By SJ
Otto
When
this opioid campaign began I noticed a clear and sharp problem arising in that
people with real pain were going to suffer as the opioid "crisis" led
to public hysteria and government overreach. (See: Those
in pain did not create any “opioid epidemic”).
I
have a friend who has cancer and he is having a hard time finding a doctor who
will prescribe needed pain killers. He is in the final stages of lung cancer
and doctors are telling him "they are going to faze out opioid
drugs." He has a morphine pain pump that no doctor will refill. He has had
a prescription for methadone. But now he can't get any doctor to treat him. He
has been going through withdrawals for days.
Now USA
Today has posted an article: "Chronic pain patients, overlooked in
opioid crisis, getting new attention from top at FDA," by Jayne O'Donnell
and Josephine
Chu. It turns out that there are many pain patience, just as my
friend, who are having trouble getting treatment for pain. According to that
article:
Chronic pain patients and the groups that represent them say the
escalating government response to opioid addiction ignores their need for the
painkillers and doctors who will prescribe them, leaving some out of work,
bedridden and even suicidal.
I
also have posted article in which I was sceptical that all the reported
overdoses were not really from people being prescribed medical opioids. (See The
opioid epidemic is really a fentanyl epidemic—and we don’t need all the hype).
It turns out I was right:
CDC researchers said in an article in
April in the American Journal of Public Health that they overestimated the
number of Americans who have died of prescription opioid overdoses. Because of
inaccurate tracking methods, the CDC said it incorrectly counted many
overdoses from illicitly manufactured synthetic opioids such as fentanyl as
prescription drug deaths.
The
above statement is exactly what I wrote in an article earlier this year. This
is not much different from the crack
epidemic, in which the police gave young Afro-Americans ridiculously long
prison sentences for selling what amounted to smokable cocaine. It was no
different than regular cocaine except it can be smoked.
The
mainstream news media should no better than to let these campaigns get out of
control, but they just don't learn. So much of the "opioid epidemic"
is nothing more than fake news.
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