Monday 8 PM EDT: communication campaign to end government overreach

Monday Webinar:

The Communication Campaign

Link: https://join.me/sevenpillars
How do we get information to the legislators and President that they can’t ignore and dismiss with a form letter?  Through coordinated mass emails/FB posts/tweets from hundreds of constituents at the same time.  DoctorsofCourage is spearheading such a campaign.

Major advocates in the work of stopping the attacks on patients and pain management providers met on the webinar Monday, June 24. We put our heads together, discussed what has been tried, but hasn’t worked, and are working on a coordinated effort to design effective communication. This is a start. We will be working every Monday on a communication campaign that hopefully all will participate in. If you have any ideas to share, please send them to me at lindacheek@doctorsofcourage.org. I will share with the group. If you are interested in becoming an active advocate in the campaign, please join us next Monday at 8:00 EDT.

To dial in by phone:

United States – Camden, DE
+1.302.202.5900

United States – Denver, CO
+1.720.650.5050

United States – Los Angeles, CA
+1.213.226.1066

United States – New York, NY
+1.646.307.1990

United States – Tampa, FL
+1.813.769.0500

United States – Washington, DC
+1.202.602.1295

More phone numbers

Conference ID:
848-079-407 #

Sudden, Unexpected Death in Chronic Pain Patients

Sudden, Unexpected Death in Chronic Pain Patients

https://www.practicalpainmanagement.com/sudden-unexpected-death-chronic-pain-patients

Severe pain, independent of medical therapy, may cause sudden, unexpected death. Cardiac arrest is the cause, and practitioners need to know how to spot a high-risk patient.

Sudden, unexpected death may occur in a severe, chronic pain patient, and the terminal event may be unrelated to medical therapeutics. Fortunately, sudden death is not as commonly observed in pain patients as in past years most likely due to better access to at least some treatment. Sudden death still occurs, however, and practitioners need to know how to spot an “at-risk” patient.

Unexpected, sudden death due to severe pain is poorly appreciated, since many observers still view severe pain as a harmless nuisance rather than a potential physiologic calamity. In many cases, just prior to death, the patient informs their family that they feel more ill than usual and seek relief in their bed or on their couch. Unfortunately, some of these patients don’t awaken. Other patients die, without warning, in their sleep or are found collapsed on the floor. Modern medicine’s aggressive toxicology and forensic procedures after death have contributed to the poor understanding of pain’s death threat. In some cases, a pain patient that was being treated appropriately with an opioid or other agent with overdose or abuse potential has suddenly and unexpectedly died. Drugs were found in body fluids after death, and in my opinion a coroner wrongly declared the death to be an “accidental overdose” or “toxic reaction” to drugs rather than implicate the real culprit, which may have been an “out-of-control” pain flare.

This article is partially intended to call attention to the fact that the mere finding of abusable drugs at autopsy doesn’t necessarily mean that the drugs caused the death. In fact, the drugs may have postponed death. Some physicians have been falsely accused of causing deaths due to drug overtreatment when, in fact, undertreatment of pain may have caused the death. Additionally, opioid blood levels assessed at autopsy of a patient who died suddenly are all too often wrongfully considered accidental overdoses because the pathologist is unaware that chronic pain patients on a stable dose of opioids can be fully functional with serum levels of their prescribed opioids that far exceed lethal levels in opioid-naïve patients.1

Given here are the mechanisms of sudden, unexpected death in pain patients and some protective measures that practitioners must take to keep from being falsely accused of causing a sudden, unexpected death. More importantly, given here are some clinical tips to help identify the chronic pain patient who is at high risk of sudden, unexpected death so that more aggressive pain treatment can be rendered.

A Brief Anecdotal History
As a senior medical student at Kansas University in the early 1960s, I was required to take a rural preceptorship with a country doctor. In making our rounds one day to the county’s nursing home, I heard a farmer’s wife declare, “pain killed my mother last night.” Since then, I’ve repeatedly heard that pain killed a loved one. Folklore frequently mentions that people die “from,” as well as “in” pain. There is, however, little written detail of these events.

In the early years of my pain practice, which I began in 1975, I had several patients die suddenly and unexpectedly. This rarely happens to me today as I’ve learned to “expect the unexpected” and to identify which patients are at high risk of sudden death. In recent years, I’ve reviewed a number of litigation and malpractice cases of sudden, unexpected death in chronic pain patients. In some of these cases, physicians were accused of over- or misprescribing and causing a sudden, unexpected death, even though the patient had taken stabilized dosages of opioids and other drugs for extended periods. Also, the autopsy showed no evidence of pulmonary edema (a defining sign for overdose and respiratory depression). In cases where the physician was falsely accused, the post-death finding of abusable drugs in body fluids caused a family member, regulatory agency, or public attorney to falsely bring charges against a physician.

Setting and Cause
Unexpected deaths in chronic pain patients usually occur at home. Sometimes the death is in a hospital or detoxification center. The history of these patients is rather typical. Most are too ill to leave home and spend a lot of time in bed or on a couch. Death often occurs during sleep or when the patient gets up to go to the toilet. In some cases, the family reports the patient spent an extraordinary amount of time on the toilet just prior to collapse and death. Sudden and unexpected death, however, can occur anywhere at any time, as pain patients who have died unexpectedly and suddenly have been found at work or in a car.

Coronary spasm and/or cardiac arrhythmia leading to cardiac arrest or asystole is the apparent cause of death in the majority of these cases, since no consistent gross pathology has been found at autopsy.2-5 Instant cardiac arrest appears to account for sudden collapse or death during sleep. Perhaps constipation and straining to pass stool may be cardiac strain factors as some pain patients die during defecation. Acute sepsis due to adrenal failure and immune suppression may account for some sudden deaths.

Two Mechanisms of Cardiac Death
Severe pain is a horrific stress.6,7 Severe pain flares, acute or chronic, cause the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis to produce glucocorticoids (cortisol, pregnenolone) and catecholamines (adrenalin and noradrenalin) in an effort to biologically contain the stress.8,9 Catecholamines have a direct, potent stimulation effect on the cardiovascular system and severe tachycardia and hypertension result.10 Pulse rates may commonly rise to more than 100 beats per minute and even rise to more than 130 beats per minute. Blood pressure may reach more than 200 mmHg systolic and more than 120 mmHg diastolic. In addition to adrenal catecholamine release, pain flares cause overactivity of the autonomic, sympathetic nervous system, which add additional stimulation to catecholamine-induced tachycardia and hypertension. Physical signs of autonomic, sympathetic overactivity, in addition to tachycardia and hypertension, may include mydriasis (dilated pupil), sweating, vasoconstriction with cold extremities, hyperreflexia, hyperthermia, nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting.

The combined physiologic effects of excessive catecholamine release and autonomic, sympathetic discharge may put such strain on the heart to cause coronary spasm, cardiac arrhythmia, and sudden death.11 Pain patients who have underlying arteriosclerosis or other cardiac disease are at higher risk of sudden death. For example, a patient with angina or generalized arteriosclerosis is at high risk, and should be aggressively treated. Anecdotal reports have been made in which a patient whose pain was well controlled on opioids died unexpectedly with an underlying cardiac disease. In one report, a 40-year-old pain patient on opioids was found dead and the autopsy revealed previously unrecognized coronary artery disease, which was determined to be the cause of death. Some patient deaths may be due to other comorbid conditions, whether known or not known, and may not be related to the pain problem.

Case Example #1
A 60-year-old male with severe pain due to Lyme’s disease–related arthritis has generalized arteriosclerosis. When his pain flares, he has hypertension, tachycardia more than 100 beats per minute, and angina. On numerous occasions, he had been hospitalized for chest pain and he regularly requires nitrates for emergency coronary relief. He was treated with a long-acting opioid for baseline pain and a short-acting opioid for breakthrough pain. This regimen has controlled his angina and has prevented hospitalizations for more than 2 years.

The second mechanism, which may produce sudden death, is adrenal insufficiency. The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis may acutely and suddenly deplete during episodes of severe pain resulting in a life-threatening drop in cortisol, aldosterone, and possibly other adrenal hormones (Figure 1).12 With a precipitous drop in adrenal hormone production, there can be a severe electrolyte imbalance (eg, low sodium, high potassium), which may produce cardiac arrhythmia and death. Although undocumented, some sudden deaths may likely be a simultaneous result of excess sympathetic stimulation and electrolyte imbalance.

Identification of the At-risk Patient
An active, ambulatory pain patient who has mild to moderate, intermittent pain is not at high risk for sudden death. The patient at high risk for sudden death is a severe pain patient who is functionally impaired and has to take a variety of treatment agents, including opioids and neuropathic drugs, to control pain. In all likelihood, the patient who has centralized pain and who has central nervous system inflammation due to glial cell activation is the patient who will likely have flares severe enough to affect the endocrine and cardiovascular systems. Acute pain severe enough to cause cardiac overstimulation and death is usually only seen with severe trauma. Pain as a result of modern-day surgery is well controlled by analgesics, so perioperative sudden death due to surgically induced pain, per se, is essentially a thing of the past. Accidents, trauma, and war wounds are exceptions. In these situations, a patient in excruciating pain who shows signs of excess sympathetic discharge needs progressive emergency pain treatment to control excess sympathetic discharge.13,14 Excess sympathetic discharge signs that can be discerned at the bedside, emergency room, or accident site include mydriasis, diaphoresis, hyperthermia, tachycardia, hypertension, and hyperreflexia.15,16

The chronic pain patient who is at high risk for sudden death can usually be spotted at a clinical visit (Table 1). Patient and family will give a history of functional impairment. The most typical history will be one in which the patient will have constant, daily pain intermixed with severe flares, which cause a bed or couch-bound state. Even though medication dosages may be high, they may not be effective enough to prevent pain flares and sudden death. The patient will likely demonstrate excess sympathetic discharge. By history, this includes waves or episodes of allodynia, hot and cold flashes, hyperalgesia, and severe insomnia. Physical exam may reveal excess sympathetic discharge by any or all of the following signs: tachycardia, hypertension, vasoconstriction (cold hands/feet), mydriasis (dilated pupil), and hyperreflexia.

Cortisol, pregnenolone, or corticotropin (adrenocorticotropic hormone) serum levels may be subnormal indicating that the immune and healing systems are impaired, leaving the patient subject to infections and interference with opioid effectiveness.

When high-risk indicators are found, therapeutic adjustments in type, quantity, and quality of pain treatment must be implemented to minimize or eliminate risk factors. In particular, there should be attempts to normalize hypertension, tachycardia, and hormone levels.

Methadone Administration And Sudden Death
Other than overdose and respiratory depression, the opioid methadone has been associated with a cardiac conduction defect (prolonged QT interval) called “torsades de pointes,” which may cause an unexpected, sudden death.17,18This defect may cause sudden death by cardiac arrests. No other opioid has been credibly associated with cardiac conduction defects. In addition to the problem of QT prolongation, many methadone-related deaths occur during the first few days of use, making the deaths in these instances more likely due to the prescriber’s unawareness of methadone’s long half-life and, therefore, accumulation in the bloodstream because the dose was titrated too quickly.

However, the recognition of QT prolongation has caused considerable controversy and many experts believe that an electrocardiogram should be done to screen for a prolonged QT interval before and/or during methadone administration.17 The occurrence of “torsades de pointes” with methadone is usually dose related and associated with concomitant use of antidepressants or benzodiazepines. If a patient who takes methadone suddenly dies due to cardiac arrhythmia, there will be no gross pathology at autopsy, which is typical of sudden death in a pain patient. The prescribing physician may, however, be accused of overprescribing methadone. Due to this risk, many physicians have made a choice to shun methadone and avoid the risk of being falsely accused for overprescribing. From a clinical perspective, the use of antidepressants and benzodiazepines should be restricted if methadone is prescribed, since these ancillary agents appear to facilitate methadone deaths.

Risk of Sepsis
Although not well documented, acute sepsis and sudden death probably occur in some severe, chronic pain patients. The mechanism is probably initiated by subnormal serum levels of cortisol or other hormones due to adrenal depletion. Chronic subnormal adrenal hormone levels severely compromise the protective immune system in the body, rendering the patient susceptible to virulent bacteria and other pathogens.19,20 The author has frequently found extremely low levels of cortisol (fewer than 1.0 mg/dL) in undertreated intractable pain patients. One can only wonder as to how many pain patients have suddenly died from acute sepsis. Although documentation of this pathologic event is scant, practitioners should be aware that extremely low serum levels of adrenal hormones are known to be associated with a compromised immune system and sepsis.

Death Following Sudden Opioid Cessation
There is the misguided notion among some addiction and mental health practitioners that withdrawal from opioids is an innocuous procedure that is risk free. This school of thought says that only withdrawal from alcohol and benzodiazepines is risky. This is generally true unless the patient who is dependent upon opioids has severe underlying pain and is taking opioids solely for pain control. In some patients, opioids may mask underlying pain so well that a practitioner may not even believe that pain recrudescence is a possibility once opioids are stopped.

Patients who have severe pain that is well controlled by opioids may be sudden-death candidates if their opioids are precipitously stopped. If opioids in a severe pain patient are precipitously stopped, the masked pain may flare causing severe autonomic, sympathetic discharge and overstimulation of the adrenals to produce excess catecholamines with subsequent cardiac arrhythmia and arrest. Malpractice suits have occurred when opioids have been precipitously stopped in a pain patient. Here are two examples known to the author.

Case Example #1
A 45-year-old woman with fibromyalgia and severe pain was well controlled with extended release morphine for baseline pain and short-acting hydrocodone for breakthrough pain. She entered an in-patient detoxification program where she was told that fibromyalgia only required psychotherapy and no opioids. The detoxification program precipitously stopped all her opioids and placed her in isolation for punishment because she was using opioids as a “crutch” rather than “facing her problems.” She died suddenly about 36 hours after all opioids were stopped.

Case Example #2
A 42-year-old male had a work injury and subsequently suffered reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD) or complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS). His pain was reasonably well controlled with fentanyl transdermal patches (Duragesic) for baseline pain and short-acting oxycodone (OxyContin) for breakthrough pain. His workers’ compensation carrier had him evaluated by “experts” who claimed that pain couldn’t possibly exist for more than about 6 months after injury, and RSD and CRPS were not “legitimate diagnoses.” His workers’ compensation carrier, based on their “experts’” opinions, precipitously stopped all his opioids by refusing to pay for them. The man died suddenly 4 days after abrupt cessation of his opioids.

Value of Opioid Serum Levels
Patients who have severe chronic pain, take opioids, and demonstrate some high-risk signs and symptoms for sudden death as described above should have opioid blood levels done. Why? Legal protection. If a severe chronic pain patient who takes opioids suddenly dies, the practitioner may be accused of overprescribing and causing an overdose death unless he/she has pre-death opioid blood levels on the patient’s chart. Keep in mind that there will be no gross cardiac pathology at autopsy if the patient suddenly dies of a cardiac arrhythmia or arrest. And, the coroner will likely call the death a drug overdose and blame the prescribing physician. Here are two illustrative cases.

Case Example #1
A 28-year-old male, former football player had severe spine and knee degeneration. He died in his sleep and his death was brought under investigation by the coroner. At autopsy he had a methadone blood level of 400 ng/mL. The prescribing physician was about to be charged with negligence by the local district attorney, until the physician showed that, in life, the patient’s methadone blood levels ran between 500 to 650 ng/mL.

Case Example #2
A 58-year-old female with genetic porphyria had suffered from severe generalized pain for more than 20 years. She collapsed in her living room in sudden death. At autopsy she was found to be wearing three fentanyl dermal patches (100 mcg/hour). At autopsy she demonstrated a fentanyl blood level of 10 ng/mL and a morphine blood level of 150 ng/mL. Her prescribing physician was able to show the sheriff’s investigators that in pre-death treatment, she had fentanyl and morphine blood levels considerably above these found at autopsy. No charges were ever brought against the physician.

Summary
Although sudden, unexpected death in chronic pain patients appears to be declining in incidence due to greater access to treatment, practitioners need to be aware that sudden, unexpected death may occur independent of opioid administration. The precise mechanism of death is cardiac arrest or asystole due to coronary spasm, arrhythmia, and/or electrolyte imbalance. Severe chronic pain produces excess sympathetic discharge through the autonomic nervous system and overstimulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, which causes great output of adrenal catecholamines. The chronic pain patient who is at highest risk for sudden death is the patient whose uncontrolled pain and pain flares are so great as to cause a high degree of functional disability. Those pain patients who are ambulatory and active are not at high risk for sudden death. The attainment of opioid blood levels during treatment of patients who are at high risk for sudden death are advised as a medical-legal protection should opioids be present in blood after death. Patients who are identified as high risk should be monitored by regular clinic visits, and efforts should be done to control excess sympathetic discharge and adrenal deficiencies.

Highway robbery is ILLEGAL … EXCEPT for (PBM) Prescription Benefit Managers

Metformin ER (Glucophage XR)

Metformin ER (Glucophage XR) is an inexpensive drug used to treat type II diabetes. It helps control blood sugar in combination with diet and exercise. This drug is slightly more popular than comparable drugs. It is available in brand and generic versions. Generic metformin ER is covered by most Medicare and insurance plans, but pharmacy coupons or cash prices may be lower. The lowest GoodRx price for the most common version of metformin ER (Glucophage XR) is around $3.00, 69% off the average retail price of $9.98.
This is apparently how the “PBM highway robbery game is played”.. The above is from www.goodrx.com
This shows that the AWP (Average Wholesale Price) is $1667.77 and CVS/Caremark paid the pharmacy a total of $155.21 – $40 from the pt & Caremark $115.21 and in turn CVS/Caremark sent the pt’s insurance company a bill for $1212.33
And what did CVS/Caremark do to earn $1057.12 administrative fee ?
Not much more than what a Visa/MC/Amex/Discover does when a person uses them to pay a purchase.  For which a charge card will charge the seller a 2%-3% service charge.
Is Anthem insurance that STUPID about the price or is there some “back door” kickback/rebate/discount from CVS/Caremark  to Anthem…
Everyone – especially members of Congress – is complaining about the cost of Rx medication.   Maybe the fact that the insurance/PBM industry has one of the largest pot of money to hire lobbyists has something to do with Congress’ lack of knowledge what is really behind the high cost of Rx meds ?

chuckle of the day 01/04/2020

PULL THE PLUG: she’s on a constant stream of painkillers, sedatives and paralytics

Judge Rules Hospital Can Take Baby Off Life Support

https://blackamericaweb.com/2020/01/02/judge-rules-hospital-can-take-baby-off-life-support/

DALLAS (AP) — A Texas judge on Thursday sided with a hospital that plans to remove an 11-month-old girl from life support after her mother disagreed with the decision by doctors who say the infant is in pain and that her condition will never improve.

Trinity Lewis had asked Judge Sandee Bryan Marion to issue an injunction in Tarrant County district court to ensure that Cook Children’s Medical Center doesn’t end her daughter Tinslee Lewis’ life-sustaining treatment. Texas Right to Life, an anti-abortion group that is advocating for Tinslee, said the girl’s mother will appeal the judge’s decision.

Doctors at the Fort Worth hospital had planned to remove Tinslee from life support Nov. 10 after invoking Texas’ “10-day rule,” which can be employed when a family disagrees with doctors who say life-sustaining treatment should be stopped. The law stipulates that if the hospital’s ethics committee agrees with doctors, treatment can be withdrawn after 10 days if a new provider can’t be found to take the patient.

In a statement issued by Texas Right to Life, which opposes the “10-day rule,” Lewis said she was “heartbroken” over the judge’s decision. “I feel frustrated because anyone in that courtroom would want more time just like I do if Tinslee were their baby,” she said.

The hospital said in a statement Thursday that in order to keep Tinslee alive, she’s on a constant stream of painkillers, sedatives and paralytics. She currently has severe sepsis, which isn’t uncommon when patients require deep sedation and chemical paralysis, it said.

“Even with the most extraordinary measures the medical team is taking, Tinslee continues to suffer,” the hospital said.

Efforts to find another facility to take her have been unsuccessful. The hospital said it has reached out to more than 20 facilities. Texas Right to Life and Protect TX Fragile Kids have also been trying to find a facility to take her.

Prior to Thursday’s ruling, both sides agreed that if Marion denied the injunction request, the hospital would wait at least seven days before taking Tinslee off life-support. In her decision, Marion said the seven-day period would give the girl’s mother time to file a notice of appeal and a motion for emergency relief with a state court of appeals.

Tinslee has been at Cook Children’s since her premature birth. The hospital said she has a rare heart defect and suffers from chronic lung disease and severe chronic high blood pressure. She hasn’t come off a ventilator since going into respiratory arrest in early July and requires full respiratory and cardiac support.

Lewis testified at a hearing last month that despite her daughter’s sedation, she has a sense of the girl’s likes and dislikes, describing her as “sassy.” She said Tinslee likes getting her nails done but doesn’t like having her hair brushed.

“I want to be the one to make the decision for her,” Lewis said about removing her daughter from life support.

At the hearing last month, Dr. Jay Duncan, one of Tinslee’s physicians, described the girl’s complex conditions and Cook Children’s efforts to treat her, which have included about seven surgeries. The cardiac intensive care doctor said that for the first five months of Tinslee’s life doctors had hope she might one day at least be able to go home.

But Duncan said there came a point when doctors determined they had run out of surgical and clinical options, and that treatment was no longer benefiting Tinslee. Duncan said last month that the girl would likely die within half a year, and noted the hospital has made “extraordinary” efforts to find another facility for her.

“She is in pain. Changing a diaper causes pain. Suctioning her breathing tube causes pain. Being on the ventilator causes pain,” he said.

Duncan said there had been “many, many” conversations with Tinslee’s family about her dire condition.

Tarrant County Juvenile Court Judge Alex Kim issued a temporary restraining order to stop the removal of life support on Nov. 10. But Kim was removed from the case after the hospital filed a motion questioning his impartiality and saying he had bypassed case-assignment rules to designate himself as the presiding judge.

After his removal, Judge Marion, who is chief justice of Texas’ Fourth Court of Appeals, was assigned to hear the request for an injunction in Tarrant County district court.

The case has become a rallying point for Republicans in Texas, with the attorney general stating his opposition to the “10-day rule” and GOP state Rep. Tan Parker saying it “doesn’t fit with Texas values.”

The 1999 law that shields from lawsuits doctors who follow the process of going through an ethics committee was crafted by a task force that included lawmakers, attorneys, doctors and anti-abortion groups. Supporters of the law passed when George W. Bush, a Republican, was governor include the Texas Alliance for Life, the Texas Catholic Conference of Bishops and the Texas Medical Association.

Supporters say the law provides a framework for doctors and hospitals to resolve differences and ensures that doctors can’t be forced to perform medical interventions that cause harm or suffering.

I have mixed emotions about this situation.  “PAIN” is mentioned many times as the basis behind the decision and mentioned a few times of other meds – probably controlled substances – that she was receiving routinely.

It was not mentioned in this article but some others that I have read the current hospital had supposedly contact as many as 20 other hospital to take on the care of baby Tinslee going forward and none wanted to take on the care of this baby.

There is only a mention of Tinslee’s Mother in the picture… where is the Father ?

Is Trinity Lewis a single Mother ?

Is MONEY a underlying issue ?   11 months at $3000/day her care could hit ONE MILLION although most likely such high-touch, high-tech care could in the end the total cost to date could be multi millions.

No matter how this ends…. not everyone will be happy ….

 

If you didn’t check your Part D program before the end up the year – you may be getting $crewed

We have been using Silver Scripts (part of CVS Health/Caremark) for years… I have always been rather lazy and not checking out Rx prices from various Part D programs until 2019… when I ran the program https://www.medicare.gov/plan-compare/#/?lang=en to find out what would be the least expensive annual out of pocket costs for us.

We use a local independent and had noticed over the last couple of years… our out of pocket costs for Rxs seem to be going up – dramatically !!  Come to find out that Silver Scripts the only TWO PREFERRED PHARMACIES in the county of abt 85,000 population was the CVS Rx dept in Target and a new CVS store – these stores is one of the most congested roads in the entire county and about 1/2 mile apart and at least a 8 mile drive for us to go “into town” as opposed to the local indy that is abt ONE MILE from our house and will deliver if needed.

I took our new Part D cards to the pharmacy on Saturday with a refill that Barb needed and told them to fill it after the first of the year… since this year we have a $450 deductible with the new Part D prgm-  but all Part D programs were going to have a deductible or higher premiums to collect the same copay over 12 months.

The prescription that I was to pickup today was suppose to be $55 but when I got there… .it was $92… Come to find out the staffer that I had talked to had filled in on Monday when I dropped it off and billed it to Silver Scripts.

The Pharmacist reversed the Silver Script and billed it to our new Part D program and the price came out as $56..  Keep in mind the Rx filled/billed to Silver Scripts …the $92 was a COPAY and the one filled/billed to our new Part D was FULL PRICE because we are in our DEDUCTIBLE PERIOD… and it is suppose to be $3 once the deductible is met.

So I went to print out all the Rxs filled with Silver Scripts for 2019 and while they don’t automatically show you this.. if you hit the down arrow on each claim it will show what they paid… and found out that they paid little to NOTHING on most of the Rxs that we had filled last year…  One very notable Rx was I was charged $147.00 and THEY PAID $6.00

I just checked www.goodrx.com and the quoted prices was a range of $35 -$64 locally.  So Silver Scrips (CVS) has been charging me – and everyone else that doesn’t have them filled at a CVS pharnacy ) – from 50% to nearly THREE TIMES the available CASH PRICE at local pharmacies.  I was also paying Silver Scripts a MONTHLY PREMIUMS and normally the Part D/PBM gets a rebate/kickback/discount from the Pharma and I don’t know if they are getting any $$$ from the Feds/Medicare on a monthly basis.

Many scream & holler that Medicare should be negotiating prices with the pharmas… looks like they should start putting a mussel on some of their Part D prgms. Silver Scripts is one of the top three Part D providers.

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Unity can have many facets

over the last couple of weeks, I have been reviewing the stats on my blog, Face Book and Twitter.  Many times it has been stated by many that the chronic pain community seems to be impossible to come together… to unify.. “Unity” can have many facets..

It is claimed that there is 100+ million chronic painers… but where are they ?  I wonder how many chronic painers could be sorted out from the hundred or thousands of face book pages and just how many would the net number be on all those social networks ?   A few thousand that are regularly active.. it could maybe be up to ten thousand.  Even at ten thousand that is abt 0.01% of the total number of chronic pain pts

One of the facets of unity is speaking with one voice or talking about one specific agenda.  How many people or groups claim they represents the chronic pain community and many/most/all have at least a slightly different agenda and message.

Have you ever been in a restaurant/bar and the place is so noisy that the people at your table can’t hear each other because of the ambient ” white noise ” ?

Is the chronic pain community making very little progress going forward because all of the people that needs to be influenced to enact change is just hearing ” white noise” because there is no unity of message ?

Of the numerous “players” in this “war”, the only one that seems to have a unified message is the DOJ/DEA and they have a well organized distribution of that message https://www.dea.gov/press-releases      and it would appear that our media dutifully regurgitates these press releases on a routine basis.

Prescribers seem to fall into three different “camps”, those who are going to do their best to treat their chronic pain pts as they always have, those who believe that if they move all their chronic pain pts to < 90 MME/day they will be “safe” and a third that wants all of their pts off of opiates and controlled substances.

The Pharmas seem to just wait until something happens and hires law firms to settle the issue with some bureaucratic entity getting “paid off”

The various parts of our corporate healthcare system ( hospital systems, chain pharmacies, insurance/PBM, etc )  are doing various things, many of their actions/policies seem to be highly influenced by their legal depts or outside legal counsel.

IMO, part of the lack of unity within the chronic pain community is – at least from my media stats – how very little there is of sharing…  According to my Twitter account I have nearly 3000 followers.  I started noticing that when something I posted got some re-tweets… it was very seldom out of the SINGLE DIGITS of re-tweets. There will never be any sizeable unity within the chronic pain community .. if people don’t share with others in the chronic pain community what is going on around the community .. either good or bad… how is the community going to ever come together ?

When I started my blog, FB and Twitter accounts abt eight years ago… I really didn’t know what specifically I was going to do with them.  Everything seems to evolve that my focus was to be a educator and motivator.  You can’t “fight the enemy” unless you know what the enemy is doing but knowledge/education that does not result in some action taken… is a total waste.

I am starting the new year by taking a total hiatus from social media. I am NOT closing nor deleting all of my accounts,  I believe that there is a lot of valuable information on those accounts that I have accumulated over the last 8 yrs.. that may be useful to some pts in the future.

My email (steve@steveariens.com) will still be active and I will reading it

 

 

2019 in review … what killed us

who will not be here tomorrow

 

2016 in review … what killed us

2017 in review … what killed us

2018 in review … what killed us

6775 Americans will die EVERY DAY – from various reasons

2700 people  WILL ATTEMPT SUICIDE

140 will be SUCCESSFUL – including 20 veterans

270 will die from hospital acquired antibiotic resistant “bug” because staff won’t properly wash hands and/or proper infection control.

350 will die from their use/abuse of the drug ALCOHOL

1200 will die from their use/abuse of the drug NICOTINE

1400 will contract C-DIF from Hospital or Nursing home because staff doesn’t properly wash their hands are adhere to infection control  

80 WILL DIE mostly elderly.

850 will die from OBESITY

700 will die from medical errors

150 will die from Flu/Pneumonia

80 will die from Homicide

80 will die in car accidents

70 From ALL DRUG ABUSE

http://www.romans322.com/daily-death-rate-statistics.php

United States of America
RealTime
CURRENT DEATH TOLL
from Jan 1, 2018 – Dec 31, 2018 (6:27:30 PM)


Someone just died by: Death Box

Just the Data … Raw and Undigested


Abortion *: 1091318
Heart Disease: 613959
Cancer: 591325
Tobacco: 349779
Obesity: 306806
Medical Errors: 251295
Stroke: 133019
Lower Respiratory Disease: 142853
Accident (unintentional): 135967
Hospital Associated Infection: 98937
Alcohol *: 99937
Diabetes: 76440
Alzheimer’s Disease: 93482
Influenza/Pneumonia: 55192
Kidney Failure: 42735
Blood Infection: 33443
Suicide: 42746
Drunk Driving: 33787
Unintentional Poisoning: 31738
All Drug Abuse: 24989
Homicide: 16788
Prescription Drug Overdose: 14991
Murder by gun: 11486
Texting while Driving: 5985
Pedestrian: 4997
Drowning: 3913
Fire Related: 3498
Malnutrition: 2770
Domestic Violence: 1459
Smoking in Bed: 780
Falling out of Bed: 598
Killed by Falling Tree: 149
Lawnmower: 68
Spontaneous Combustion: 0
Your chance of death is 100%. Are you ready?

Totals of all categories are based upon past trends documented below.


Sources:
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/deaths.htm
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hus/hus15.pdf#019
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr60/nvsr60_04.pdf
http://www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/library/graphs/graphs.htm
http://www.alcoholalert.com/drunk-driving-statistics.html
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/suicide.htm
http://wonder.cdc.gov/wonder/prevguid/m0052833/m0052833.asp
http://www.cdc.gov/motorvehiclesafety/Pedestrian_Safety/factsheet.html
http://www.cdc.gov/HomeandRecreationalSafety/Water-Safety/waterinjuries-factsheet.html
http://www.nfpa.org/categoryList.asp?categoryID=953
http://www.dvrc-or.org/domestic/violence/resources/C61/
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1562978,00.html
https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.documentcloud.org/documents/781687/john-james-a-new-evidence-based-estimate-of.pdf

 


I am being completely weaned off my meds, & suspect I will kill myself with the amount of pain I am in, & will be by the time this is over (the wean that is). Already can’t function.


My husband committed suicide after being abandoned by his pain dr.


Please pray for me as I am on the brink of suicide! I don’t want to die but can’t handle the pain anymore! The doctor that I am currently seeing will not give me enough pills to last all month every month… I have to wait until Oct to get in with a pain management doctor whom I already know by others that I know sees this doctor that he will help me, need prayer to hold on until oct… I keep thinking of my family who needs me hear.


“We just lost another intractable member of our support group two nights ago. She committed suicide because her medications were taken away for interstitial cystitis (a horribly painful bladder condition) and pudendal neuralgia, both of which she had battled for years


D D., journalist and prescribed fentanyl patient for a dozen years joined me on air last weekend with her husband and spoke of her suicide plan should the only relief from constant agony be heavily reduced or taken away.


I was told last Friday that my Dr. will be tapering my meds again . When I told him I didn’t think my body could take another lowering he stated ” it wasn’t my
License on the line”, I stated ” no , but it’s my life on the line”!!!!! I can not continue to live this way . I can not continue to suffer in agony when my medications and dose where working just fine before and I was a productive member of society . I can no longer take this. I have a plan in place to end my life myself When I am forced to reduce my Medications again . I just can’t do it anymore .


On Friday at around 9 p.m. U.S. Navy veteran Kevin Keller parked his red pickup truck in the parking lot at the Wytheville Rite-Aid, walked across the grass and stood in front of the U.S. Veterans Community Based Outpatient Clinic next door.

Sick and tired of being in pain, he pulled out a gun, shot a hole in the office door, aimed the gun barrel at his head and ended his hurt once and for all.


As a longterm pain patient with a current unsupportive pain dr, I just thought I’d share the reality of the position I’m in right now…

I’m in very bad pain all the time for very legit and well documented reasons. My pain dr however never gives me enough meds to help me. He just keeps reducing them, which is causing me to be in even more pain and suffer so much more. My quality of life also continues to go downhill at the same time. I was just given a letter by him recently too about some study indicating an increase in deaths if you take opioids and benzos. It stated he’s no longer going to give pain meds to anyone who is taking a benzo. I take one, because I have to, for a seizure disorder, not because I want to. He told me to pick one or the other though, plus went ahead and reduced my pain meds some more. He doesn’t seem to care the least bit. I’ve looked hard and so far I can’t find another one to get in to see near me at this time, but I’m desperately still trying. Unfortunately, they’re few and far between here, in addition to the wait for an appointment being long. I’ve even called hospice for help. So far, they haven’t been of much help either, because I don’t have a dr who will say I have six months or less to live. I told them either choice my pain dr is giving me is very inhumane, so I’d rather just quit eating and drinking, to the point where I pass away from that, while I get some kind of comfort care from them. I don’t really want to though, although I do have a long list of some very bad health problems, including a high probability that I have cancer and it’s spread. Am I suicidal? No. Will I be if my pain and seizure meds are taken away. Highly likely. I never ever saw this coming either. I don’t have a clue what to do and the clock is ticking, but I’m still fighting for an answer. So far, I can’t find not even one dr to help me though. Not one. I know my life depends on it, but at what point will these drs let my suffering become so inhumane that I just can’t take it anymore. I just don’t know right now. It’s a very scary place to be in for sure. That I do know.


The patient was being denied the medicine that had been alleviating his pain and committed suicide because, “he couldn’t live with the pain anymore. He could not see a future. He had no hope. He had no life.”


I am a chronic pain patient who has been on fairly high doses of opiates for about nine years now. My dose has been forcibly reduced since the cdc guidelines. I moved to Oregon from Alaska and can’t find a doctor to prescribe my medication. I pray I have the strength not to take my own life!


Zach Williams of Minnesota  committed suicide at age 35. He was a veteran of Iraq and had experienced back pain and a brain injury from his time in service. He had treated his pain with narcotics until the VA began reducing prescriptions.


Ryan Trunzo committed suicide at the age of 26. He was an army veteran of Iraq. He had experienced fractures in his back for which he tried to get effective painkillers, but failed due to VA policy. His mother stated “I feel like the VA took my son’s life.”


Kevin Keller, a Navy veteran, committed suicide at age 52. He shot v after breaking into the house of his friend, Marty Austin, to take his gun. Austin found a letter left by Keller saying “Marty sorry I broke into your house and took your gun to end the pain!” Keller had experienced a stroke 11 years earlier, and he had worsening pain in the last two years of his life because VA doctors would not give him pain medicine. On the subject of pain medication, Austin said that Keller “was not addicted. He needed it.”


Bob Mason, aged 67, of Montana committed suicide after not having access to drugs to treat his chronic pain for just one week. One doctor who had treated Mason was Mark Ibsen, who shut down his office after the Montana Board of Medical Examiners investigated him for excessive prescription of opioids. According to Mason’s daughter, Mason “didn’t like the drugs, but there were no other options.”


Donald Alan Beyer, living in Idaho, had experienced back pain for years. He suffered from  degenerative disc disease, as well as a job-related injury resulting in a broken back. After his doctor retired, Beyer struggled without pain medicine for months. He shot himself on his 47th birthday. His son, Garrett, said “I guess he felt suicide was his only chance for relief.”


Denny Peck of Washington state was 58 when he ended his life. In 1990, he experienced a severe injury to his vertebrae during a fishing accident. His mother, Lorraine Peck, said “[h]e has been in severe pain ever since,” and his daughter, Amanda Peck, “said she didn’t remember a time when her dad didn’t hurt.” During the last few years of his life, Peck had received opiates for his pain from a Seattle Pain Center, until these clinics closed. After suffering and being unable to find doctors who would help with his pain, Peck called 911. Two days later, Peck was found dead in his home with bullet wounds in his head. A note found near Peck read: “Can’t sleep, can’t eat, can’t do anything. And all the whitecoats don’t care at all.”


Doug Hale of Vermont killed himself at the age of 53. He had experienced pain from interstitial cystitis, and decided to end his life six weeks after his doctor suddenly cut off his opiate painkillers. He left a note reading “Can’t take the chronic pain anymore” before he shot himself in the head. His doctor said he “was no longer willing to risk my license by writing you another script for opioids”  (see attachment A for details of the problem as relyed by his wife Tammi who is now 10 months without a husband as a direct result of the CDC guidelines to prevent deaths)Bruce Graham committed suicide after living with severe pain for two years. At age 62, Graham fell from a ladder, suffering several severe injuries. He had surgery and fell into a coma. After surgery, he suffered from painful adhesions which could not be removed. He relied on opioid painkillers to tolerate his pain, but doctors eventually stopped prescribing the medicine he needed. Two years after his fall, Graham shot himself in the heart to end the pain.


Travis Patterson, a young combat veteran, died two days after a suicide attempt at the age of 26. After the attempt to take his own life, Patterson was brought to the VA emergency room. Doctors offered therapy as a solution, but did not offer any relief for his pain. Patterson died two days after his attempted suicide.


54-year-old Bryan Spece of Montana  killed himself about two weeks after he experienced a major reduction in his pain medication. The CDC recommends a slow reduction in pain medicine, such as a 10% decrease per week. Based on information from Spece’s relative, Spece’s dose could have been reduced by around 70% in the weeks before he died.


In Oregon, Sonja Mae Jonsson ended her life when her doctor stopped giving her pain medicine as a result of the CDC guidelines.


United States veterans have been committing suicide after being unable to receive medicine for pain. These veterans include Peter Kaisen,Daniel Somers, Kevin Keller, Ryan Trunzo, Zach Williams, and Travis Patterson


A 40-year-old woman with fibromyalgia, lupus, and back issues appeared to have committed suicide after not being prescribed enough pain medicine. She had talked about her suicidal thoughts with her friends several times before, saying “there is no quality of life in pain.” She had no husband or children to care for, so she ended her life.


Sherri Little was 53 when she committed suicide. She suffered pain from occipital neuralgia, IBS, and fibromyalgia. A friend described Little as having a “shining soul of activism” as she spent time advocating for other chronic pain sufferers. However, Little had other struggles in her life, such as her feeling that her pain kept her from forming meaningful relationships. In her final days, Little was unable to keep down solid food, and she tried to get medical help from a hospital. When she was unable to receive relief, Little ended her life.


Former NASCAR driver Dick Trickle of North Carolina shot himself at age 71. He suffered from long-term pain under his left breast. Although he went through several medical tests to determine the cause of his pain, the results could not provide relief. After Trickle’s suicide, his brother stated that Dick “must have just decided the pain was too high, because he would have never done it for any other reason.”


39-year-old Julia Kelly committed suicide after suffering ongoing pain resulting from two car accidents. Kelly’s pain caused her to quit her job and move in with her parents, unable to start a family of her own. Her family is certain that the physical and emotional effects of her pain are what drove her to end her life. Kelly had founded a charity to help other chronic pain sufferers, an organization now run by her father in order to help others avoid Julia’s fate.


Sarah Kershaw ended her life at age 49. She was a New York Times Reporter who suffered from occipital neuralgia.


Lynn Gates Jackson, speaking for her friend E.C. who committed suicide after her long term opiates were suddenly reduced by 50% against her will, for no reason.  Lynn reports she felt like the doctors were not treating her like a human being (Ed:  a common complaint) and she made the conscious decision to end her life.


E.C. committed suicide quietly one day in Visalia California.  She was 40.  Her friend reported her death.  “She did not leave a note but I know what she did”.  The doctor would only write a prescription for 10 vicodin and she was in so much pain she could not get to the clinic every few days.   We had talked many times about quitting life. Then she left.  She just left.


Jessica, a patient with RSD/CRPS committed suicide when the pain from her disease became too much for her to bear. A friend asserted that Jessica’s death was not the result of an overdose, and that “living with RSD isn’t living.”


https://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/02/27/business/media/sarah-kershaw-former-times-reporter-dies-at-49.html?referer=https://t.co/qcSF8qOBp6?amp=1


http://www.news-press.com/story/news/crime/2014/09/08/death-investigation-at-groves-rv-park-in-fort-myers/15280035/


http://www.kpaddock.org/


https://m.facebook.com/FibroPrince/posts/948610075216801


https://www.pharmaciststeve.com/?p=14073


https://www.pharmaciststeve.com/?p=14574


https://www.pharmaciststeve.com/?p=15023


http://linkis.com/painnewsnetwork.org/7IoUl


http://linkis.com/whotv.com/2016/11/10/ibRof


https://articles.al.com/news/index.ssf/2016/12/alabama_pain_centers_troubles.amp


https://www.painnewsnetwork.org/stories/2016/12/22/chronic-pain-patient-abandoned-by-doctor-dies#.WFwJ5-Lk6Xg.twitter


http://linkis.com/painnewsnetwork.org/oKRZ5


http://linkis.com/www.seattletimes.com/tgyL7


https://edsinfo.wordpress.com/2017/04/20/%ef%bb%bfpain-and-suicide-the-other-side-of-the-opioid-story/amp/


http://www.bendbulletin.com/topics/5342867-151/opioid-crisis-pain-patients-pushed-to-the-brink


https://www.painnewsnetwork.org/stories/2017/5/26/patient-suicide-blamed-on-montana-pain-clinic


https://www.painnewsnetwork.org/stories/2016/5/27/are-cdcs-opioid-guidelines-causing-more-suicides?rq=suicide


http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/breaking/man-who-set-himself-on-fire-at-northfield-veterans-clinic/article_b7a4a712-f04e-11e5-a39b-3f42b9138511.amp.html


Aliff, Charles


Beyer, Donald Alan


Brunner, Robert “Bruin”


Graham, Bruce


Hale, Doug


Hartsgrove, Daniel P


Ingram III, Charles Richard


Kaisen, Peter


Keller, Kevin


Kershaw, Sarah


Kimberly, Allison


Little, Sherri


Mason, Bob


Miles, Richard


Murphy, Thomas


Paddock, Karon


Patterson, Travis “Patt”


Peck, Denny


Peterson, Michael Jay


Reid, Marsha


Somers, Daniel


Son, Randall Lee


Spece, Brian


Tombs, John


Trickle, Richard “Dick”


Trunzo, Ryan


Williams, Zack


Karon Shettler Paddock  committed suicide on August 7, 2013  http://www.kpaddock.org/


https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1616190951785852&set=a.395920107146282.94047.100001848876646&type=3&theater 

Jessica Simpson took her life July 2017


Mercedes McGuire took her life on Friday, August 4th. She leaves behind her 4 yr old son. She could no longer endure the physical & emotional pain from Trigeminal Neuralgia.


www.disabledveterans.org/2017/08/16/veteran-commits-suicide-front-amarillo-va-emergency-department/

Another Veteran Suicide In Front Of VA Emergency Department


 Depression and Pain makes me want to kill self. Too much physical and emotional pain to continue on. I seek the bliss fullness of Death. Peace. Live together die alone.


 Dr. Mansureh Irvani  suspected overdose victim  http://www.foxnews.com/health/2017/08/18/suspended-oral-surgeon-dies-suspected-overdose.html


Katherine Goddard’s Suicide note: Due to the pain we are both in and can’t get help, this is the only way we can see getting out of it. Goodbye to everybody,”   https://www.cbsnews.com/news/florida-man-arrested-after-girlfriend-dies-during-alleged-suicide-pact/  


Steven Lichtenberg: the 32-year-old Dublin man shot himself   http://www.dispatch.com/news/20160904/chronic-pains-emotional-toll-can-lead-to-suicide  


Fred Sinclair  he was hurting very much and was, in effect, saying goodbye to the family.  https://www.pharmaciststeve.com/?p=21743


Robert Markel, 56 – June 2016 – Denied Pain Meds/Heroin OD  http://www.pennlive.com/opioid-crisis/2017/08/heroin_overdose_deaths.html


 Lisa June 2016  https://youtu.be/rBlrSyi_-rQ


Jay Lawrence  March 2017  https://www.painnewsnetwork.org/stories/2017/9/4/how-chronic-pain-killed-my-husband


Celisa Henning: killed herself and her twin daughters...http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/Mom-in-Apparent-Joliet-Murder-Suicide-said-Body-Felt-Like-It-was-On-Fire-Grandma-Says-442353713.html?fb_action_ids=10213560297382698&fb_action_types=og.comments

Karen Boje-58  CPP-Deming, NM


Katherine Goddard, 52 –  June 30, 2017 – Palm Coast, FL -Suicide/Denied Opioids  http://www.news-journalonline.com/news/20170816/palm-coast-man-charged-with-assisting-self-murder


https://medium.com/@ThomasKlineMD/suicides-associated-with-non-consented-opioid-pain-medication-reductions-356b4ef7e02aPartial List of Suicides, as of 9–10-17


Suicides: Associated with non-consented Opioid Pain Medication Reductions


Lacy Stewart 59, http://healthylivings247.com/daughter-says-untreated-pain-led-to-mothers-suicide/#


Ryan Trunzo of Massachusetts committed suicide at the age of 26  http://www.startribune.com/obituaries/detail/18881/?fullname=trunzo,-ryan-j  


Mercedes McGuire of Indiana ended her life August 4th, 2017 after struggling with agony originally suppressed with opioid pain medicine but reappearing after her pain medicine was cut back in a fashion after the CDC regulations. She was in such discomfort she went to the ER because she could not stand the intractable pain by “learning to live with it” as suggested by CDC consultants. The ER gave her a small prescription. She went to the pharmacy where they refused to fill it “because she had a pain contract”. She went home and killed herself. She was a young mother with a 4 year old son, Bentley. Bentley, will never get over the loss of his mom.


http://greatamericans.world/suicides-associated-with-non-consented-opioid-pain-medication-reductions/


“Goodbye” Scott Smith: Vet w/PTSD committed murder/suicide. Killed his wife then himself today 11/27/2017


http://www.sfchronicle.com/news/crime/article/Ex-California-lawmaker-charged-with-aiding-wife-12405065.php

Pamela Clute had been suffering from agonizing back problems and medical treatment had failed to relieve pain that shot down her legs While California’s assisted suicide law went into effect a couple months before Clute’s death, the law only applies to terminally ill patients who are prescribed life-ending drugs by a physician. Clute wasn’t terminally ill


Kellie Bernsen 12/10/2017 Colorado suicide


Scott Smith: Vet w/PTSD committed murder/suicide. Killed his wife then himself today 11/27/2017


  Michelle Bloem committed suicide due to uncontrolled pain


John Lester shot himself on Jan. 8, 2014.


Anne Örtegrentook her life on Jan. 5  


 Debra Bales, 52 – Civilian – January 10, 2018 – Petaluma, CA – Denied Pain Meds/Suicide


 Aliff, Charles – Could not locate info!
He may be able to help! Charles Aliff – https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100009343944744…


Brunner, Robert – Could not locate info!


Cagle, Melvin – http://www.objectivezero.org/…/The-Veteran-Spring-Why-a…


Chaney, Rocky – Denise Chaney – I WOULD LIKE YOU TO INCLUDE ROCKY WAYNE CHANEY HE WAS 70 YEARS OLD BORN MARCH 15 1946 DIE MARCH 24 2016 US ARMY VIETNAM. HE HAD PROSTATE CANCER WHICH SPREAD THROUGH OUT HIS BODY AND HE HAD LEWY BODY DEMENTIA HE DIE AT BEAUREGARD MEMORIAL HOSPITAL DERIDDER LOUISIANA OF BRAIN INJURY/DEATH AND CARDIAC ARREST DO TO ABNORMAL EEG BECAUSE OF SEVERE GENERALIZED SLOWING SUGGESTING DIFFUSE CEREBRAL DYSFUNCTION. HE HAD CEREBRAL BRAIN INJURY IT WAS ALL AGENT ORANGE CONNECTED


Harold Hamilton – http://www.dispatch.com/…/chronic-pains-emotional-toll…


Hartgrove, Daniel – http://www.legacy.com/…/name/daniel-hartsgrove-obituary…


Ingram III, Charles – http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/…/article_b7a4a712…


Jarvis, Michael http://www.chicagotribune.com/…/ct-indiana-doctor…


http://www.nydailynews.com/…/indiana-man-kills-doctor…


Kevin Keller, 52 – US Navy – July 30, 2014 – Wytheville, VA
http://www.swvatoday.com/…/article_65866e4c-18f6-11e4…


Kershaw, Sarah – https://mobile.nytimes.com/…/sarah-kershaw-former-times…


Kimberly, Allison http://feldmanmortuary.com/…/Allison…/obituary.html…


Lane, Keith – Timothy Shields
August 8, 2017 · Colon, MI I would like you too include Kieth Lane . US Army , Vietnam in country , combat wounded . He died recovering from ulcers surgery of a stroke and heart attack in Battle Creek VA medical center in Michigan .
http://www.legacy.com/obi…/sturgisjournal/obituary.aspx…


Lichtenberg, Steven – http://www.dispatch.com/…/chronic-pains-emotional-toll…


Markel, Robert – http://www.pennlive.com/…/08/heroin_overdose_deaths.html


Miles, Richard – Could not locate info!


Murphy, Thomas – http://www.objectivezero.org/…/The-Veteran-Spring-Why-a…


Paddock, Karon http://www.kpaddock.com/


Denny Peck, 58 – Civilian – September 17,2016 – Seattle, Wa https://l.facebook.com/l.php…


http://www.seattletimes.com/…/the-whitecoats-dont…/…


Peterson, Michael – https://l.facebook.com/l.php…


Reid, Marsha – https://www.painnewsnetwork.org/…/daughter-blames…


Simpson, Jessica – https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1616190951785852&set=a.395920107146282.94047.100001848876646&type=3&hc_location=ufi


Daniel Somers, 30 – US Army – June 10, 2013 – Denied Pain Meds/Suicide http://gawker.com/i-am-sorry-that-it-has-come-to-this-a…


Son, Randall – http://www.wpsdlocal6.com/…/woman-says-marion-va…/…


Bryan Spece, 54 – USMC – May 3, 2017 – Great Falls, Montana – Denied Meds/Suicide https://www.painnewsnetwork.org/…/patient-suicide…


Tombs, John – http://www.objectivezero.org/…/The-Veteran-Spring-Why-a…


 Jennifer E. Adams age 41 of Helena  December 20, 1976April 25, 2018


 https://youtu.be/0ACgV0aLIAk


Jay Lawrence  March 1, 2017  on the same bench in the Hendersonville, Tennessee, park where the Lawrences had recently renewed their wedding vows, the 58-year-old man gripped his wife’s hand and killed himself with a gun.


suicide due to pain video  https://youtu.be/CSkxF1DMQws


Eden Prairie Aug 2018 handwritten note, which stated she “could not endure any more pain and needed to escape it.” http://www.fox9.com/news/charges-eden-prairie-man-helped-wife-commit-suicide


Raymond Arlugo  August 29th 2018   https://hudsonvalleydoctorskilledmybrother.wordpress.com/2018/09/14/suicide-over-pain-telling-my-brothers-story-because-he-cant/amp/


Kris Hardenbrook   Oct 2018   What is the difference between patient abandonment and a FIRING SQUAD ? – NOT MUCH ?


Robert Charles Foster,65 Nov 3, 2018 Chronic pain pt …SUICIDE BY COP https://theworldlink.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/suspect-dead-after-officer-involved-shooting-in-bandon/article_182bfafd-5e6d-539f-b366-0f9a00b7dc85.html


Lee Cole 04/23/2018   https://www.pharmaciststeve.com/?p=27825


Peter A. Kaisen  76-year-old veteran committed suicide (Aug. 24, 2016) in the parking lot of the Northport Veterans Affairs Medical Center on Long Island, https://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/25/nyregion/veteran-kills-himself-in-parking-lot-of-va-hospital-on-long-island.html 


Paul Fitzpatrick, 56 Oct 2018, kills himself blaming 20 years of debilitating pain caused by laser eye surgery  https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6445427/Canadian-man-kills-suffering-20-years-pain-laser-eye-surgery.html


Jessica Starr   Dec, 2018 failed Lasik SMILE eye surgery resulting in chronic pain


Paolo Antonio Argenzio:  Passed away on Monday December 10th 2018, from a self inflicted gunshot wound


Rory G. Hosking, age 50, honorable Army Veteran, passed away Feb. 9, 2019 from his struggle with chronic pain


Sonya White has passed away on Thursday March 7, 2019 at 30 years old


Danielle Byron Henry 10th June, 2017


Kelly Catlin, the 23-year-old Olympic cyclist with debilitating migraines committed suicide 16th March, 2019


Dawn Anderson was 53 years old, and a former Registered Nurse died on March 11, 2019 in untreated agonizing pain


Adam Palmer Jan 20,2019    Family says Pleasant Grove man committed suicide after going off pain meds too quickly


Bobbi Fencl April 9, 2019 My wife Bobbi Fencl is one of the recent casualties of the insane Federal, State and Physician response to the Opioid Crisis. She committed suicide this last Tuesday. She is now out of pain and wrapped in His arms.


Post on FB 07/18/2019 – exact suicide date unknown: 

Remember The Fallen Pain Warriors.
Travis Patterson, a Texan, a decorated Staff Sergeant in the Army, combat veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, was injured by a road side mine, and discharged from the army in 2016. He was in daily severe pain. He could not get pain treatment, and tried to commit suicide and was admitted to a Topeka Kansas VA hospital by his 26 year old wife. The VA refused to treat his war wounds with pain medicine and offered instead a stress ball. Two days later he made sure of his own method for treating his intractable pain by killing himself. He had a future with his wife and studying law but it did not matter. He showed no signs of mental illness, just the stress of failure to treat his underlying war injuries with long term daily pain. One other veteran remarked the US Government was finding other ways to “kill us”.

Additional information: Travis was denied pain medication for this combat wounds by the VA by law passed without knowledge of most 12–15, deep in a 2000 page budget bill. It is now federal law to forcibly taper wounded veterans with intractable pain to “prevent addiction and heroin overdoses” Traviswas a Texas native).


  Akaiah Nicole Altstock, 14, of Sneads Ferry, North Carolina, died Wednesday, September 25, 2019.

Suicides from under/untreated pain – KNOWS NO AGE LIMITS


David Pezzula: this time the pain was too difficult, and he died by suicide on Friday morning, December 6, 2019


02/14/2020  Last night we suffered a major loss. Our beautiful Jessica hung herself. She was only 24 and left behind 2 beautiful little boys, Kyson age 4 and Kaison age 2. People think pain doesn’t kill but I assure you, it absolutely does. Rest in Peace Jess


Jennifer Hill  CRPS SUICIDE  April 1, 2020  HER 53rd  BIRTHDAY


questioning the stability of compounded medications in implanted pumps

I was very hesitant to post this at all it was more than I was ever expecting. It was however enough to get them to do independent specialized testing of the medications shelf-life! I agreed to hold all of my documents, charts, and specialized testing until their test confirms or contradicts our numbers. So the waiting game is on again. Mostly because I don’t want to get sued! 😉 it actually explains a lot to a lot of people! Hydromorphone was tested twice straight from the pump! FDA at their finest! Now we may know why these medications were not approved! I don’t know why fentanyl was not approved for at least for 2 months. Seeing the average patient goes in every 6 weeks!

At 3 months the results as followed:

Hydromorphone
1 month. 91%- 86%
2 months 71%-76%
3 months 62%-67%
loss of its original potency in medication

3 month:
Fentanyl:
1 month: 97%-99%
2 month: 89%- 93%
3 month: 50%- 53%

I have always questioned the stability of compounded meds put in implanted pumps… the only study that I had seen was from Medtronics and the commercial Morphine Infumorph and their studies suggested that it is at least 90% potency stable for six months in vivo.

While these figures seem to be from a very small sampling, but suggests that compounded meds put into a implanted pump … their potency stability will not approach those of the commercial products.

What is not known about these pts is if the pt was – or was not – warned about using a heating pad, hot tub or some other external heat source that could cause the medication to be raised above the normal body temp of 98.6 F. That could possibly be detrimental to the potency of the med.

Meds that are infused into the spinal fluid not only has to be STERILE, they must be a SOLUTION and PRESERVATIVE FREE.

each time a implanted pump is refilled… it is an invasive procedure with the sterile spinal fluid and more times a pump has to be refilled  the more chances of someone accidentally breaking a sterile field and the pt ends up with some sort of meningitis or infection in the spinal fluid.  So the more stable the med is in the pump and the fewer times that it has to be refilled… the better/safer it is for the pt.