Blue Cross not following the laws and denying pain management

Incredible news to share:
After my insurance decided to not cover my rx last week, they said that they needed a pre-authorization. I’ve been on the same rx and dose for eight years. Then, after my doctor filled out all the extra paperwork the following day, I was informed that they did not approve the pre-authorization. 😤

So. I got to work and started researching their policies and what laws they were basing them on.
I found a very specific law passed last year that implicitly states that I am a patient who is grandfathered into the plan and should not be held to new standards.
I got all of my information printed, hi-lighted, and ready for a fight. I called to speak with a specialist and supervisor.
I was getting the basic speech that is read off a script or training manual.
I kept my cool, then went in with all of the facts. I started quoting laws and policies, explaining how that affected me, and how we needed to fix the error and adhere to the state and federal laws, and bcbs policies.

They asked for this information again, as they were taken aback. I sent it to them, personally, in an email. I explained exactly what I expected and why I had a legal right to it. I quoted laws. I provided links to laws as well as to bcbs pages that applied those laws to new rules and policies. I explained that I was only one of many millions who are experiencing discrimination over this issue. I explained that we expect a change in our treatment and that we would prefer to settle these issues of abuse and discrimination outside of court, if possible.

Well. I got everything I asked for. Not only that, but they were so thankful for the information I sent. They’d never been taught about those laws and policies, or how they apply. And they certainly were not trained to counsel patients who call in crying because their medications are no longer covered, and they didn’t know until they showed up at the pharmacy to pick up their meds.
They said that out of the thousands (yes, thousands) of calls they’ve received at that call center in the past few weeks, I’m the only person who has ever presented any information like that.
They have since, in the last week, explained this information to all of their employees, printed it out, and now have a way to try and actually help patients who call. It’s implementation starts today!

I’m so excited for this!!!
Now, if getting the government to use their brains on this matter were as easy…..
But I have momentum now, and I’ve set a precedent. I will followup and follow through!

 

here is contact information for the poster of this information  https://www.facebook.com/laura.orlando.545

 

 

AIM study suggesting 9% of US suicides are associated with chronic pain

http://annals.org/aim/article-abstract/2702061/chronic-pain-among-suicide-decedents-2003-2014-findings-from-national

https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-health-pain-suicide/chronic-pain-may-contribute-to-suicide-study-warns-idUKKCN1LQ2L6

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-09/acop-cpm090418.php

 

Guess who really started the “opiate crisis” ?

2001 to 2010: The Decade of Pain Control and Research

https://lifeinpain.org/node/141/

Decade of Pain Control and ResearchGlenview, IL – October 31, 2000 –

The 106th U.S. Congress passed H.R. 3244 and President Clinton signed this bill into law. Title VI, Sec. 1603, provides for the “Decade of Pain Control and Research,” to begin January 1, 2001.

The 106th Congress was Republican controlled and Pres Bill Clinton (D) signed the above law.

This is only the second Congressionally declared medical decade, the first being the Decade of the Brain in the 1990s.

With this designation, brought about through the efforts of the American Academy of Pain Medicine, the American Headache Society, and the American Pain Society, it was hoped that public attention and funding for research would be focused on an under-recognized but very serious issue.

Pain lacks a significant constituency at the federal level, resulting in a lack of investment in research, education, and treatment. This Congressionally declared “Decade” will bring a much-needed focus on pain to both the public and private sectors, and is a first step in stimulating further progress in research, education and clinical management.

This is a major accomplishment for the Pain Care Coalition, and great credit is due to both Philipp M. Lippe, MD for originating the idea and to Michael Ashburn, MD for his diligent work with Senator Orrin Hatch and his staff to enact this law. Dr. Lippe serves as the Executive Medical Director for the American Academy of Pain Medicine.

The Pain Care Coalition is a national coalition that advocates for responsible pain care policies at the federal level. The Coalition was formed in 1998 by the American Academy of Pain Medicine, the American Headache Society, and the American Pain Society.

Back in 1914, the Democratic controlled Congress and signed into law by Pres Woodrow Wilson (D)…  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harrison_Narcotics_Tax_Act

“The act appears to be concerned about the marketing of opiates. However a clause applying to doctors allowed distribution “in the course of his professional practice only.” This clause was interpreted after 1917 to mean that a doctor could not prescribe opiates to an addict, since addiction was not considered a disease. A number of doctors were arrested and some were imprisoned. The medical profession quickly learned not to supply opiates to addicts. In United States v. Doremus, 249 U.S. 86 (1919), the Supreme Court ruled that the Harrison Act was constitutional, and in Webb v. United States, 249 U.S. 96, 99 (1919) that physicians could not prescribe narcotics solely for maintenance.

The act also marks the beginning of the creation of the modern, criminal drug addict and the American black market for drugs. Within five years the Rainey Committee, a Special Committee on Investigation appointed by Secretary of the Treasury William Gibbs McAdoo and led by Congressman T. Rainey, reported in June, 1919[25] that drugs were being smuggled into the country by sea, and across the Mexican and Canadian borders by nationally established organisations[26] and that the United States consumed 470,000 pounds of opium annually, compared to 17,000 pounds in both France and Germany.[25] The Monthly Summary of Foreign Commerce of the United States recorded that in the 7 months to January 1920, 528,635 pounds of opium was imported, compared to 74,650 pounds in the same period in 1919″

In 1970 The Controlled Substance Act was passed by a Democratic controlled Congress and signed into law by Pres Richard Nixon (R).  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controlled_Substances_Act

which created the structure to “deal with” – declare war on drugs – to deal with the illegal drug market that Congress had created some 50+ year earlier.

according to this  Methadone treatment centers started in the mid-60’s  https://www.narconon.org/drug-information/methadone-history.html

By the mid-1960s in New York City, the rapid spread of disease from one addict to another called for a drastic solution. Researchers at the Rockefeller Foundation developed a system of dosing heroin addicts with methadone to prevent their use of heroin.”

Since this was before the existence of the DEA, the DEA may have been forced to create some sort of licensing of these Methadone treatment centers and thus the same judicial system that declared that opiate addiction was a crime and not a disease was now issuing licenses to treat the “crime of opiate addiction” with a medication

Those of us in healthcare were under the understanding that the “decade of pain” was a result of the Joint Commission https://www.jointcommission.org/ declaring that “pain” was the fifth vital sign and was now a MAJOR STANDARD for hospitals and nursing homes to get/maintain accrediation under the JC.

It would appear now that since we have a “opiate crisis” they are disavowing any connection to that decade of pain and fifth vital sign.

so it would appear that Congress has been the major driving force behind the “opiate crisis” over the last 100 + yrs and the pharmas that produced the various opiates and prescribers that prescribed those same opiates are just minor contributors to the the crisis… if there is even a crisis… .because the majority – and increasing – of OD’s in recent years involves illegal Heroin and Illegal Fentanyl being imported from China and Mexico.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Real Facts Behind the “Opioid Crisis” and the Abandonment of Pain Patients

This is from a national DPPR member for a handout. The Real Facts Behind the “Opioid Crisis” and the Abandonment of Pain Patients:
● Andrew Kolodny and Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing – PROP (addiction specialists with no
experience treating pain) petitioned the FDA in 2012 to change opioid manufacturing guidelines for patients with
non-cancer pain, asking FDA to limit dosing to 100 MED and limit treatment to 90 days. FDA denied this request
in 2013 due to a lack of scientific evidence to support limiting usage or dosage and no evidence to suggest cancer
pain is different from non-cancer pain. Most patients treated with opioids on higher doses and long term
treatment do well and live productive lives without addiction or death.
● 2014 – Illicit fentanyl was added to other illicitly manufactured drugs such as heroin, hydrocodone, xanax, etc.
Addicts buy their drug of choice on the street not realizing it has fentanyl in it. Fentanyl is 50-100 times stronger
than morphine. Addicts began dying in mass quantities catching the attention of the media and the government.
● DEA stepped up enforcement on doctors and pharmacies, threatening and prosecuting doctors for “over
prescribing” opioids to pain patients.
● CDC published the 2016 opioid death report which falsely claimed pain patients were addicted and dying in
massive numbers even though historically pain patients are rarely addicted or involved in opioid-related deaths.
● CDC contracted with members from the anti-drug lobbying group PROP to help draft CDC guidelines for opioid
prescriptions written by primary care physicians even though CDC and PROP knew that illicitly manufactured
fentanyl and heroin was the cause of the crisis. CDC Guidelines were implemented by the states as rule rather
than guidelines as originally intended, forcing pain patients off their medication or to a lower, non-therapeutic
dosage. This was done in spite of CDC having no prescription regulatory power and FDA already telling PROP
there is no scientific evidence to suggest these limitations are necessary or useful.
● Pharmacies and insurance companies began limiting opioid quantities and/or refusing to fill opioid prescriptions
based on perceived addiction bias against patients with pain from all causes due to media/government
misinformation, namely the original 2016 CDC opioid death report and guidelines.
● FDA cut production of opioids creating shortages and leaving many hospitals, cancer patients, and pain patients
without medication to treat pain.
● In 2018, CDC finally issued a correction for the 2016 opioid death report admitting that the majority of the deaths
were from illicit fentanyl and heroin, not legal prescription pain pills. CDC and National Institute on Drug Abuse
(NIDA) concede pain patients are almost never involved in opioid-related deaths. According to SAMHSA 2016
and similar studies the addiction rate for pain patients is .8%. That means 99.2% do not get addicted.
● Government/regulators ignore CDC and NIDA statements, continue threatening doctors. Many doctors stopped
treating pain patients and many closed their practice due to fear of losing their license or being prosecuted. Many
pain patients are left with no treatment for pain leaving them to suffer in agony with no support.
● NIH, FDA, DEA, CMS, Medical Boards, States abandon pain patients based on CDC’s initial report and guidelines
implemented as rule because of the false ideology CDC created. The majority of drug addicts continue to get
their drugs on the street and are still dying with no help. All pain patients, including cancer patients, blamed for
illicit fentanyl and heroin addiction/overdoses and continue to suffer needlessly. Production of opioids scheduled
to be cut again which will create even more shortages for the few patients still able to get meds and for hospitals.
CMS due to implement CDC guidelines as rule for Medicare and Medicaid patients in 2019.
● PROP stands to gain millions in federal money for addiction treatment that will likely never be fully utilized
because pain patients are the ones targeted yet most are not addicted. Most of the real addicts do not see
doctors unless they OD, thus little access to treatment.Pain patients and providers need your support! Please call your state and federal
legislators, the Medical Board of California, DEA, FDA, CMS, and media and tell them to
protect pain patients and their doctors from unfair discrimination. Tell the DEA to
leave our doctors alone! Tell them to remove the CDC guidelines and allow access to
opioid treatment as allowed by the manufacturer’s guidelines. Spread the word!
dontpunishpainrally.com
dontpunishpainrally.com/docs/
Resources
FDA Refuses PROP’s Request To Limit Opioid Dosage and Usage
http://paindr.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/FDA_CDER_Response_to_Physicians_for_Responsible_Opioid_Prescribin
g_Partial_Petition_Approval_and_Denial.pdf
https://www.huffingtonpost.ca/marvin-ross/doctors-evidence-pain-patients_a_23371118/
PROP Involved in Drafting CDC Guidelines
https://www.painnewsnetwork.org/stories/2015/9/21/prop-helped-draft-cdc-opioid-guidelines
http://nationalpainreport.com/cdc-opioid-prescribing-guideline-unintentional-consequences-8836710.html
Illicit Fentanyl on the Rise
https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/images/pbss/CDC-Fentanyl-overdoses-rise.pdf
https://www.drugabuse.gov/related-topics/trends-statistics/overdose-death-rates
CDC Admits Death Data Inaccurate
https://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/10.2105/AJPH.2017.304265
http://www.clinicalpainadvisor.com/opioid-addiction/the-issues-with-the-cdc-guidelines-on-opioids-for-chronic-pain/article/5
24976/
Pain Reliever Use Disorder – SAMHSA
https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/NSDUH-FFR1-2016/NSDUH-FFR1-2016.htm#opioid4
Cochran Report – Rate of Addiction Rare
https://www.cochrane.org/CD006605/SYMPT_opioids-long-term-treatment-noncancer-pain
Living with CDC Opioid Guidelines
https://www.practicalpainmanagement.com/treatments/pharmacological/opioids/living-cdc-opioid-guidelines
https://www.practicalpainmanagement.com/treatments/pharmacological/opioids/inhumane-dangerous-game-forced-opioid
-reduction
The Myth That Prescriptions Caused The Opioid Crisis
https://amp-newsobserver-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/amp.newsobserver.com/

 

Kolodny: “I think it’s a good idea”… taxing opiate prescriptions

States Looking To Tax Opioids Pin Hopes On November Elections

https://khn.org/news/states-looking-to-tax-opioids-pin-hopes-on-november-elections/

After almost slapping a tax on makers of opioid pills earlier this year, Minnesota lawmakers are set to try again when they meet in January.

The drug manufacturers that helped create the opioid addiction crisis should help fix it, said state Sen. Chris Eaton, whose daughter died of an overdose.

“I’m definitely going to pursue it” in the next legislative session, said Eaton, a Democrat. “Whether it has a chance or not kind of depends on the election.”

Lawmakers in at least 10 other states intend to consider opioid taxes in upcoming legislative sessions. Many pin their hopes on the November midterm elections.

If Democrats retake governorships and legislatures this fall, lawmakers and policy analysts predict other states would be more likely to follow New York, whose groundbreaking opioid tax to raise $100 million a year took effect July 1.

November results “are absolutely going to drive some of this,” said Tara Ryan, vice president of state government affairs for the Association for Accessible Medicines, which represents makers of generic medications and opposes opioid taxes. “If the Democrats take the elections, like some people say they will, it could definitely change the votes.”

California, Delaware, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Montana, New Jersey, Tennessee and Vermont are all eyeing renewed attempts to pass opioid taxes, officials in those states say. The proceeds would mostly pay for addiction treatment and prevention.

“We’ll be back come January,” said Tim Ashe, president pro tempore of the Vermont Senate, which overwhelmingly passed a tax measure this year that faded in the House and was opposed by the state’s Republican governor, Phil Scott, who is up for re-election.

New York’s law taxes manufacturers and distributors according to an opioid medication’s strength and will direct proceeds toward addiction treatment, prevention and education. The tax is expected to amount to roughly a dime per lower-strength opioid pill and higher for more powerful ones.

“I think it’s a good idea,” said Andrew Kolodny, an opioid-policy researcher at Brandeis University and frequent critic of the pharma industry. “The human and economic costs of these meds are enormous.”

Adding to the momentum is frequent support from Republicans, who are normally reluctant to tax businesses.

“I’m probably the No. 2 or 3 most conservative individual in the legislature, and I’m standing up there proposing a[n opioid] sales tax,” said Montana Republican Sen. Roger Webb.

But an industry backlash is growing. An association representing pharmaceutical distributors sued in July to block the New York law, arguing that those businesses were unfairly targeted.

Pharma’s main trade group has also fought hard against such measures, arguing they drive up the cost of medicine and unfairly penalize patients with chronic pain.

“We do not believe levying a tax on prescribed medicines that meet legitimate medical needs is an appropriate funding mechanism for a state’s budget,” said Priscilla VanderVeer, spokeswoman for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, or PhRMA.

New York’s law prohibits passing the tax on to consumers and other purchasers such as insurance companies, but enforcing that could be tricky, according to legal experts.

The Association for Accessible Medicines opposes all opioid taxes but especially objects to that measure because it taxes drugs per pill rather than according to revenue. That puts most of the burden on makers of cheap generics and largely spares brand-name sellers, whose marketing helped fuel the addiction crisis, Ryan said.

Drugmakers will prove to be tough opponents regardless of electoral outcomes, said Regina LaBelle, a visiting fellow at Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy who worked on drug strategy in the Obama White House.

“These types of taxes face an uphill battle in state legislatures as powerful forces, including industry and industry-funded groups, ally against them,” she said. Pharma-funded chronic-pain patients can be a powerful lobby, she said.

Surging mortality rates caused by fentanyl, heroin and other illegal opioids give pharma companies a chance to deny blame, even if many of those victims became addicted through prescription pills, LaBelle said.

Drug overdoses killed more than 70,000 people last year, a record, according to new, preliminary estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Dozens of cities, counties and states have sued opioid makers and distributors, arguing the companies downplayed the dangers of addictive pills and ignored signs they were being abused on a massive scale. Often compared to litigation against tobacco companies in the 1990s, the cases could produce billions of dollars in government revenue to fight addiction and overdose.

But that could take years. Through opioid taxes and related measures, states could quickly supplement addiction-prevention funds made available by Washington, which many consider inadequate and unpredictable.

Members of Congress have pushed more opioid legislation this summer, but the House’s package so far has no clear path to becoming law.

Federal funding “is a drop in the bucket,” said Patrick Diegnan, a Democratic New Jersey state senator who backed an opioid tax this year. “We really basically have to put in place the infrastructure for treatment. It will cost a lot of money.”

Minnesota’s proposed opioid tax had bipartisan support this year, passing the state Senate by a huge margin. But under heavy pressure from drug companies, a measure in the Republican-controlled house failed at the end of the legislative session in May.

In the governor’s race this fall, Tim Walz, a Democratic congressman, faces Jeff Johnson, a county commissioner who upset former Gov. Tim Pawlenty in the Republican primary.

Minnesota recently got Washington’s permission to bill Medicaid, the state and federal program designed for low-income people, for psychiatric hospital stays for those with intense addiction-treatment needs.

But none of the moves so far will furnish resources adequate to relieve the crisis, argue patient advocates. Many see an element of justice in making opioid companies contribute.

“Why is it important for the drug industry to pay reparations?” said Lexi Reed Holtum, executive director of the Steve Rummler Hope Network, a Minnesota advocacy group named for her fiancé, who died of an overdose in 2011. “No matter what, this is going to go on for decades to come.”

KHN’s coverage of prescription drug development, costs and pricing is supported in part by the Laura and John Arnold Foundation.

Why doesn’t the DEA use all the money they confiscate from “bad guys” to help fund the treatment of those who are substance abusers ?

 

matching money to any donations made in the next six days (09/18/2018)

Pain Warriors ~ the Movie – needs your financial support

Tina called me today and she has an anonymous donor who has offer to MATCH any donations to help the fund raiser to get to $12,000… If the fund raiser doesn’t get to $12,000 within SIX DAYS… the fund raiser will CLOSE and all donations will be refunded and this fund raiser will have FAILED… Because they failed to raise just $2800 more.

Tina has FIVE YEARS of work – without pay – dedicated to making this film a reality.  Not to mention that more than $100,000 that has already been expended to date in creating this film/project.

For those paying attention…  It is plain that few outside of the chronic pain community are fighting for all the abuse that the community is experiencing.  The drug manufactures, doctors, pharmacies/pharmacists are – at best – standing on the sidelines with their hands folded.

We have Insurance companies, PBM’s, healthcare corporation and others who are deciding what treatment that pts can or can’t have. Some are developing a “cookie cutter” plans of treatment that are applied to everyone … regardless of what could be the most appropriate therapy for a particular pt.

A few investigative reporters have done multiple segments on various TV stations regarding the plight of the chronic pain community, but it as if they were produced and broadcasted into a VACUUM…  One broadcast seldom seems to “seed” the interest of another investigative reporter in a different market place to do their own story.

It would seem that the chronic pain community has been left to FEND FOR THEMSELVES and to TELL THEIR OWN STORY. The completion of this film is just the first step in that journey… and unless another $2800 is raised by 09/18/2018 all the efforts to date could end up in FAILURE.

As one old saying goes … “… it is time to FISH or CUT BAIT …”

click here to make donation

  https://www.seedandspark.com/fund/pain-warriors-the-movie#story

 

Your Pharmacist is a WHORE

If you think the big retail pharmacy chains and hospital corporations are concerned about your safety, think again. Today’s pharmacists are struggling to keep patients safe while meeting the ever escalating demands of their employers. In her book “Your Pharmacist is a Whore, How pharmacists lost control of their profession and why you should care”, Kim Ankenbruck, a 34 year pharmacy veteran, points out the danger you face every time you get a prescription or medication order filled. While pharmacists are incredibly detail oriented and excellent multitaskers by nature, the current workplace is chaotic and stressful due to the increased demands of upper management, coupled with staff cuts and the promotion of non pharmacist personnel over the pharmacists. At the end of the book, Kim provides contact information and sample letters you can send to both government agencies and the CEO’s of the various chain pharmacies. The letters bring up many of the issues experienced by patients, as well as holding the powers that be accountable for their part in these shortcomings and demanding that they clean up their act. This book is a call to action for pharmacists and patients to stand up and push for positive change in the healthcare system, as well as an informative behind the scenes look at the profession and business of pharmacy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1726324648/ref=cm_sw_r_fa_awdo_t1_KgeMBbFC6YM90

 

asked to pass along 09/11/2018

I sent yours, can you forward mine? Please read 28th amendment Please Read, and forward. This will only take 1 minute to read! 28th Amendment, 35 States and Counting. It will take you less than a minute to read this. If you agree, please pass it on. It’s an idea whose time has come to deal with this self-serving situation: OUR PRESENT SITUATION ! Children of Congress members do not have to pay back their college student loans. Staffers of Congress family members are also exempt from having to pay back student loans. Members of Congress can retire at full pay after only one term. Members of Congress have exempted themselves from many of the laws they have passed, under which ordinary citizens must live. For example, they are exempt from any fear of prosecution for sexual harassment. And as the latest example, they have exempted themselves from Healthcare Reform, in all of its aspects. We must not tolerate an elite class of such people, elected as public servants and then putting themselves above the law. I truly don’t care if they are Democrat, Republican, Independent, or whatever. The self-serving must stop. Governors of 35 states have filed suit against the Federal Government for imposing unlawful burdens upon their states.It only takes 38 (of the 50) States to convene a Constitutional Convention. IF??? Each person that receives this will forward it on to 20 people, in three days most people in The United States of America will have the message. Proposed 28th Amendment to the United States Constitution: “Congress shall make no law that applies to the citizens of the United States that does not apply equally to the Senators and/or Representatives; and, Congress shall make no law that applies to the Senators and/or Representatives that does not apply equally to the Citizens of the United States …” You are one of my 20.

asked to pass this along

On Wednesday, Dr. Oz had a show on the fastest growing cancer in women, thyroid cancer. It was a very interesting program and he mentioned that the increase could possibly be related to the use of dental x-rays and mammograms. He demonstrated that on the apron the dentist puts on you for your dental x-rays there is a little flap that can be lifted up and wrapped around your neck. Many dentists don’t bother to use it. Also, there is something called a “thyroid guard” for use during mammograms. By coincidence, I had my yearly mammogram yesterday. I felt a little silly, but I asked about the guard and sure enough, the technician had one in a drawer. I asked why it wasn’t routinely used. Answer: “I don’t know. You have to ask for it.” Well, if I hadn’t seen the show, how would I have known to ask? We need to pass this on to our daughters, nieces, mothers and all our female friends and husbands tell your wives !! I just did, now you send it on to your list. Someone was nice enough to forward this to me. I hope you pass this on to your friends and family.

Pain Warriors ~ the Movie – needs your financial support

I first made this post one week ago. I have been following and communicating with Tina since close to her beginning of her journey in making this documentary.  Since I made this post, a total of 21 – TWENTY ONE – more people have come forth with a donation – for a GRAND TOTAL OF SEVENTY NINE DONATIONS, but the fund is still only at 57% of goal and if  80% EIGHTY PERCENT of goal is NOT REACH IN THE NEXT WEEK… the fund raiser will close and ALL THE MONEY RAISED will be RETURNED TO THOSE WHO HAVE DONATED and basically the effort to fund Tina’s chronic pain documentary WILL POSSIBLY IMPLODE.  Possibly along with Tina’ s advocacy for the chronic pain community, because a very small fraction of 1% of the 10 million chronic painers who could afford to contribute $10 ONE TIME … DID NOT BOTHER !!! There is a saying in “medicine” passive pts can experience POOR OUTCOMES… The same could apply to those pts who fail to advocate for themselves…  expecting other to advocate for them… but sooner or later… those advocates will stop advocating on the behalf of others who fail to advocate for themselves and those suffering/dealing from chronic pain will find themselves ALL ALONE, ABANDONED and those who are against anyone being prescribed opiates  WILL WIN !!! Guess who the LOSERS WILL BE ?

 

They claim that 90% of those family with a chronically ill person are struggling financially.  Tina has been working on this film on chronic pain for nearly FIVE YEARS and financing to date has been by a “generous angel”. She started a fund raiser https://www.seedandspark.com/fund/pain-warriors-the-movie#story to raise the final $15,000 needed to complete the editing and final production.

She herself is a disabled chronic pain pt and the fund raiser is limited to 30 days – which HALF has already passed and has only 58 people who have donated money and has raised only 37% of her goal.

There is claimed to be 100 million chronic pain pts and that means that 10% – TEN MILLION – should be financially able to donate something. After the next 15 days and 80% of the goal is not reached the fund raising program will automatically close and all the money currently donated will be refunded back to those who donated  and put Tina’s FIVE YEARS of work  at risk of possibly going down the drain.

She needs 0.001% out of those TEN MILLION people/families to EACH DONATED at least $10 to meet her goal.

This chronic pain pt has DONATED FIVE YEARS of her life to create this movie to benefit the chronic pain community and ONLY FIFTY EIGHT people/families have stepped up to support her effort.