Posted on 02/29/2012 12:37:51 PM PST by surroundedbyblue
I"m a nurse anesthetist, and I just got a work-related email from my boss. Basically it said "please conserve midazolam, fentanyl, morphine, and hydromorphone.....supplies are CRITICALLY short & the hospital is struggling to maintain supplies".
Um, ok. The last time I checked, this was the United States, not Crapistan. How are we "critically short" on all of the major anesthesia drugs that we use??? Am I supposed to offer the patient a bullet to bite?
Are there any FReepers out there who have ties to the pharm industry and can explain this? Speaking with others throughout the hospital, I have learned there are critical drug shortages in the ICU, ER, and oncology areas.
Regulations changed which made it more expensive and difficult to produce drugs. Then one main company had problems and shut down. Nobody elsr is producing the drugs
My spouse runs a children’s hospital. Drug companies can’t be profitable with the current Medicaid reimbursements so they have just stopped making some drugs. The more the government gets involved, the worse things become.
The hospital is constantly having to deal with critical drug shortages. A lot are drugs for pediatric cancer patients.
Cool,huh !
You need to see this thread.
Oh, but not to worry, if Sasha, Miliah or Moochelle ever need drugs to save their sorry lives, I’m sure they will have no problem obtaining them.
Yeah its the fault of those rich one percenters
Thank you for posting this. My husband is in the hospital with late stage cancer. Shortages of avastin, reglan and one night the nurse told me they had enough for 2 doses of phenergan for the whole hospital! She managed to get one of those for us. It is frightening now but really makes me wonder what the future for us baby boomers will be.
Those are all generic, right? Is there any chance that there just happen to be proprietary medications that can substitute for these at a large multiple of the price?
I have been having problem finding another generic medication for some time. There is no shortage of the raw materials for making it, there is a lot of demand, and it should be possible for the limited number of manufacturers to make a decent profit on it. The only explanations I have been able to come up with are:
1. Corruption: The makers of brand name products have been able to apply various types of political, regulatory, and business pressure to get the generic companies to limit or halt production.
2. A large portion of production is being diverted to illegal non-prescription use.
I don't think that's the case at all but rather the costs of these new high-end drugs are much higher than what the government and the insurance companies are willing to reimburse the hospitals for. So if administering these drugs to their patients results in a loss to the hospital, what do you expect will happen? You try to do with less..........
Don't forget, the patient doesn't pay the bill, Medicare or their insurance companies do..........
And if Medicare is now putting a cap on drug reimbursements, why do you suppose that is? You think maybe it might be that the government is trying to influence public opinion on health care? Creating controversy between hospitals and patients while blaming the drug companies with the only solution being a take over of those companies by the government?
European socialist countries who have access to these drugs don't have a problem with the supply because the government is willing to pay for them.........
That's the advantage of socialized medicine. But it comes with a price, is that what you want?
... warm-up for `The Hunger Games’?
My daughter is reading it & I like to know what she’s reading.
In my hospital (and the system it is part of) Brevital, pentothal, and propofol were all short at the same time. We now have propofol, but still no brevital or pentothal. And, our shortage now extends to midaz, fentanyl, Dilaudid, and morphine. It’s crazy.
Recently we had ZERO supply of THAM for our liver transplants. I was told to use sodium bicarb. Well, that’s nice but what do you do when the patient’s sodium is 150?? THERE’S A REASON WE USE THAM IN THE FIRST PLACE!!!! Stupid beaurocrats!!!
Just in time medicine. Having supplies sitting on a shelf is no longer considered economically justified under the obama way of life.
I don’t know but I did a search and came up with this page, there are a lot of shortages.
http://www.fda.gov/Drugs/DrugSafety/DrugShortages/ucm050792.htm
OMG! We are Crapistan.
This sounds just like Russia a few decades ago. I remember when thye forgot to add toothbrushes to 'the list' so none were made one year.
I seriously doubt that.
Medicine during hospital visits is not “free as part of the surgical package”.
Hospital markups on drugs are in the thousands of percents.
I saw a story recently about a drug dose that should have cost pennies being billed in excess of $400.
What’s going on?
Answer: Socialism
Atlas is Shrugging
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.