My doc’s office needed to answer some questions before the pharmacist considered refilling my prescription(s) ?

I really am hoping I can reach out to you. I’m feeling embarrassed about my visit to cvs pharmacy . The pharmacist tore me down emotionally in public today. I don’t know who to ask for help. I see an addiction doc who’s also my primary. I Needed to get back on my medicines to stay healthy. I stopped my meds for a while to have my baby. I went to the cvs I had always went to in my past. The pharmacist denied my scripts @first! Finally she said she would fill only one of them. In the end she said that my doc & I needed to answer some questions before filling my other script & that she was entitled to surpass my HIPAA law being that she’s my pharmacist. My docs office needed to answer some questions before her considering filling it. My doc office said it’s a violation of my HIPAA rights. The problem is she said she’s looking out for my best interest as though it was her decision. She degraded me about taking my anti anxiety med. it’s still hasn’t been filled. Any advice? Also she didn’t refer me to another pharmacist In that location but did put stickers&numbers on the script if I wanted to take it elsewhere she wouldn’t fill either. I felt it was a personal attack & degrading. Please help

According to what this pt wrote… the pt got a unwarranted “second medical opinion” on the therapy the pt has been taking for four years.

The medications involved are both controlled substances but neither was a C-II

One thing that the Pharmacist was correct about is that pharmacists can have access to a pt’s medical records without violating the HIPAA rules.

Most will agree that one of the primary functions of the practice of medicine is the starting, changing, stopping a pt’s therapy.

IMO, it is also inappropriate for a pharmacist to decide not to fill a prescription and not call the prescriber to discuss their concerns. To put the pt in the middle of the issue it is grossly unprofessional.

Since this pt has been on this medication for abt 4 yrs.  The only reason that a pharmacist has the valid reason to refuse to fill a pt’s Rx is because the dose is perceived as too high, the pt’s health records indicates that the pt is allergic to a new Rx and/or there is a significant level one drug to drug interaction.

Who believes that this pharmacist  – if the pt and prescriber jumps thru all the hoops and over all the hurdles this time.. that the pharmacist would not create/fabricate some more hoops and hurdles the next month, when the pt needs for medications  and keep this up month after month until the pt and prescriber gets fed up and the pt takes the Rxs to another store.

Everyone needs to ask themselves the question … should I have to BEG ANYONE to allow me to spend my money in their business ?  Does anyone deserve your business if all they want to do is put unnecessary obstacles between you and your medically necessary medications ?

Watchdog report slams DEA’s money-laundering operations

Watchdog report slams DEA’s money-laundering operations

https://www.politico.com/amp/news/2020/06/17/watchdog-report-dea-money-laundering-325723

Findings that DEA-handled funds may have fueled crime echo the furor over Operation Fast & Furious.

The Drug Enforcement Administration laundered tens of millions of dollars in the course of drug trafficking investigations over the past decade without complying with laws governing such operations, according to a newly released review from the Justice Department’s in-house watchdog.

Justice’s Inspector General Michael Horowitz found that the DEA failed to move millions of dollars in profits from completed operations to the U.S. Treasury and did not report all such undercover operations to Congress as the law requires.

In some cases, the financial transactions handled by the DEA facilitated the purchase of aircraft by drug trafficking organizations, but the DEA apparently showed little interest in determining just how the aircraft were used until auditors asked about the issue.

Horowitz’s review echoed many of the findings that fueled a controversy almost a decade ago over a federal gunrunning investigation known as “Operation Fast and Furious,” that allowed suspected gun traffickers to purchase weapons in order to trace their flow.

As many as 2,000 of the weapons crossed the border into Mexico, investigators found, prompting a loud outcry against the Obama administration from Republicans in Congress.

Drug trafficking organizations “are not only involved in drug trafficking, but also participate in violent crimes and have been linked to terrorism,” the new IG report finds. “This elevates the risks that the DEA’s involvement in money laundering activity may inadvertently support particularly egregious criminal activity. Despite these risks, officials in the DEA and in the Department conveyed the idea that allowing money to ‘walk’ is not as inherently risky as letting drugs or guns ‘walk.’”

The report also indicates that DEA sometimes changed the focus or nature of the undercover operations without seeking the appropriate approvals from higher-ups at DOJ. In one instance, a narco-terrorist was added as a new, “atypical” target of a DEA money laundering effort, without high-level approval.

“Because of the sensitivity and additional risks involved in investigating narco-terrorists, we believe that the addition of this target should have immediately alerted [senior officials] that this target did not fall within the initial scope of approved activity,” the review said.

The new report spans three fiscal years, from 2015 to 2017, but some of the money-laundering operations date back to the 1990s and the report suggests neglect of the legal requirements for well over a decade.

DEA is supposed to report details of its undercover operations to Congress on an annual basis but has not done so since 2006 or earlier, the watchdog found.

DEA and Justice Department officials agreed with 19 recommendations Horowitz made to address shortcomings found during the audit.

DEA tightened some of its policies on the undercover operation issues in 2018, but didn’t take more significant action until April of this year, well after the inspector general’s team gave Justice and DEA officials the initial findings.

“While DEA acknowledges a need for improvement in the areas noted in the OIG’s report….significant progress has been made in recent years and that effort continues today,” DEA Chief Compliance Officer Mary Schaefer wrote in a response attached to the report.

Coronavirus can still pass between face mask wearers — even when they’re 4 feet apart: study

Coronavirus can still pass between face mask wearers — even when they’re 4 feet apart: study

COVID-19 can be transmitted between people who are standing more than four feet apart, even if they are wearing a mask, a new study has found.

The research, published in Physics of Fluids, notes that face coverings alone do not prevent droplets of fluid that are projected by a cough, a discovery the researchers called “alarming.” It adds to the importance to also maintain proper social distancing measures, they said.

The same researchers found previously that droplets of saliva can travel 18 feet in five seconds when an unmasked person coughs, so masks are important. However, repeated coughs are likely to reduce their effectiveness, the experts found in the new study, using computer models.

Corona virus prevention Face Masks protection N95 masks and medical surgical masks at home . (iStock)

“The use of a mask will not provide complete protection,” study co-author and University of Nicosia professor Dimitris Drikakis said in a statement. “Therefore, social distancing remains essential.”

If a person has a coughing fit, “many droplets penetrate the mask shield and some saliva droplet disease-carrier particles can travel more than 1.2 meters (4 feet),” Drikakis added.

The calculations from the simulation also noted that droplet size could be affected due to hitting the mask, escaping and eventually, entering the environment.

“The droplet sizes change and fluctuate continuously during cough cycles as a result of several interactions with the mask and face,” Drikakis explained.

“Masks decrease the droplet accumulation during repeated cough cycles,” Dr. Talib Dbouk, the study’s co-author, added. “However, it remains unclear whether large droplets or small ones are more infectious.”

The study’s findings have implications for health care workers, who are often unable to maintain proper social distancing.

The researchers suggested wearing “much more complete personal protective equipment,” including helmets with built-in air filters, face shields, disposable gowns and two sets of gloves.

Earlier this month, the World Health Organization updated its guidance to recommend that governments around the world encourage the widespread use of fabric face masks while in public settings.

Initially, the WHO advised only those who are experiencing symptoms of COVID-19 or are caring for someone infected with the novel virus to wear a face mask. The WHO’s new recommendations also lag behind those from other top health agencies, such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

In April, the CDC updated its guidelines to recommend all Americans wear cloth face coverings while in public, “especially in areas of significant community-based transmission.”

As of Tuesday morning, more than 8 million coronavirus cases have been diagnosed worldwide, more than 2.1 million of which are in the U.S., the most impacted country on the planet.

 

Finally: Common Drug Improves COVID-19 Survival in Trial

Finally: Common Drug Improves COVID-19 Survival in Trial

https://www.medpagetoday.com/infectiousdisease/covid19/87086

Dexamethasone, the familiar glucocorticoid, reduced deaths in hospitalized COVID-19 patients with severe disease by one-third compared to those receiving usual care, according to topline interim results from the RECOVERY trial released early Tuesday.

Deaths in the dexamethasone arm were reduced by one-third (RR 0.65, 95% CI 0.48-0.88, P=0.0003) among patients receiving mechanical ventilation, and by one-fifth (RR 0.80, 95% CI 0.67-0.96, P=0.0021) among patients requiring oxygen versus patients receiving usual care, according to a statement from the study’s authors.

But dexamethasone showed no benefit among patients who did not require respiratory support (RR 1.22, 95% CI 0.86-1.75).

RECOVERY is a U.K.-based pragmatic trial in which hospitalized patients are randomized to various open-label treatments: besides dexamethasone, these include tocilizumab (Actemra), convalescent plasma, azithromycin, and lopinavir/ritonavir (Kaletra); hydroxychloroquine was also being tested until enrollment in that arm was stopped earlier this month, after it failed to show any benefit.

“Dexamethasone is the first drug to be shown to improve survival in COVID-19,” said RECOVERY trial chief investigator Peter Horby, MD, PhD, of University of Oxford, in the group’s statement. “The survival benefit is clear and large in those patients who are sick enough to require oxygen treatment, so dexamethasone should now become standard of care in these patients.”

Horby described dexamethasone as “inexpensive, on the shelf and can be used immediately to save lives worldwide.”

Sir Patrick Vallance, the U.K.’s chief scientific adviser, characterized the news as a “ground-breaking development” in the fight against COVID-19.

In the trial thus far, 2,104 patients were randomized to receive 6 mg of dexamethasone via intravenous injection for 10 days compared to 4,321 patients receiving usual care. Among the usual care group, 28-day mortality was highest (41%) among patients requiring mechanical ventilation; mortality was 25% in those who required oxygen only and 13% among those not requiring any respiratory support.

The investigators estimated that treating 8 ventilated patients or 25 requiring supplemental oxygen would prevent one death.

Recruitment to the dexamethasone arm of the trial was stopped on June 8, as a sufficient number of patients were enrolled to determine if the drug had meaningful benefit.

They added that given the “public health importance of these results,” they are working to publish the full details soon.

should the chronic pain community be ashamed of itself ?

I am a member of this private group 

Shih Tzu Lovers

https://www.facebook.com/groups/shihtzuloverus/members

There is 57,000 members in this private group

Within the last week a woman made a post about having to euthanize her 16 y/o Shih Tzu after becoming suddenly ill…  Those of us who have had pets understand how she feels… we are currently on our third Shih Tzu,, having “adopted” our first Shih Tzu pup about 30 years ago…  and having to euthanize the first two over liver or kidneys failing…  when they were in their mid-teens

This SINGLE POST has received 451 comments and 778 emojis on this single post. Since this is a private FB page.. there cannot be any shares.

Maybe these Shih Tzu owners have so much activity ..because – unlike the chronic pain community – they don’t have hundreds or thousands of FB pages devoted to the Shih Tzu breed ?

And the chronic pain community questions about their lack of unity… seems like some people care more about their “fur babies” than chronic painers care about each other ?

The Rapp Report: Interview With Shasta Rayne Harner, Vice President of CIAAG 06/15/2020

E07: Interview With Shasta Rayne Harner, Vice President of CIAAG 06/15/2020

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-3rs7a-dfd3c9

E07: Interview With Shasta Rayne Harner, Vice President of CIAAG 06/15/2020

In this episode, we interview Shasta Rayne Harner of Chronic Illness Advocacy and Awareness Group, Inc. (CIAAG). Shasta is the Vice President and Dir

ector of CIAAG. She is also a chronic pain patient herself, suffering from Dermatomyositis. 

The Chronic Illness Advocacy & Awareness Group, Inc. (CIAAG) is a national non-profit organization that promotes both a common-sense, compassionate and research-based approach to palliative care along with the responsible prescribing of opioid medication to those experiencing chronic pain and illnesses, including: serious injuries, intractable pain, and those who suffer from painful chronic diseases.

CIAAG’s mission is to work collaboratively with legislators in crafting the policy changes and legislation enacted to combat opioid abuse (including heroin and illicit fentanyl) in a way that does not restrict patients’ access to their medication. Restricting access is not just a problem for the individual;

it negatively impacts the nation’s public and economic health, resulting in previously functioning members of society being forced into unemployment and disability in response to the relentless, inhumane and debilitating pain they experience.

Intractable pain and forced isolation often leads to depression and other mental health crises as well. Unfortunately, some patients have turned to the street to find unsafe alternatives (including dangerous counterfeit pills) in a desperate effort to relieve their untreated pain, while others have succumbed to suicide as a final escape.

CIAAG offers lawmakers and other decision-makers fact-based research on prescription opioid use from qualified physicians, as well as policy white papers, testimonials and other resources to aid in crafting sensible policies around opiate use.

 Learn more about CIAAG at https://ciaag.net/

The CIAAG dossier, “Violation of A Nation” can be found at http://uploads.documents.cimpress.io/v1/uploads/c7c18e1c-2c3d-4ffd-b251-2ddba53a2d8b~110/original?tenant=vbu-digital

You can donate and contact CIAAG at https://ciaag.net/donate-and-contact

The National Pain Strategy referenced in this episode can be found at https://www.iprcc.nih.gov/sites/default/files/HHSNational_Pain_Strategy_508C.pdf

Be sure and check us out The Rapp Report Chronic Pain Crusade group on Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/247276683163131

And follow us on Twitter:

https://twitter.com/rapp_report

Thank you for listening! Please share this episode!

local police stop cars and seize cash and property to pay for local law enforcement efforts

The War on Drugs spurred the nation’s current policing crisis

http://https://www.ocregister.com/2020/06/12/the-war-on-drugs-spurred-the-nations-current-policing-crisis/

SACRAMENTO – While growing up around Philadelphia in the 1970s, I had a number of interactions with police – none of which were particularly harrowing. On the night before Memorial Day, for instance, a friend and I were drinking beer (yes, we were underage) in a cemetery by the Delaware River when we saw lights flashing and were approached by officers.

Apparently, the police had gotten a tip that someone might be stealing the brass placards from the gravestones and we were in the wrong place at the wrong time. We didn’t have any ID, so my friend handed a stuffed animal with his name on it to the officer. The policeman laughed, realized that we weren’t up to any serious mischief, made sure we were OK to drive home and sent us on our way.

Quite frankly, I couldn’t imagine that scenario playing out in the same benign way today. I thought of that interaction as I’ve watched the angry, nationwide protests unfold over the disturbing death of George Floyd, where a Minneapolis officer placed his knee on his neck for nearly nine minutes. Many of my conservative friends, especially those who grew up in the world similar to the one I described above, have been caught off-guard by the depth of anger.

Even if some left-wing activists used the crisis to promote riots and mayhem, such mass protests do not happen in a bubble. Tens of thousands of people don’t take to the streets because of outside agitators, but because they are angry about things they’ve often experienced themselves. And many Americans – especially in minority communities – have experienced the brunt of an overall policing approach that has become overly militaristic.

Police strategies have changed dramatically in the past few decades – and not because of soaring crime. Despite recent spikes, crime rates now are much lower than at any time since the 1960s, and police can absolutely take some credit for that. I’m not naïve here. Police abuse has been a problem as long as there have been police. I’ve read about the segregated South and the way police routinely terrorized African-Americans. But something significant has happened in the years following my cemetery experience.

I point to the nation’s War on Drugs as a prime culprit. Recent commentary has correctly focused on various reasons for our current policing mess. Just as teachers’ unions make it impossible to fire bad teachers, police unions make it impossible to fire overly aggressive and even corrupt officers. Then “limited immunity” protects cops from being sued even when they violate people’s constitutional rights.

The federal 1033 program provides decommissioned military-style hardware to police departments. So, instead of sending a beat cop to deal with a routine arrest or disturbance, police nowadays like to bring out the toys – i.e., those tank-like vehicles, SWAT teams and flash-bang grenades that are more appropriate for invaders than peace officers.

But few people have talked about the war on drugs, which started in the 1980s, and conditioned police departments to behave in this more militarized way. Police first took this approach during alcohol Prohibition, as others have noted, and then stepped up the efforts after America’s leaders looked for ways to combat a spreading drug epidemic. This issue isn’t only about race, of course, given how aggressive police behave even in suburban Southern California. But these ham-fisted policies fall disproportionately on minority communities.

One of the earliest drug-war policies is “civil asset forfeiture,” which lets law enforcement quickly snatch the proceeds of drug kingpins. Police don’t need to prove that you did anything wrong before they confiscate your car or other property. The police agency merely needs to assert that the property was used in the commission of a drug crime.

“Today, the old speed traps have all too often been replaced by forfeiture traps, where local police stop cars and seize cash and property to pay for local law enforcement efforts,” wrote two federal officials who helped create the program, in a 2014 Washington Post column. “This is a complete corruption of the process, and it unsurprisingly has led to widespread abuses.” It’s led to widespread anger, too, as police mainly seize poor people’s cars rather than cartels’ assets.

It wasn’t hard to predict what would happen when police take on a siege mentality and are provided with military hardware and exempted from constitutional limitations. In a 1996 editorial, William F. Buckley’s conservative National Review wrote that “the war on drugs has failed” and is “encouraging civil, judicial and penal procedures associated with police states.”

Twenty-four years later we’re seeing the fruits of those policies, even if most observers don’t see the connection. By all means, let’s review police-disciplinary procedures, union protections, racial bias and other causes of police abuse – but let’s not forget the way the drug war has often turned minor interactions like the one I had into violent confrontations.

Your Pain, Your Rights: Dealing With Your Physician And Your Hospital

Your Pain, Your Rights: Dealing With Your Physician And Your Hospital

https://rsds.org/your-pain-your-rights-dealing-with-your-physician-and-your-hospital/

Although I had concentrated on legal issues relating to pain in terminal illness, I had never even heard of CRPS until I got a call from a young mother in  California with the crippling syndrome. She had gone from being an athletic, employed, confident woman to one who could not care for her two-year old,  couldn’t work, and feared her husband was getting fed up with her inabilities and constant complaints. She was stitched to life by her innate determination, her love for her daughter and not much else. The tragic aspect of her story was that she knew, from experience, that she could get significant pain relief from a combination of fentynl patches and breakthrough medication.

Her HMO balked at the cost of fentynl and suggested that she was not really hurting. A physician at the clinic told her she was drug seeking. A clinic pharmacist yelled at her when she came to pick up medications and told her not to come back for “her drugs.” It took an HMO appeal, a complaint to the state insurance commissioner, and filing a complaint in a local court to get her relief. A little over a year later, a re-evaluation started it all over again.

In advising her, I learned that chronic pain, just like end-of-life pain, could be safely treated with opioids, and that the barriers for adequate pain management were much higher for those with chronic pain than those with terminal illnesses. I also had begun to understand that living with severe chronic pain is
as bad as dying with it-and lasts longer.

Advocacy at the systemic level may eventually make multidisciplinary pain management a reality at all disease and income levels. In the meantime, many chronic pain sufferers will continue to fight it out one physician and one appointment at a time-not always successfully. As with much of medical care, self-advocacy
is absolutely necessary. You need to know your rights and familiarize yourself with policies and procedures in domiciliary care to ensure you receive appropriate and effective treatment.

Getting Off on the Right Foot

CRPS patients with untreated pain often feel that the physicians they consult are unfeeling, paternalistic, judgmental gate-keepers. Although this image may fit some, it is more useful to see the prescriber in a different light and do your best to respond to his limitations, which may include:

  • lingering doubts about whether CRPS is a real syndrome
  • poor training in pain management, or training against using opioids for chronic pain because, despite reassuring words, his state medical board takes a hard line on physicians who prescribe them.
  • feedback from a pharmacist that the physician is prescribing too much pain medicine
  • intense pressure from your HMO to hold costs down by not prescribing the more expensive formulations
  • bad experiences with other opioid patients, making him feel that chronic pain makes for needy, time-consuming and difficult patients
  • the knowledge that honest physicians have unfairly been indicted for their prescribing habits.

For all these reasons, physicians are often fearful and wary of chronic pain patients and they cannot help but wonder which one will get him in trouble. The physician who simply refuses to use opioids for anything but acute pain, and then only for brief periods, is not going to help you, even though the AMA ethical standards require member physicians to provide patients with “adequate pain control, respect for patient autonomy, and good communication.1” However, he should be willing to refer you to someone who will provide effective pain care. In Florida, California and a few other states, physicians are legally required either to treat pain or refer. In other states, the obligation is usually defined in the medical board regulations. Certain specialty boards have adopted standards or guidelines on the use of opioids to treat chronic pain.

If you would like to provide your physician with state laws and guidelines regarding opioid treatment, they are available online at http://www.medsch.wisc.edu/painpolicy/matrix.htm

Prescribers who use opioids for pain management must feel secure about treating you and your pain and must overcome his comfort level limitation on dosage. Therefore, put aside your anger and frustration to present yourself as effectively as possible. Let the physician know that you are responsible and willing to cooperate to protect you both. Bring all the records you have to the first visit and let him know if opioids have helped you in the past. Be aware, however, that physicians are conditioned to see this as demanding a particular opioid; be clear that you are only informing.

Good physicians will have some practice management tools in place, so don’t take it personally if you are asked to sign a pain “contract” and to submit to blood or
urine monitoring. Contracts are actually a form of detailed and interactive informed consent. Good physicians will regard some contract violations as reason to evaluate and discuss what certain actions mean and will understand that actions that look like abuse can also be clear signals of under-treated pain, dysfunctional living arrangements, or manifestations of depression or anxiety.

Let the physician know if you need to “violate” one of the contract rules-such as requesting early refills so that you can go out of town or increase the dose in a time of particularly serious pain. However, you still have pain, call the physician before you increase the dose and ask for an appointment to talk about titration. If you can’t afford an interim visit, try to speak with him by telephone to explain how you are feeling, or have a friend or relative call him to express concerns.

Finally, do not be shocked or offended if he asks you to have a psychiatric consultation. This need not mean that he thinks your pain is “all in your head”. Depression and anxiety are almost synonymous with chronic pain, as is social isolation. Many studies show that a psychological evaluation and even ongoing psychological care can substantially improve pain management, as can other modalities, such as neurocognitive feedback. And, of course, it gives your physician some “cover” to have another professional involved. If money is an issue, let him know.

It is a good idea to bring a relative or friend who will talk to your physician about your suffering and the functional difference that pain medicine makes because prescribers are reassured when a patient using opioids has a visible support structure. It is also less likely that the physician will be rude or patronizing in front of a supportive friend or relative.

Some pain management physicians who are anesthesiologists by training have a firm bias toward invasive procedures over medical management, so they may suggest that you repeat sympathetic blocks or expensive tests even if a previous physician has already tried them. You have no obligation to go along, particularly
if your records reflect a history of procedures. The physician is obliged to seek your informed consent, which requires a discussion of risks and alternatives. Although you do not have to give it, the unfortunate upshot may be that he declines to treat you further.

You and Your Physician: What are Your Rights?

Reality dictates that some physicians, even in the face of clear pain, will not be willing to prescribe opioids. More commonly, they are willing to prescribe low doses but have a personal comfort level limit that may or may not be adequate for you. Moreover, if you push him to titrate doses above that comfort level, he may decide that you are a drug seeker. This serious ethical problem-the physician putting his perceived personal safety before his patient-is a deplorable situation
that can lead to abandonment.

A physician can abandon a patient whom he views as drug seeking or who has in some way “violated” the informed consent agreement. Although state laws and medical ethical rules do not allow abrupt termination of a physician-patient relationship, a prescriber does not have to keep you in his practice. If you are stable and able to find another physician, he can terminate you if he provides a brief written explanation of his reasons. An oral message is insufficient. The physician
must also agree to continue your care for at least 30 days and he should also provide a referral.

However, if you are at a critical or important point in your treatment, abandonment by notice and 30-day care is not permissible under common law. This restriction should apply to a patient taking opioids for pain because the consequences of withdrawal for a person who has a chronic illness could be significant.
Additionally an un-medicated patient may face a return of the pain that had been mediated by the opioids; he will almost certainly experience anxiety and distress. In short, a period without continuity of care could constitute a medical emergency. It seems logical that refusal to treat a patient until the patient has obtained another physician (or perhaps until it becomes clear that the patient is not making a serious effort to transfer care) should constitute abandonment.

What Can You Do?

Try Informal resolution. Deal with the termination immediately. If the physician is in a clinic setting, ask the head of the clinic if another physician there will take over your care. Speak to other health care professionals who know you well enough to be comfortable calling to explain that you are genuinely in pain and are a reliable, conscientious person.

Ask for a meaningful referral. Tell your prescriber you will need his help in finding another physician and you have a right to his assistance.  Get your records and review them carefully. Federal privacy law (HIPAA) requires your physician to provide your records promptly and to charge you no more than his actual costs of copying. It also allows you to have your records corrected if they contain errors. Review them for accuracy and look closely at what they say about the reason for termination. Phrases like “drug seeking” or “possibility of abuse” will hurt your efforts to find another physician. If he has used these phrases, write him a letter, preferably through an attorney, and use the words “abandonment,” defamation” and “emotional distress” if the attorney confirms that they are appropriately used in your state.

File a Complaint with the State Medical Board. Every state has a medical board that reviews all complaints and takes action when necessary. Only two state boards have disciplined any prescriber for under treating pain, so it is not possible to see this yet as a meaningful remedy. However, as more complaints are made and individual physicians show a pattern of patient abandonment, state boards are more likely to act.

State board complaints are not complicated. You do not need an attorney, but if you have one, take advantage of his advice. The forms themselves are simple and straightforward and are available on your state’s website. You can also order them by phone. Make your complaint more effective by writing a clear statement of what happened to you and any difficulties that you are having in finding another physician. Avoid a long, rambling statement. It may help if you number each paragraph and tell your story chronologically. If possible, have someone else read it to make sure it seems clear.

Do not feel limited by a form that does not allow much space for your comments.

Explain the emotional and physical impact of the termination. If you think your physician terminated you unfairly, state why. Make it clear if he was verbally abusive! Attach brief statements by anyone who has observed the impact that the termination has had on you and any other documents that may help the board understand that you are a legitimate pain patient with a serious medical condition.

If you want to follow up with the board, talk with the clerk to make sure it was put on the docket. Find out who is responsible for the investigation and ask to speak with him. Answer any questions and ask to be kept informed of case progress.

Consult an Attorney About a Formal Action

Abandonment is a tort (legal wrong) that may give you cause for a legal action against your physician. To prove abandonment you usually have to show (a) a physician-patient relationship; (b) that was terminated or neglected by the physician and (c) that caused you harm. An attorney can advise you about
your state’s requirements. Additionally, there is a tort called “infliction of severe emotional distress,” which requires (a) an action taken by the defendant (b) which was reasonably foreseeable to cause severe distress; and (c) that it did in fact cause severe emotional distress. Some states require a physical injury, but there is some precedent that recognizes pain as such. A growing body of medical evidence that untreated pain has serious physical consequences would
substantiate this view. If the defendant physician knew and intended to cause the emotional harm, a more serious tort is invoked. The requirements of these torts are often complicated and you should discuss your state’s precedents with your attorney.

Do not take a suit lightly and do not expect a windfall. Litigation is very hard on anyone with a chronic illness and even more so with RSD because of the stress involved. It prevents you from moving on. If you cannot afford to pay an attorney, you will have to convince one that the case is worth taking on a contingency basis; experience has proven this difficult. Most attorneys know very little about opioids and even less about pain management. You will need to educate your attorney so that he can evaluate your case intelligently.

You can find additional information on legal assistance in the directory, In Pain and Agonizing Over the Bills. For a print
copy, contact the RSDSA office at (877) 662-7737.

 

Seattle man, 70, beats coronavirus — then gets $1.1M hospital bill- almost $18,000/day

Seattle man, 70, beats coronavirus — then gets $1.1M hospital bill

https://www.foxnews.com/health/seattle-man-70-beats-coronavirus-then-gets-1-1m-hospital-bill-report-says

Coronavirus nearly killed Michael Flor.

After he got out of the hospital following a 62-day stay, the bill he received nearly killed him too.

“I opened it and said, ‘Holy (expletive)!,” the Washington state resident recalled, according to the Seattle Times.

The 181-page bill came with a total charge of $1.1 million, the report said.

Fortunately, because the 70-year-old man is covered by insurance, including Medicare, he will likely have to pay only a small portion of the tab.

In fact, because he suffered from the coronavirus, he might not have to pay anything at all, the Times reported.

Among the charges, according to the newspaper:

$408,912 – for 42 days in an intensive care unit (ICU) room that was special equipped as an isolation chamber because of the contagious nature of the virus.

$100,000 – for treatment as his heart, kidney and lungs all nearly failed during his stay.

$82,215 – for 29 days of ventilator use.

The prices, however, are typically far higher in the U.S. than in other wealthy countries, the Los Angeles Times noted last September.

“I feel guilty about surviving,” Flor told the Seattle paper. “There’s a sense of ‘Why me? Why did I deserve all this?’ Looking at the incredible cost of it all definitely adds to that survivor’s guilt.”

“I feel guilty about surviving. There’s a sense of ‘Why me? Why did I deserve all this?’ Looking at the incredible cost of it all definitely adds to that survivor’s guilt.”

— Michael Flor, coronavirus survivor

Flor said much of the guilt stems from knowing that taxpayers and other insurance customers will contribute to the cost of keeping him alive.

“It was a million bucks to save my life, and of course I’d say that’s money well-spent,” he says. “But I also know I might be the only one saying that.”

Pain Management :benefits included no longer witnessing the patient suffering, a diminished caregiver burden on spouse

Hip and knee replacements bolster marriages, study finds

https://www.foxnews.com/health/hip-and-knee-replacements-bolster-marriages-study-finds

Orthopedic surgeons are well aware that joint replacement surgeries can reduce patients’ pain and emotional distress, however a recent study explored how hip and knee replacements can improve marriages, too.

“It started with a thank you note,” Dr. Michael Tanzer, lead author and orthopedic surgeon at McGill University Health Center in Montréal, Québec, said in a press release. “My patient’s wife wrote to tell me how delighted she was to have her husband’s quality of life back because of the dramatic effect it had on her own life and their marriage. This one gesture of gratitude made me think about the impact of joint replacement surgery in a way I had taken for granted.”

The impact of joint replacement surgery can extend far beyond an improvement in pain and mobility, one study recently noted. (iStock)

The study noted how spouses of such patients often assume the role of caregiver. Research has demonstrated how spouses report reduced marital satisfaction, higher rates of depression and a lower quality of life.

Osteoarthritis is the most common form of arthritis and occurs when the protective cartilage that cushions the ends of bones wears down over time, according to the Mayo Clinic. In severe joint damage, hips and knees are most often replaced to relieve pain and improve mobility.

Hips and knees see the most replacements to alleviate severe joint damage, experts say. (iStock)

Tanzer said the team conducted a pilot study to evaluate spouses’ perception of patients’ pain and disability before and after total hip or knee replacement.

The study’s sample of 33 couples, who were on average 68 years old, revealed that the spouses rated the patients’ pain levels “significantly” higher, both before and after surgery, as opposed to what the patients reported.

Patients said the most significant effect from surgery was their improved mobility. Other benefits included resuming leisure and sporting activities, an improvement in pain and improvement in social and family lives.

Meanwhile, spouses had different priorities.

Most of them said the largest advantage post-surgery was the ability to carry on with social and leisure activities with their partner. Other benefits included no longer witnessing the patient suffering, a diminished caregiver burden and a sense of independence to resume their normal life, among other advantages.

“As an orthopedic surgeon, it’s important to consider the well-being of your patient’s spouse and know that they too are likely experiencing the burdens of living with a functional disability,” Tanzer said.

“The emotional and social impact as well as the physical challenges can be many and by continuing to research and bring more resources to the clinical setting, we can help both orthopedic surgeons and patients create a better quality of life from diagnosis through to treatment.”

In the study, couples had been married for an average of 36.5 years. To participate in the study, subjects had to have been living with a spouse for at least five years before the surgery. The patients lived with an osteoarthritis diagnosis for an average of seven years, with an average wait time of 8.7 months to receive an operation.

The study was released as part of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons’ Virtual Education Experience called “Marital Relationship and Quality of Life in Couples Following Joint Replacement Surgery.”