I didn’t want heavy painkillers after surgery — but my hospital pushed opioids on me anyway
Hospitals want to keep their patients happy, but too often doctors treat pain like a disease and push opioids even when people explicitly say no.
This is a story about how the health care industry effectively forces patients into opioid use. I know, because this recently almost happened to me. And it could have cost me my life.
A few weeks ago, I had a major abdominal surgery. I have had two similar surgeries before, which taught me how well I tolerated both pain — and painkillers. Pain, while uncomfortable, was not unbearable. Far worse were the drugs, which caused uncontrollable nausea, dizziness, vomiting and overall malaise. That was not something I was keen on dealing with again, least of all following a stomach surgery. Before my procedure, I made sure to have these requests documented in my medical records.
That’s where the trouble started.
During the month before my surgery, every professional I met with did their utmost to assure me that this time would be different. This time, they emphasized, I should expect the very worst in terms of pain. Time and again, I gave them the same answer I had given in my initial consultation and had written in my medical file: “I prefer not to use any heavy narcotics outside of the necessary anesthesia.” And time and again, I was met with the same slack-jawed expression and incredulous response.
Oh no, they all assured me. No, no, no — I really didn’t understand just how painful this surgery would be.
I really did, I insisted, and began to explain that I had had similar surgeries — only to be immediately cut off and told that my prior surgeries hadn’t been anywhere near as serious as this one, and that I was going to need something quite strong to make the pain go away.
Make the pain go away. As though the pain itself were a disease or disorder. The physicians were emphatic, as though my future pain was more of an issue than the current tear in my abdomen.
“I understand I’m going to be in pain,” I repeated, equally emphatically, and now to the point of frustration. “The pain is not the issue.”
My surgeon was the only individual who did not disregard my decision to manage without prescription painkillers, and in my file noted that my post-discharge pain management plan would consist of standard, over-the-counter Tylenol.
That note was later updated to read Tylenol 3 — with codeine — by the hospital staff. No one believed that I could manage without something stronger. Sure enough, upon discharge, I was given a prescription for 40 tablets of codeine.
Forty.
Pain is a symptom, not a disease
Later I sat at home, the flimsy piece of dull blue paper trembling in my hands, its 4 and 0 scrawled out in sharp black ink. Forty tablets of codeine. For what? For an otherwise healthy woman, who had insisted on her preference of not using anything stronger than over-the-counter Tylenol? A woman who had made sure her choice was indicated in her medical file?
Why had it been so difficult for me to not obtain narcotics? In my head, I replayed the events of the past 18 or so hours: Over the course of a one-night hospital stay, I had been offered and denied narcotics at least half a dozen times. It began immediately following my surgery. Not long after I had awakened, a nurse entered my room and attempted to administer Dilaudid through an IV. When I stopped her, I learned I had already been given Dilaudid once, while unconscious.
I began to dread the thought of falling asleep.
Every few hours, another nurse would appear and attempt another dose of Dilaudid. When I explained effects that these painkillers tended to cause for me, one nurse seemed to listen at first, then replied that the staff would give me the Dilaudid to manage my pain, and then give me yet another drug, an anti-emetic, to cope with the nausea.
Even my indirect interactions with the hospital were marked by the medical industry’s near-militant insistence on eviscerating pain. All the questionnaires I received before and after my surgery were all centered around pain management. On the wall of my hospital room, a stark white sign blared in large block letters: “Pain management is a patient right. Please tell us about your pain.”
Pain management was a patient right. Painkiller refusal, it seemed, was not.
“It’s about you, our patient,” the sign added, in smaller script underneath. But was it? Too often, the incentive structure that pervades the industry sets things up so that health care professionals work harder to serve drug companies and hospitals than actual patients and policyholders.
There are other incentives at work, as well. Patient satisfaction scores now play a role in hospital reimbursement rates. As an Annals of Family Medicine study reported this year, patients who are prescribed high doses of opioids were more likely to report high satisfaction with care — meaning higher rates of Medicare reimbursements for their providers.
Similarly, in 2014 a Patient Preference and Adherence survey indicated that nearly half of doctors admitted to prescribing inappropriate narcotic medication because of the incentive to acquire higher satisfaction scores. The misalignment can have deadly consequences.
Incentive should be to save lives, not sell drugs
Three days after my surgery, I experienced a sharp, persistent pain in my right calf. In the emergency room, an ultrasound located a blood clot just below my right knee. Post-surgical clots can quickly travel through the body and into the lungs, where a pulmonary embolism could have catastrophic consequences for a patient.
I reflected on my experiences and had the chilling thought: Had I taken my (filled, but still unused) prescription for 40 Tylenols with codeine, would I have been able to identify the pain in my leg? If I had regarded pain as a disease rather than a symptom, and tried to eradicate the pain rather than treat its causes, would I be sitting here today?
We in the medical industry have a chance — and a duty — to use our expertise toward eradicating something far worse than pain: an epidemic that destroys lives, eats through money, and endures through a perverse incentive structure to which no one in my field is fully immune. If we all took a bold step to commit to change and refuse the siren song of kickbacks, reimbursements and misaligned rewards, wouldn’t the lives we save be incentive enough?
Emma Passé has 14 years experience in the insurance industry. She is currently at Employee Benefit Management Services, Inc., an independent Third Party Administrator (TPA) where she helps employers and their employees incentivize higher value care at lower costs.
Filed under: General Problems
Without a doubt there’s a hidden $ agenda $ in her ludicrous
re-derrick…she just tossed out a stink-en-Red-Herring , and we all see her for exactly who she is !
I flat do not believe this is true; maybe 10 years ago (MAYBE!), but just no way any hospital is aggressively pushing drugs on anyone these days. Sounds like more hysterical “OPIOIDS EPIDEMIC!!” PROPaganda.
And if she didn’t want 40 of those dastardly T-3….not filling it is one crazy option.
This is ridiculous. No hospital “pushes” pain meds on a patient. And if a prescription is written for meds you do not want to take, DON’T FILL IT! Ridiculous!
I believe little of this. Hospital surveys changed the way they addressed pain management a few years ago.
It is important to be careful about the things one believes on the internet. Verify independently before believing.
My pain is a disease. I find this insulting and suspicious!
Pain is a symptom.
Hope, when the pain is severe, chronic, never-ending and will plague one until the day he dies, it becomes a disease of its own.
I have to wonder if she’d taken meds which would have probably helped her walk and move around better, might she have not had the blood clot? She still might have but that’s one of the reasons post op pain is treated, get people moving to help them heal and to prevent blood clots, pneumonia, etc. Also there’s been a time or two I refused a script, I either left it there or handed it back. She didn’t have to take it home and then sit there and look at it with shaking hands at home and she certainly did not have to fill it. I don’t get her point of filling something she wouldn’t ever take? Seems irresponsible to me.
You know, lady, if you were so keen on no strong painkillers post surgery and these horrid, insensitive doctors wouldn’t respect your request…all you had to do was dispose of the prescription. You didn’t have to fill it. No one forced you to do that.
Pffffttt….please. *rolls eyes*
Just more BS!
Yea,,I,don’t believe a word this lieing ,”thingy,” saids,,,,I personally have found,,,,the more arrogant OR CONTROLLING, doctors,nurses,,BENIFIT MANAGERS,,,,ARE,,, the more they think they have the god given right to decide for all of America,,,how much FORCED PHYSICAL PAIN,,,ie torture another human being is to forcible endure,,,Even if they have to lie,,obviously,,,to torture us,,,maryw
Usually when you look at the backgrounds of these people they all have some way of profiting over what they are saying. The more people they can con with there misleading and false information the more money they make.
I believe the term “Bizarro World” applies.