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My Story: Hospitals Are Undertreating Pain

By Michael Swift, Guest Columnist

Right now, as I type this, I can barely finish because I just got home from a surgery in my abdominal area. I won't get into the details, but a lot of cutting was done, and I was discharged after an agonizing hospital stay. I was given Tylenol and Naproxen for post-surgical pain.

I am now reclined in bed at home and suffering from post-op pain because a major hospital in a city of a quarter million people is undertreating pain. This is the new norm for most hospitals here in Texas.

My wife and I lived in beautiful central Oregon all our lives. We ended up vacating the house we rented and could find no place to live in the entire state that was affordable to us. For family reasons, we moved to the Texas Panhandle.

My wife, seeking a new pain specialist in Amarillo, was denied and bawled-out two times by doctors. She was told by one verbatim: “We don't push dope here. If you want drugs, go to the north side of town."

I almost walked back in after she told me what this doctor had said to her, to punch him in the mouth. But it would do no good trying to help her from a jail cell. She was visibly upset, in tears, humiliated and so hurt. She is a 67-year-old senior with spinal stenosis and a bone disease that is destroying her vertebral column. Even with stellar remarks by her former providers as a "model patient with legitimate pain,” she was still an object for these millennial brats to verbally spit upon.

When living back in Oregon, my wife and I had a wonderful provider in Bend and our lives were fully active. We failed however to do our homework before moving to Texas. When we arrived, we realized that the Texas Medical Board and certain medical groups and doctors decided they wanted to solve the huge drug abuse problem.

The real problem here has been massive amounts of illicit fentanyl, comprising about 75% of overdose deaths, along with heroin, ecstasy and many other street drugs pushed in by the Sinaloa drug cartel. Nevertheless, the medical board went after the doctors and patients because it was easier than addressing the real problem.

A Broken Healthcare System

To say the least, I am saddened, upset and feeling a huge weight of condemnation from individuals here in the medical field. What a broken and detached healthcare system.

We are both leaving Texas for a nearby state, already set up with a new provider there, who is willing to take a good look at her without judgement. I am not leaving though, until I file a complaint against both pain management providers for their unethical, cruel treatment and libelous slander -- with the use of profanity to my wife's face -- all confirmed by the nurse in the exam room.

I will also file a complaint with the Texas Medical Board for the experience I had as a surgery patient. It will fall on deaf ears, but I won't stop until I get a response. To those of you out there who are also suffering and abandoned, take any and EVERY measure available to control your pain, which is robbing you of your life. You have no other choice.

There is a terrible and frightening experience awaiting those who are destined to go under the knife in hospitals that have overreacted to the "opioid crisis” by implementing a new policy of completely abstaining from administering any narcotic pain medication to post-surgical patients.

I suppose I could have screamed at the top of my lungs to demand pain relief, but who wants that on their record. Or worse, to be blacklisted. Thank God I have an alternate source of pain relief, but I am still astounded.

I am a veteran of nine prior surgeries, all of them done over 20 years ago. When I was in the hospital after those surgeries, I was asked by a nurse what narcotic I wanted to choose for pain relief. After that, I stayed healthy, avoided more surgeries and interpreted the many stories I heard about "Tylenol for post-op pain" as nothing but false tales and fear-mongering.

To all and any of you who posted such statements, I sincerely apologize. You were telling the truth.

Michael Swift lives with degenerative disc disease, arthritis and severe migraines.

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