Posted on 02/17/2003 7:24:36 AM PST by MrLeRoy
Shannon O'Brien, 35, was at the drive-up window of her neighborhood Walgreens pharmacy in Tacoma, Wash., waiting to pick up her prescription for Percocet when two police officers dragged her out of her car, handcuffed her and took her to jail.
"I kept asking, what's going on? What did I do? I had no idea why they were arresting me," O'Brien says.
When asked about the prescription, O'Brien told the officers that she has brain cancer and that her medical information card was in her wallet.
"They were going through my purse, but they wouldn't even look at my medical card," O'Brien said in a telephone interview. "I was in hysterics, crying, very upset and very embarrassed, shocked and humiliated,"
The pharmacist on duty had called the police when he couldn't reach O'Brien's doctor at the University of Washington Medical Center to validate her prescription for the painkiller, according to a lawsuit filed Jan. 23.
Despite the fact that her neurosurgeon faxed her a letter to take to her arraignment the next day, O'Brien says the judge mandated drug-abuse education as a condition for her release. The felony fraud charge was dropped only after her doctor contacted the Pierce County prosecutor's office directly to verify that she had brain cancer and needed the narcotic pain reliever.
O'Brien's case illustrates the fact that pain treatment in this country is a major problem for doctors and their patients -- and it's getting worse, say experts. Patients are not receiving the best possible pain management because of a variety of factors, including lack of education on the part of patients and doctors and legal barriers that sometimes limit doctors' ability to give patients what they need. As a result, what suffers in our health care system is compassion.
"Somebody has said the war on drugs has turned into a war on patients, and I think that's true," says Dr. C. Stratton Hill, founder of the Pain Service at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.
"The DEA is going after physicians just like they are the Medellin cartel in South America. That's why you hear horror stories about people dying in pain," says Hill, past president of the Texas Pain Society and current president of Texas Cancer Pain Initiative, a nonprofit advocacy group.
Hill says that he has twice testified in murder trials in which doctors were accused of killing their patients by providing them with narcotic pain relievers (both times the physicians were acquitted) and that his own practice has been investigated.
"I wrote a lot of prescriptions for narcotic pain relievers when I was in practice," Hill acknowledges. "They dropped the charges against me, but they've got doctors so scared now that they are just not prescribing narcotic analgesics. There are even doctors in the pain community who don't want to prescribe these drugs. The media and the cops have created an absolute hysteria -- mostly about OxyContin. The whole thing is a mess."
OxyContin is the time-release form of Oxycodone, the opium derivative found in Percocet, which O'Brien took to relieve severe headaches caused by two brain surgeries, extensive radiation and chemotherapy.
"Why put a poor woman with a brain tumor in jail?" asks Hill, one of several experts who will address "The Ethical Obligation to Treat Pain" at a conference sponsored by the Tarrant County Academy of Medicine, Tuesday and Wednesday in Fort Worth.
Hill has led efforts in Texas to do away with the triplicate-prescription legislation that allows the Department of Public Safety to track how many prescriptions for amphetamines, barbiturates and narcotics doctors write and pharmacists fill. He and many other Texas doctors say the legislation is intimidating and an obstacle to treating severe pain.
There are three major barriers to effective pain management, says Dr. Ira Byock, an authority on end-of-life care, author of the book Dying Well and a keynote speaker for this week's seminar.
Barriers include health systems that fail to support pain-management teams, medical schools that fail to teach doctors to routinely assess pain in an organized, rational fashion and public attitudes and cultural tendencies that give patients and families misconceptions about pain treatment.
"Triplicate-prescription laws aimed against prescription drug abuse are part of the legal barrier," Byock says. "People fear the side effects of drugs and worry that they may be given too much, even though all studies show patients are at far more risk of being given too little. They worry that if they take strong drugs now, their doctor will have nothing to give them when they get worse or when they develop tolerance and the effectiveness diminishes."
A recent survey conducted for the Life's End Institute: Missoula Demonstration Project, which Byock directs for the University of Montana, found that about one-third of the public believes pain medication should be taken only when pain becomes severe, 42 percent believe people are often given too much pain medication and one-third believe that most people taking pain drugs will become addicted over time.
"All of which is untrue," Byock says.
"The concept of uncontrollable pain is self-fulfilling. Pain only becomes unmanageable when the clinicians involved give up," Byock says. "You would think medical schools and residency programs would be teaching doctors and nurses to competently deal with this most universal of situations, but they are not."
This week's conference was organized to examine ethical, legal and moral obligations associated with the treatment of pain, with the goal of mobilizing health providers to treat pain more effectively in all stages of a patient's life, says Dr. John Burk, a Fort Worth pulmonologist and founding member of the Ethics Consortium, a group of physicians, chaplains and social workers who have organized smaller seminars on related subjects for the past 10 years.
"When it comes to pain care, and especially end-of-life pain care, the law is out of step with medical practice," Burk says. "How can we change the system to meet patient needs? If a doctor is doing his or her best to take care of the patient and keep the patient out of pain -- doing pain control and using narcotics to do it -- and then can be nailed for it . . . It's a scary thing, a frightening thing for everyone in pain management," Burk says. "The courts are not the place to settle how you treat your patients."
Roy Martin, who was a chaplain at Cook Children's Medical Center for 13 years, says the conference was organized to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Tarrant County Medical Society because pain management is such a critical issue right now, with more people living longer with severe disease and chronic, intractable pain.
"The triplicate-prescription law really can inhibit physicians from prescribing narcotics because they know someone is looking over their shoulders and counting," Martin says. "If a patient is in real pain, he is not a candidate to become an addict. It's an unscientific mind-set shared by some physicians and nurses that suggests that."
Martin, who teaches ethics at the University of North Texas Health Science Center, says he tells student doctors to treat pain as comprehensively and intelligently as they would treat anything else.
"I really believe they have a moral obligation to relieve the pain and suffering of their patients, so much as that is possible," Martin says. "Compassion should be the principal moral feature of every physician."
A recent survey, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, asked doctors what was the poorest, least-adequate part of their medical educations, Martin recalls. Eighty-four percent said pain treatment.
To help combat the problem, the health science center has put together a blue-ribbon committee, led by Dr. Louis Sullivan, former secretary of the federal Health and Human Services Department, to develop a Web-based curriculum to teach medical students about pain management.
Dr. Mark Hahn, dean of the health science center and president of the American Academy of Pain Medicine, is organizing the effort and says the curriculum will be online and available to all medical schools in the country within a year.
"There is a significant problem. Patients with true pain are not receiving appropriate care because of lack of access, lack of physician expertise and fear of using narcotic painkillers," Hahn says. "In most cases, it is an irrational fear. Both as dean at UNT and president of AAPM, I am aware of the lack of formal education at the medical school level."
The disgusting shysters prey like parasites on decent hard-working people such as physicians. Lawyers are like worms you just found in your beloved, loyal dog.
You MUST BE A DOPEHEAD, WHY ELSE WOULD YOU WANT TO END THE WAR ON DRUGS??!??? All kidding aside, enough innocents have died as a result of cops, the ATF and the DEA busting into peoples' homes (unConstitutionally) with guns blazing, just because 2%-3% of Americans wish to do drugs.
So instead of telling the patient she'd have to wait til he could contact her doctor,, he calls the local jack booted thugs,, who without any cause drag this poor lady in handcuffs to jail,, SICKENING BASTARDS
i wonder if these big bad officers would be so brave facing al queda members in afghanistan,,,why do i doubt that ? They should be FIRED immediately.
"From one data point you make this sweeping conclusion? BZZZZT! Thanks for playing ... Next!"
Yeah, that says it. BTW, this Shannon O'Brien story is "old" not "breaking" news.
If she'd done the same thing in Chandler, AZ, she could have ended up shot in the back.
Fortunately, that particular Thug In Blue is up on Second-Degree Murder charges.
If I were Ms. O'Brien, I'd file a civil suit against the pharmacist and the pharmacy. Are they going to tell me that its standard procedure to call the cops when a physician can simply not be reached to verify the prescription? No f'ing way. You just don't fill it until the doctor can be reached. The cops are not innocent either. They, along with the prosecuter, should all lose their jobs.
Wrong. It is a war on Americans.
Refrain from spamming the threads and trying to start flame wars, like the AM's asked. You will not be warned again.
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