key for that cabinet around here somewhere. May take a while to find it though. |
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It is a good idea to get it filled for a future thing. I missed with a 5 pound sledge and hit my hand really hard. After keeping pressure on to slow the hematoma, and assess for breakage, I was happy that I had a bottle of Vicodin in the meds cabinet from a previous injury. Same thing for Flexoril. Fairly recently I got a script for Oxy. I took exactly half of one pill. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: Had minor surgery a few years back. They gave me a script for pain meds. The incision didn't hurt to I didn't bother filling it. Same thing for Flexoril. Fairly recently I got a script for Oxy. I took exactly half of one pill. When my mom was on home hospice care they left a veritable supermarket of pain meds for her. After she passed my dad was so freaked out about having any of her stuff around he called the hospice people who told him to just toss them. He was so worried about them "falling into the wrong hands" that he gathered them up and took them to the police station. |
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I've looked under chairs
I've looked under tables I've tried to find the key To fifty million fables They call me The Seeker I've been searching low and high I won't get to get what I'm after Till the day I die I asked Bobby Dylan I asked The Beatles I asked Timothy Leary But he couldn't help me either They call me The Seeker I've been searching low and high I won't get to get what I'm after Till the day I die People tend to hate me Cause I never smile As I ransack their homes They want to shake my hand Focusing on nowhere Investigating miles I'm a seeker I'm a really desperate man I won't get to get what I'm after Till the day I die I learned how to raise my voice in anger Yeah, but look at my face, ain't this a smile? I'm happy when life's good And when it's bad I cry I've got values but I don't know how or why I'm looking for me You're looking for you We're looking in at other And we don't know what to do They call me The Seeker I've been searching low and high I won't get to get what I'm after Till the day I die |
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Quoted: I am talking about people going to the ER lying about shit they don’t have to get narcotics. Saying every pain medicine but the ones they want don’t work or that they are allergic to them. They are not in pain. They want a fix of narcotics. I am not talking about the guy with 27 rods and screws in their leg, hip, and back, Or the poor bastard with cancer that has spread to the bone. Or the guy that just landed after a parachute jump and has a broken femur sticking out of his thigh. I thought this thread was about drug seekers lying about shit trying to get narcotics. There is a huge percentage of ER visits for that. As for your messed up spine, there are likely people with the exact same findings on X-ray or MRI getting through life just fine without being on narcotics every day. What is different about you versus them? View Quote |
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I hurt my back and coukd barely walk, sitting was painful, walking was tolerable. But I knew my doctor would just call me a bitch, and tell me to focus on my core, before he ever gave me pills. So I sucked it up, took 800mg of vitamin I and focused on my core. 3 days later, the pain is almost gone and I'm ready to go picking up the wife again
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I just tell the ER docs/nurses that I'm allergic to ALL pain meds EXCEPT Dilaudid.
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People having to play "mother may I" with the medical industry to get pain relief is ridiculous. Just legalize it already.
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I hurt my back and coukd barely walk, sitting was painful, walking was tolerable. But I knew my doctor would just call me a bitch, and tell me to focus on my core, before he ever gave me pills. So I sucked it up, took 800mg of vitamin I and focused on my core. 3 days later, the pain is almost gone and I'm ready to go picking up the wife again View Quote |
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People having to play "mother may I" with the medical industry to get pain relief is ridiculous. Just legalize it already. View Quote This actually makes a lot of sense from the doc's point of view. Just make a recommendation, you're free to go with it or decide you know better. If you think you know better, but upon your death it's clear you did not know better, well there's no responsibility in the form of a prescription from a doc. Docs don't have to deal with state dea's, federal dea's etc. No more worry about having the prescription pad with all the safety checks, no more worry about people trying to steal prescription pads. No more worry about drug seekers, no more worry about expensive malpractice insurance, no more worry about losing your license for trying to treat your patients in a complete lose/lose situation. |
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You tell me, you seem to be the expert. When you've had the same surgeries I've had and lived in my bones for the past decade, then you can enter that conversation. Until then, your opinion means jack shit. Actually, it'd still be jack shit to me. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: I am talking about people going to the ER lying about shit they don’t have to get narcotics. Saying every pain medicine but the ones they want don’t work or that they are allergic to them. They are not in pain. They want a fix of narcotics. I am not talking about the guy with 27 rods and screws in their leg, hip, and back, Or the poor bastard with cancer that has spread to the bone. Or the guy that just landed after a parachute jump and has a broken femur sticking out of his thigh. I thought this thread was about drug seekers lying about shit trying to get narcotics. There is a huge percentage of ER visits for that. As for your messed up spine, there are likely people with the exact same findings on X-ray or MRI getting through life just fine without being on narcotics every day. What is different about you versus them? I’m asking what your opinion is regarding people with the exact same diagnosis/findings on objective studies- With one being in chronic pain spending the rest of their life on narcotics, and the other doing okay without them, or only needing them once in a while. I know people that have sprinted with a casualty, fall and blow out their knee, get up and keep carrying them. I have seen people finish long infils on a broken foot, or exfil on their broken fibula. With chronic injuries and problems and not on narcotics. People that finished decades long careers out shooting savages with men half their ages retire, and found to have severe spinal and joint injuries with problems and not on narcotics. What is your opinion on why they are not going to spend decades of their life on narcotics everyday and still work, have demanding jobs, etc.? |
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Quoted: It is a good idea to get it filled for a future thing. I missed with a 5 pound sledge and hit my hand really hard. After keeping pressure on to slow the hematoma, and assess for breakage, I was happy that I had a bottle of Vicodin in the meds cabinet from a previous injury. Same thing for Flexoril. Fairly recently I got a script for Oxy. I took exactly half of one pill. View Quote |
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Blank Script | Taylor Swift "Blank Space" Opioid Abuse Parody |
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Quoted: Yes that is a reason, also the introduction of the medication also brings the possibility someone would be allergic to it, and also brings on possible worse things like cornea melts. The drops aren't even considered narcotics, but they are controlled. But lets do a hypothetical. You come in with a cornea abrasion. Extremely painful, but will heal unless infected. The first day or so, OW. But over time you will heal. Should the doc give you something that you don't need (and isn't standard of care) and possibly create an allergy? an allergy that the doc would then have to treat with potentially steroids? steroids that you cannot utilize if there is a epithelial defect (which by definition you have in a corneal abrasion)? Or the doc gives you the drops and you use them as directed and you feel great, never to return. Until that secondary bacterial or viral infection starts to create a central ulcer that perforates the cornea, or best case scenario you run out of drops and the pain sets in. Or even if the doc says use this only once every 3 hours (ignoring the standard of care), and you use it ever 15 minutes and create a corneal melt, thereby setting yourself up for a corneal transplant and permanently reduced your vision. Why risk introducing something that can stunt healing, create an allergic reaction, or a corneal melt, when if you do nothing, unless there's a secondary infection, will heal without intervention? If doctors practice outside the standard of care, they should be prepared to defend their license quite often. The standard of care is what doctors are expected to abide by, and if they stray there better be a good reason. Standard of care generally isn't just a theory, it's backed by actual evidence and studies. We've gotten so far away from allowing the body to naturally heal in some instances. People demand instant relief, and sometimes that instant relief doesn't allow the body to heal naturally, and sets up a dependency. View Quote |
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What is your opinion on why they are not going to spend decades of their life on narcotics everyday and still work, have demanding jobs, etc.? View Quote |
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I’m not offering an opinion. I’m asking what your opinion is regarding people with the exact same diagnosis/findings on objective studies- With one being in chronic pain spending the rest of their life on narcotics, and the other doing okay without them, or only needing them once in a while. I know people that have sprinted with a casualty, fall and blow out their knee, get up and keep carrying them. I have seen people finish long infils on a broken foot, or exfil on their broken fibula. With chronic injuries and problems and not on narcotics. People that finished decades long careers out shooting savages with men half their ages retire, and found to have severe spinal and joint injuries with problems and not on narcotics. What is your opinion on why they are not going to spend decades of their life on narcotics everyday and still work, have demanding jobs, etc.? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Quoted: I am talking about people going to the ER lying about shit they don’t have to get narcotics. Saying every pain medicine but the ones they want don’t work or that they are allergic to them. They are not in pain. They want a fix of narcotics. I am not talking about the guy with 27 rods and screws in their leg, hip, and back, Or the poor bastard with cancer that has spread to the bone. Or the guy that just landed after a parachute jump and has a broken femur sticking out of his thigh. I thought this thread was about drug seekers lying about shit trying to get narcotics. There is a huge percentage of ER visits for that. As for your messed up spine, there are likely people with the exact same findings on X-ray or MRI getting through life just fine without being on narcotics every day. What is different about you versus them? I’m asking what your opinion is regarding people with the exact same diagnosis/findings on objective studies- With one being in chronic pain spending the rest of their life on narcotics, and the other doing okay without them, or only needing them once in a while. I know people that have sprinted with a casualty, fall and blow out their knee, get up and keep carrying them. I have seen people finish long infils on a broken foot, or exfil on their broken fibula. With chronic injuries and problems and not on narcotics. People that finished decades long careers out shooting savages with men half their ages retire, and found to have severe spinal and joint injuries with problems and not on narcotics. What is your opinion on why they are not going to spend decades of their life on narcotics everyday and still work, have demanding jobs, etc.? |
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Hell, it seems like the opposite these days. While back I had my wisdom teeth pulled. When I was checking out I asked if I got any sort of pain meds given that I had an abscess and had all 4 wisdoms yanked in one sitting. Dentist looked at me like I was the biggest junkie POS on the face of the earth and gave me the most condescending "NO, that is what Tylenol is for" before huffing out of the room. Umm, ok. View Quote |
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The one time I was offered high strength pain meds for back pain, and refused them, the doctor looked at me like I was nuts. My rationale is simple - I've taken them before and I'm well aware that my brain likes them very much, so I choose not to use them. I'll take OTC meds if I need pain relief.
I honestly have to wonder how many patients say no. |
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Hell, it seems like the opposite these days. While back I had my wisdom teeth pulled. When I was checking out I asked if I got any sort of pain meds given that I had an abscess and had all 4 wisdoms yanked in one sitting. Dentist looked at me like I was the biggest junkie POS on the face of the earth and gave me the most condescending "NO, that is what Tylenol is for" before huffing out of the room. Umm, ok. View Quote |
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I had to take my wife to the hospital for acute abdominal pain a few years ago. They were polite, but I swear they were treating her like a drug seeker. Took forever to get her any relief, and she was in agony. Turns out she had a bowel obstruction. View Quote This spurned a morning trip to the ER, a second trip to the ER in the afternoon, and finally a third trip to the ER later that night. The ER doc all but accused him of looking for opioids, and in the course of checking him over, made sure to run a finger up his ass. My Sister made a phone call to his actual doctor, who happened to be on the hospital board. The man showed up in the exam room after midnight and started raising hell about mistreatment of patients. My Dad as it turned out had a huge fucking infection above his incision, and not a hematoma. He was sent by ambulance to a large trauma 1 level hospital. It cost him 47 days in the hospital, a second surgery, and 6 weeks of IV antibiotics to get well again. Dr Ass Reamer got his shit pushed in by my family's doctor. There was an official complaint filed and DAR was pretty much let go. |
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Does it matter, when hospital administrators are so focused on patient satisfaction metrics that they pressure staff to make the patients "happy"?
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When I went to the ER with kidney stones a few years ago the staff left my laying there moaning in pain for about an hour because I asked for something for the pain. After I asked for something, my wife, who is very familiar with what goes on in hospitals, said that asking for something was drug seeking behavior. I told her that's because I am seeking drugs, it hurts like hell! I guess I was damned if I ddid, and damned if I didn't. View Quote |
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Quoted: Might be a reason for that...lookup cornea melt. View Quote Science Has Repeatedly Debunked this Stubborn Ophthalmology Myth SGEM#83: IN YOUR EYES (TOPICAL TETRACAINE FOR CORNEAL ABRASIONS) This one is behind a login wall, but the conclusion is there. Short-Term Tetracaine Does Not Impair Healing of Corneal Abrasions |
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I had two out at once and they gave me a prescription for 30 10mg oxycodones a week before the procedure, in addition to the antibiotics I'd need and a benzo for before the procedure. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Hell, it seems like the opposite these days. While back I had my wisdom teeth pulled. When I was checking out I asked if I got any sort of pain meds given that I had an abscess and had all 4 wisdoms yanked in one sitting. Dentist looked at me like I was the biggest junkie POS on the face of the earth and gave me the most condescending "NO, that is what Tylenol is for" before huffing out of the room. Umm, ok. If that dentist keeps giving out #30 Oxycodone 10 mgs, he's gonna have plenty of business...of the wrong kind. Druggies are like raccoons. Feed one and the next morning, there will be 10 waiting at your front door. And they go hit every new doctor in town to see if he's a Dr. Feelgood type or not. My maximum script I write in clinic is #12 Hydrocodone 5/325 or #12 Percocet 5/325. And that usually requires a confirmed kidney stone or a significant long bone fracture. In the ER, it's a maximum of #8. |
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Maybe the docs are tired of dealing with seekers and figure if they give them all the opioids they want they'll all eventually die. Do heroin addicts reproduce at replacement levels? If not then maybe it's not a bad strategy.
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Lol this is why I just go straight to shooting heroin.
JK Not funny because that is what is happening. |
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Does it matter, when hospital administrators are so focused on patient satisfaction metrics that they pressure staff to make the patients "happy"? View Quote If you don't show physical vital sign manifestations of pain, or actually have an obvious reason for me to give you anything. You're not getting opioids from me. Period. Had one asshole last week call us for chest pain. Met us on a street corner. Allergies to toradol, tramadol, and fentanyl. Yeah, right. No seeking behavior here. Walks to our stretcher and sits comfortably, no nausea, no abnormal skin signs, normal vitals, normal EKG. Pain scale 10/10. Half way to the hospital asks if I'm going to give her pain medications. I said no, she became an indignant, pissy twat. Get her to the ER, tell old doc what her deal was, immediately became crushing pain, to jaw, neck, and back. I tell doc shes spoon feeding him horse shit. He looks up her records, 17 visits this year so far for various abdominal or chest pain related issues, all with a normal diagnosis. She had been CT scanned 15 times in 5 months just in this one hospital system alone. If the narcs don't kill her the cancer from the radiation will. |
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Corneal melting has a lot more going on than a simple corneal abrasion. A corneal perforation, or a post cataract extraction patient and a corneal abrasion are different animals. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Corneal melting has a lot more going on than a simple corneal abrasion. A corneal perforation, or a post cataract extraction patient and a corneal abrasion are different animals. Quoted:
Science Has Repeatedly Debunked this Stubborn Ophthalmology Myth SGEM#83: IN YOUR EYES (TOPICAL TETRACAINE FOR CORNEAL ABRASIONS) This one is behind a login wall, but the conclusion is there. Short-Term Tetracaine Does Not Impair Healing of Corneal Abrasions In the first link the second article mentions: Although their data reflected an odds ratio for delayed healing of 1.31 for those receiving topical anesthetics for 72 hours or less, suggesting 31 percent greater odds for delayed healing with topical anesthetics, the bottom line is that no complications from treatment were noted. In the first link the final article mentions: This was a well-done study of 1,576 patients with corneal abrasions, of which 532 were determined to be “simple” as opposed to “complicated.” The relative risks for ED return visit and fluorescein staining (both indications of persistent symptoms) were 1.67 and 2.53, respectively. However, when considering only simple corneal abrasions, the numbers neutralized to 1.16 and 0.77. The second link is the same study that the first link uses as it's first article. It also mentions: “Topical Tetracaine used for 24 hours is safe, and while there was no significant difference in patient VAS pain ratings over time, patient surveys on overall effectiveness showed that patients perceived tetracaine to be significantly more effective than saline.” The presence of the rust ring in 23 patients complicates things for this study. The presence of a rust ring indicates that at some point you had an embedded metallic foreign body. That's not just a corneal abrasion. In additional the patients with the rust rings are removed from the study. why? because the remains of a rust ring will continue to irritate the cornea surface invalidating the participation of the study because it was not just a corneal abrasion to begin with. Third link is behind a pay wall that I do not have access to now, but I'd like to read it rather than relying only on the title. But if we take the title at face value, fine we suppose we accept tetracaine doesn't impair healing, but the links above point out side effects with the dosage of tetracaine. Why put a patient at risk for those side effects for such a minimal gain? In a peer review situation are your peers likely to know? Is that ER physician that wrote the article in the second link going to be on a "peer" review committee? Has the standard of care changed? I'm not taking the stance that it should or shouldn't. I'm asking the question if it's well known enough that you aren't going to be exposed. |
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The medical industry is built on treating symptoms, not curing causes.
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This happened to me when I had major medical issues. I was in agony and they were treating me like I was an addict or something. It worked out in the end, but fucking a... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I had to take my wife to the hospital for acute abdominal pain a few years ago. They were polite, but I swear they were treating her like a drug seeker. Took forever to get her any relief, and she was in agony. Turns out she had a bowel obstruction. |
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"bad review" is the key word.
Some hospitals don't get paid unless the patient is satisfied with the care they received. |
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Disposable human beings. They’d be better off in the dumpster, with the used catheters and uneaten applesauce.
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My sister had it figured out for a while. She'd just show up at the ER, tell them she's addicted and proceed to create a huge scene till they gave her candy to leave.
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Quoted: Back in 2013 my Dad had a valve replacement and single bypass done. They sent him home a few days later with a low end pain killer, and a huge mass growing above his incision. They said it was a hematoma and normal. Fast forward several weeks, and he was feeling sickly and ached all over. This spurned a morning trip to the ER, a second trip to the ER in the afternoon, and finally a third trip to the ER later that night. The ER doc all but accused him of looking for opioids, and in the course of checking him over, made sure to run a finger up his ass. My Sister made a phone call to his actual doctor, who happened to be on the hospital board. The man showed up in the exam room after midnight and started raising hell about mistreatment of patients. My Dad as it turned out had a huge fucking infection above his incision, and not a hematoma. He was sent by ambulance to a large trauma 1 level hospital. It cost him 47 days in the hospital, a second surgery, and 6 weeks of IV antibiotics to get well again. Dr Ass Reamer got his shit pushed in by my family's doctor. There was an official complaint filed and DAR was pretty much let go. View Quote The previous time I was in the ER was after two straight days of the worst headache I've ever had (only time I've ever gone to the ER for a headache, in a very long history of severe headaches caused by a crushed C6 disk). The ER doc sits down, doesn't say 'hi', doesn't ask me what's going-on, just blurts-out "I'm not giving you narcotics". I looked at him like and said "you're the doc, do whatever you can". He let me sit there for 45 minutes with an IV drip in with Benadryl, until the tech who was administering the IV finally went to him and said "you gotta do better than that" (the tech was obviously disgusted with the doc), after which I was given a small dose morphine or fentanyl in the IV, which took the edge off enough for me to go home and sleep (which is all I wanted). My regular doc and his nurse were like "they didn't even look at your charts". That's when I decided no more ER visits unless I'm unconscious and on a stretcher. The only reason I ended-up there for the gallbladder attack was because the walk-in clinic automatically transfers you to the ER when you have abdominal pain. Fuck the ER. I understand that ER docs and nurses have to sort through those with legitimate issues and those just seeking pain meds. But you'd think that they'd bother to actually listen to a patient (or even introduce themselves) and bring up your medical history before they treat you all the same. The ER seems to make a MASH unit look like the Mayo Clinic. |
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It is a good idea to get it filled for a future thing. I missed with a 5 pound sledge and hit my hand really hard. After keeping pressure on to slow the hematoma, and assess for breakage, I was happy that I had a bottle of Vicodin in the meds cabinet from a previous injury. Same thing for Flexoril. Fairly recently I got a script for Oxy. I took exactly half of one pill. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: Had minor surgery a few years back. They gave me a script for pain meds. The incision didn't hurt to I didn't bother filling it. Same thing for Flexoril. Fairly recently I got a script for Oxy. I took exactly half of one pill. |
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The drug seekers are flocking to the latest boom industry around these parts. "Drug Rehab" clinics. From what I get from most addicts it's mostly suboxone treatment with no real plan for ever getting them off the stuff. They just medicate them as long as someone is willing to pay. So when suboxone gets the hammer like oxycontin did from the "pain clinics" what are all those addicts going to do? The World really doesn't want to see them in recovery, they just want to take as much of that money from them as they can get while it lasts.
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The drug seekers are flocking to the latest boom industry around these parts. "Drug Rehab" clinics. From what I get from most addicts it's mostly suboxone treatment with no real plan for ever getting them off the stuff. They just medicate them as long as someone is willing to pay. So when suboxone gets the hammer like oxycontin did from the "pain clinics" what are all those addicts going to do? The World really doesn't want to see them in recovery, they just want to take as much of that money from them as they can get while it lasts. View Quote |
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After hernia surgery and taking most of the first bottle of oxy the pharmacy called and had refilled it. Called the surgeon and asked WTF ?? Don't know where the wires got crossed but he called them and straightened that shit out PDQ. Took the remaining 5 pills from original bottle to his office and was told to take them over to hospital for disposal. I don't usually go to the doc's office unless I'm pretty fucked up. My bloodwork comes back clean always so I don't have too much trouble with getting meds if actually needed. View Quote |
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Yeah the junkies have made it worse for everyone. I had to go to the ER a couple of times for a kidney stone. Got treated like a junkie till I told them all I wanted was Toradol, Allopurinol and IV Fluids to help flush the stone out. Then, I got the red carpet treatment. I got asked several times if I needed something stronger than Toradol. My ER nurse and doc told me they got a lot of people claiming they had a kidney stone asking for dilauded. I was one of the very few asking for stuff that actually works for kidney stones. View Quote |
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