Are Chronic Pain Patients Being Tortured?

By Carol Levy, PNN Columnist

“This is how you do torture. Just reduce their tolerance level so low, all you have to do is touch them.”

That’s what an ophthalmologist said to a medical resident as he examined my eye, triggering my trigeminal neuralgia pain.

“They burned my fingers. All they wanted was information. I would have told them anything just to stop the pain.” That’s from an episode of Law & Order.

I haven't tested my theory, but I imagine if you asked a healthy person if chronic pain was akin to torture, the answer would be a resounding, “No. Of course not.”

Torture is defined by Merriam Webster this way: 

“The infliction of intense pain (as from burning, crushing, or wounding) to punish, coerce, or afford sadistic pleasure. Something that causes agony or pain; anguish of body or mind.”

Definitionally, chronic pain patients are not being tortured, because the pain is not being inflicted as punishment, coercion or sadistically. On the other hand, we are definitely being tortured because pain does indeed cause us agony and anguish.

The injunction against torture is spelled out in the Geneva Convention and other international laws when engaging in war, but not when the war is within our own bodies.

The U.S. Congress has twice tried to deal with pain. In 2000, the Pain Relief Promotion Act was introduced. The naming of the bill sounds good, but some of its provisions are Orwellian. It called for a criminal penalties against physicians of up to 20 years in jail and revocation of their DEA license if they knowingly prescribed a controlled substance used in assisted suicide. Some physicians were concerned the bill could lead to charges if they prescribed opioids to patients who overdosed, intentionally or not.

In 2005, the Conquering Pain Act was introduced. It called for federal health officials to develop an “evidence-based practice guidelines for pain treatment” to address “the public health crisis of pain.” 

Neither Act was approved. But many of the things they called for have come to pass.  

Many have posited that under the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), pain patients have a right to opioids and other treatments. That unfortunately is not the case. Under the ADA, disabled people who are prescribed opioids cannot be discriminated against in employment and access to public facilities. However, the ADA does not address the prescribing decisions of doctors.

More recently, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 9–0 in favor of two doctors who were convicted of acting as drug dealers by “overprescribing” opioids. The decision gives physicians charged with illegally prescribing opioids a fighting chance in court, because it requires prosecutors to prove that they had criminal intent. 

Where does this leave us? Will it change the legal landscape for doctors and patients? Will physicians who prescribe opioids based on their patients’ symptoms, diagnoses and suffering be less fearful? That is yet to be seen. 

Change takes time and one court ruling does not seem like much. But maybe we can look at it as a sliver of light, an opening that we can use to shine a brighter light onto us and our needs. 

Carol Jay Levy has lived with trigeminal neuralgia, a chronic facial pain disorder, for over 30 years. She is the author of “A Pained Life, A Chronic Pain Journey.”  Carol is the moderator of the Facebook support group “Women in Pain Awareness.” Her blog “The Pained Life” can be found here.