An Open Letter to Attorney General Jeff Sessions
/By Fred Brown, Guest Columnist
Dear Honorable Attorney General Jeff Sessions,
Why are there are so many federal agencies, like the CDC, DEA and Justice Department, that want to take away my opioid medication? I have a right to be treated humanely, don’t I?
I am an American citizen who has dealt with some serious and painful medical issues. Over 20 years ago, I was referred to a board-certified pain management physician. This was due to two failed cervical surgeries that left me with chronic back pain. I had two additional surgeries to fuse my spine after the first two operations, which only made my pain even more severe. The pain physician recommended I should begin a treatment regimen that included low doses of opioid medication.
These medications helped me to continue working and have a certain quality of life. I knew from discussions with my physician that, over time, I would need to increase the dose as my body would become dependent on opioids. This has been necessary and over many years these medications helped me live my life.
I have tried other medical modalities such as physical and occupational therapy, biofeedback, acupuncture, counseling, and other alternative treatments. Further, before starting on opioids, I tried various non-narcotic medicines which did not work.
Mr. Attorney General, earlier this year, you gave a talk in Tampa and said, “People need to take some aspirin sometimes and tough it out.”
Perhaps if someone was experiencing mild discomfort, aspirin will work. However, when one is living with severe chronic pain, 24-hours a day, seven days a week, they very likely need strong opioids prescribed by their physician.
Opiates help patients like me get relief from severe pain. They do not take away the pain, but they help reduce it and enable us to have some quality of life.
The “pill mills” have hurt many people, and most certainly the DEA should do everything it can to close them down. But at the same time, certain patients must have high dosages of these medications. Each of us have a different metabolism and what may work for one person at one dose level may not work at all with another patient.
When a government agency such as the DEA goes after physicians who are trying to help legitimate patients, without any idea of the patients’ history is and why they are on high doses, that is entirely wrong and inhumane!
Why are so many agencies, along with Congress, trying to keep these medications at lower dosages that will cause me to live with increased pain? Does our nation intend to condemn citizens who have painful and excruciating disabilities to a life of agony?
I am aware the CDC made some serious mistakes when it released the 2016 Opioid Prescribing Guideline. Some physicians believe the guideline is law and began to lower the doses of patients or even discharge them from their practice. It took CDC researchers years to admit they significantly inflated deaths from opioid prescriptions because they misreported deaths due to illegal fentanyl.
Opioid prescriptions have been declining since 2011, while overdose deaths and suicides are at an all-time high! This is not accidental. CDC, FDA and DEA are chasing the wrong opioid epidemic and needlessly ruining lives of people in pain.
Mr. Attorney General, was our nation founded on the premise that our fellow citizens should live in chronic severe pain? I do not believe our Founding Fathers would want this.
Fred Brown lives in central Florida. Fred is disabled because of spinal fusion with laminectomy syndrome, cervical radiculitis. He also has severe arthritis in bilateral knees with a failed knee replacement. In addition to pain management, Fred uses "diversion of the mind" as a way of dealing with much discomfort.
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The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.