Sweetz
Diamond Mind

Reged: 05/11/02
Posts: 768
Loc: Texas!
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Subject: Briefings News
Pain Management Groups Call for Rights and Compassion at Capitol Hill Briefing
December 18, 2003
Several pain management advocacy groups from around the nation held a Capitol
Hill panel briefing Tuesday in support of eliminating harsh Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) penalties and other coercive federal practices faced by
patients and doctors who seek to properly treat chronic pain. The well-attended
briefing in the House Rayburn Office Building, sponsored by the Association
of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS), a sixty-year-old group that
represents private physicians across the country, drew many Congressional staffers,
lawyers, representatives from advocacy organizations, members of the national
media, and patients and caregivers. The panel addressed the extreme measures
the DEA has taken to target doctors who prescribe pain medications ranging
from OxyContin to prescription versions of Tylenol for their seriously ill
patients.
Moderator Kathryn Serkes, President of Square One Media Network, steered the
briefings panel of seven experts:
William Hurwitz, MD, indicted pain management specialist;
Julie Stewart, Families against Mandatory Minimums;
Siobhan Reynolds, Founder/President, Pain Relief Network;
Rev. Ronald Myers, Sr., MD, Founder/President, American Pain Institute;
Ronald T. Libby, PhD, Professor, University of North Florida;
Jane M. Orient, MD, Clinical lecturer, University of Arizona; and
James Martin, President, 60 Plus Association.
Though the DEA was invited to attend the event by briefing organizers, it
declined to send a representative.
The panel explored a wide array of pain management issues, including federal
and state law enforcement initiatives; patient and physician experiences; the
unbalanced impact of DEA practices on African Americans, the elderly, and
low-income communities; the serious economic consequences that arise from
untreated and undertreated pain; the need for DEA funding oversight; medical-marijuana
access; sentencing reform; privacy concerns; Congressional legislation and
hearings; and exploring ways to foster cooperation between lawmakers,
regulators, law enforcement, physicians, pharmacists, and patients.
Panelists cited data showing untreated and undertreated pain to be an
epidemic. An estimated 50-75 million Americans suffer from chronic pain each day, and
pain results in more lost work days than heart disease and cancer combined.
The economic consequences of this epidemic, say experts, far exceed $100
billion each year. With access to proper pain medications, patients are often able
to continue to be productive full-time workers; without it, many are
debilitated and confined by pain to their homes.
Panelists also pointed out the many ways in which the federal government has
ruined the businesses, reputations, and lives of doctors who provide
life-giving and appropriate pain treatment. Acting on information collected by the DEA,
doctors have been de-licensed by state medical boards and hauled into federal
court on trumped-up charges of racketeering, fraud, money laundering,
malpractice, or even murder. Many have been sentenced to decades-long federal prison
terms. In light of this, the attendance of Dr. Hurwitz, a renowned
pain-management caregiver who is currently under house arrest in Virginia, was especially
important. Dr. Hurwitz, who had to obtain permission to attend the event and
could not speak about his case on orders from his lawyers, was charged this
year with over-prescribing medications like OxyContin to patients around the
country, many of whom suffered from cancer, chronic back pain, arthritis, or
diabetes. His case is pending.
Doctors are not alone in being targeted by the DEA. In one case, described by
Rev. Myers, Sr., MD, seventeen patients of a physician who was forced by the
DEA to shutter his medical practice committed suicide. The patients, like
their doctor, had been blacklisted and were refused treatment by other physicians
who feared DEA reprisal if they treated the sanctioned doctors patients.
To download briefing handouts, please click here. To learn more about America
in Pain, the National Pain Patients Coalition April 19, 2004 march on
Washington, please click here.
Copyright ©2003 Drug Policy Alliance. All Rights Reserved Contact Webmaster
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Siobhan Reynolds
Family Member of a Chronic Pain Patient
Founding Executive Director
PRN
www.PainReliefNetwork.org
"Standing up for patients in pain and the doctors who treat them"
Siobhan Reynolds
Family Member of a Chronic Pain Patient
Founding Executive Director
PRN
www.PainReliefNetwork.org
"Standing up for patients in pain and the doctors who treat them"
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"If you choose not to decide you still have made a choice."
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Whatsnew
Enthusiast
Reged: 09/27/03
Posts: 205
Loc: S.E. USA
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Once again I am sick to my stomach thinking about our law enforcement officers, the ones we pay to protect us, causing us great harm and even death!! This is the type of treatment I would read about third worlders receiving from their government and just shake my head knowing there wasn't anything they could do about it. There was a time when I would never have even thought about this happening in the USA, sadly that time has passed. If I were the DEA I wouldn't have sent a representative either. They would have been defenseless.
D
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DBs member since Feb. '03
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Stacy
Enthusiast
Reged: 11/15/02
Posts: 245
Loc: USA
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Quote:
Though the DEA was invited to attend the event by briefing organizers, it declined to send a representative.
That pisses me off. I think we all should start an email campaign to the DEA about how upset we are they refused to attend and also write to our representatives, the President's office and anyone else about how they refused to attend.
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2muchpain
Enthusiast
Reged: 10/07/03
Posts: 274
Loc: USA
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Don't mean to be callous but the DEA doesn't give a rat's a$$ about our plight. It would be so against their culture to try to understand us. They have already labeled and categorized us. I'd be willing to bet money they think we're a bunch of flakes, not to mention junkies.
In the meantime, many of them are drinking themselves into oblivion in their leisure time. AND THAT'S OK!
I think they could have a constructive role in our system. I would love to see them do away with the meth labs, crack trade, heroin, and date rape drugs, to name a few. But as other folks on this board have mentioned, it's easier to go after CP patients and their doctors. The drug lords are 2sneaky, 2dangerous and have 2much money. We are sitting ducks - an easy victory.
Just my 2cents.
A pain and anxiety free holiday to all.
2much
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knak
Banned
Reged: 06/08/02
Posts: 88
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GREAT POST!!!! The ONLY thing that may help is electing a new PRESIDENT in November.... (Maybe a DOCTOR that understands peoples pain). We need to kick this administration out on their butts!
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14stones
Board Addict
Reged: 06/18/03
Posts: 336
Loc: On the beach in California
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Exactly, I mean, democrats *never* vote against anything that would help cpers, do they?
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Go that way really fast, if something gets in your way.....TURN! Always look on the bright side of life.
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Spectre13
Enthusiast
Reged: 12/10/03
Posts: 299
Loc: ThunderHeadTippyTops
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It is standard policy for the DEA not to participate in any forum where they believe their participation would extend legitimacy to said forum. In essence, they have already stated, loud and clear - your movement is illegitimate.
Somewhere it says, "The Controlled Substances Act of 1970 (CSA) was enacted to regulate the lawful use of, and eliminate the illegal distribution of controlled substances."
The end result is, "eliminating illegal distribution of controlled substances through elimination of distribution altogether by redefining lawful use as illegal distribution."
The movement is not won by flipping the DEA over, it is won by doing what you think is right - despite the reprisals of the DEA - in numbers sufficient to render the DEA of very little importance.
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When you think it's beyond your comprehension, it probably just precedes it.
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Whatsnew
Enthusiast
Reged: 09/27/03
Posts: 205
Loc: S.E. USA
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Tell that to the Drs. who are having their licenses taken away and are being charged (and sentenced) for crimes in large enough numbers to make the rest of them change the way they treat (or don't treat) their patients. The number of Drs. is relatively small enough that passive resistance does not work, a more active campaign has to be mounted or they are assured the defeat that so many of them already seem to be accepting.
D
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DBs member since Feb. '03
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Spectre13
Enthusiast
Reged: 12/10/03
Posts: 299
Loc: ThunderHeadTippyTops
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Well, that's what I'm saying. Only when the number of doctors is large enough to make a resistive difference will it change. If it takes a campaign to psych them up, that's good. All I'm really saying is that it's up to everyone but the DEA. They are not going to flip their position on the matter regardless of evidence, people, pain or anything - period. They don't work that way. They say what they please and never rescind. To rescind is to loose control, and when they loose control they are goners. I realize it's hard to imagine the current crop of doctors becoming that bold. It may take a different crop altogether. In the end, we may have to treat docs like politicians too, willing to take our "vote" elsewhere depending on where they stand on the "issues".
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When you think it's beyond your comprehension, it probably just precedes it.
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gaby22
Stranger
Reged: 11/24/03
Posts: 11
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Thank you so much for the information you gave on the pain relief network.I went and signed up. I notice that most of us on this website are always asking what can we do?It might not be alot but signing up for sites like this one at least make you feel like your doing something instead of just waiting for the axe to fall on our doctors. Our for the meds we take to be all of a sudden deemed dangerous.You should post this address everyday in all the message boards so more people will sign up at least that way we dont feel completely helpless about our situation.
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karib
Member
Reged: 01/26/04
Posts: 109
Loc: new england
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ya know i am 47 years old, and as i get older i see this country telling me more and more what to do how to do it and if i can do it and quite frankly i am so sick and tired of it! Do we not get into wars with countries to protect their freedoms? what about ours? I had a dad, he was a good dad and he died. I don't want another one. But for some reason my country feels they need to be my "parent" Who on earth do "they" think they are! i am so baffled that i want to scream! they are all a bunch of alcoholics anyway! and stealing our tax dollars for their own pleasures. In the state i am from both the mayor of the city i am from and the governor of that same state have both been charged with fraud ! BOTH! Mayor is in jail, governor is trying to weasle his way out.
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tray1
Enthusiast
Reged: 11/22/03
Posts: 241
Loc: US
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Karib Here's your chance to speak out sign the API's Pain petetion to be deliverd to Congress on April 18th
API Pain Petition
All fields are required to be filled out to submit, but any ifno that you are uncomfortable about giving just put a n/a in that box.
Tray
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karib
Member
Reged: 01/26/04
Posts: 109
Loc: new england
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i signed, thanks, but i just have a negative attitude i guess, casue seems they do what they want anyway, (the government) karib my doctor called me in a perscription of xanex for an anixety disorder i have whihc casues me terrible insomnia, do you know the pharmicist gave her a hard time? questioned her why she is giving me more xanex? the pharmacy is Rite Aid and who the hell are they to question my doctor. now my doctor wants torethink given me xanex becasue of that. and she got more defensive when i asked her "who does the paharmacy think they are"? Do they knwo my personal problems? She sort of got angry at me questioning them! see what i mean? what is it coming to?
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tray1
Enthusiast
Reged: 11/22/03
Posts: 241
Loc: US
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Keep your chin up, things have to change, there is just no way they can continue as is.
Tray 
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