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Callous Remark by Co-Worker Causes Needless Suffering for Person in Pain

Q. I’m so furious I don’t know where to begin. My wife had a car accident in her 20s and since then has had over 20 surgeries on her jaw. With all the pins and bone grafts, she’s always been in tremendous pain.

We tried everything and I mean everything: biofeedback, hypnosis, acupuncture, herbs, ice, heat plus unorthodox methods which eventually bankrupted us. Her doctor finally convinced her to take one mild narcotic pain reliever in the morning and one at night. She’s been on this dosage for 22 years, has held a good job, and had a reasonable quality of life until now.

She still suffers pain every day (you can see it in her eyes), but she’s been able to withstand it due to the medication.

A co-worker told my wife last month, “You’re nothing but a drug addict.” This devastated my wife and she refuses to take the pain med now. Her pain has once again escalated and she lost her job.

She won’t listen to her doctor (a caring and responsible physician who monitors her closely) or to me. Watching her suffer needlessly is killing me.

This co-worker caused untold suffering with her thoughtless remark. My wife has been so responsible in taking this medicine. Is there anything I can say that will convince her to go back to her treatment?

A. Your wife’s co-worker was cruel and knows nothing about pain, pharmacology or proper treatment. No one should suffer the kind of pain your wife has been through.

According to the Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, Margaret Hamburg, MD, 100 million Americans suffer from severe chronic pain. According to Dr. Hamburg, that means that more people suffer from debilitating pain than are affected by cancer, heart disease or diabetes combined.

Some experts dispute that number. Others rant and rail about the overuse of narcotics. There is no doubt that some health professionals overprescribe such drugs. And far too many people do abuse opiod narcotics such as hydrocodone or oxycodone.

Sadly, we do not have great solutions for chronic pain. As you discovered, many of the alternatives you tried just did not overcome the agony your wife has been going through these many years.

Physicians who understand chronic pain prescribe narcotic analgesics to provide appropriate relief for selected patients. Many people with unremitting pain live productive lives taking stronger pain relievers on a daily basis with no serious consequences. They should not be considered drug addicts.

Please ask your wife to discuss this with her doctor again or another pain specialist. The quality of her life should not be destroyed by a thoughtless remark from a callous co-worker.

 

 

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About the Author
Joe Graedon is a pharmacologist who has dedicated his career to making drug information understandable to consumers. His best-selling book, The People’s Pharmacy, was published in 1976 and led to a syndicated newspaper column, syndicated public radio show and web site. In 2006, Long Island University awarded him an honorary doctorate as “one of the country's leading drug experts for the consumer.”.
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