Guest guest Posted August 7, 2012 Report Share Posted August 7, 2012 > Message: 3 > Date: Mon, 04 May 1998 02:31:30 +0000 > > Subject: Vicki's request, Kit's intro, moderator note > > Hi folks, > > Vicki lost something on the list (its those nasty computer bugs, I > supppose). We have a pretty simple way of retreiving anything on the list > from ONElist (if it works, of course) All of our stuff is archived for > people who just want to get header summaries. You just have to log into > ONElist.com, select our list, retrieve archived headers & then retrieve the > particular day's posts (They all come as one piece of text). > > Here I am having a pretty poor night myself, and I logged into our list to > find a very moving introduction from Kit that I can particularly relate to. > I don't know for sure that MS Contin or Methadone would liberate either Kit > or me, but the politics of medicine seem to prevent us from ever finding > out. High doses of Methadone have been used routinly for many years with > addicts for maintenance & detox, but we are generally 'spared " the > opportunity so as not to make us addicts. The medical profession seems very > good at ignoring a large-scale, bullet-proof research study published in > the New England Journal of Medicine following (as I recall) about one > thousand chronic pain patients treated with 'addictive' meds for a > substantial timeslice, resulting in a less than 1% addiction rate AND a > finding that those who were found addicted in the study had previously been > drug addicts! If you're a bit lost in data, > this solid study suggests that chronic pain patients given narcotics show a > LOWER susceptibility than the general population, to drug addiction. > Along the same lines, the US TV show 60 minutes (about 2 years ago) did a > documentary on persecution of doctors treating chronic pain with narcotics, > AND astounding successes they had with patients. Because it is unlikely > that people quietly suffering at home are not going to exert effective > political influence, we and those few doctors willing to treat severe & > extreme chronic pain appropriately are made to suffer needlessly. > Perhaps when the collective participation in the several net pain lists > hits 100,000 we will be able to get the public & political/medical > establishments to take our needs and rights to a reasonable quality of life > seriously. (My soap box has been put away for the rest of the day). > > Ken > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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