News (Media Awareness Project) - Web: Letter Of The Week |
Title: | Web: Letter Of The Week |
Published On: | 2008-03-14 |
Source: | DrugSense Weekly (DSW) |
Fetched On: | 2008-03-15 16:01:04 |
LETTER OF THE WEEK
WARY OF MONITORING
By Linda Paey
That was a wonderful article about the dilemma of pain medication,
however I am strongly against prescription drug monitoring. My
husband is Richard Paey. He is a chronic pain patient who had a high
need for strong pain relievers due to a car accident, a botched
spinal operation and his MS. He was well-documented in having gone to
numerous pain clinics and had not doctor-shopped. Yet he was still
targeted by the police. They stubbornly dragged him through three
trials, he spent 31/2 years in prison and then was miraculously
pardoned in September.
Although it was illegal at the time, the police pulled Rich's
prescriptions from pharmacies and decided he was taking "too much"
pain medicine; that was the sole basis of their actions against my
husband. Therefore, I don't trust the police to act appropriately
with information obtained from the pharmacies. I do not believe our
case is isolated. In most cases, the pain patient accepts a plea
agreement so no one ever hears about it.
I wish prescription monitoring would be the silver bullet that could
solve some of these problems. Unfortunately it will solve some and
create others.
Linda Paey, Hudson
Pubdate: Sun, 2 Mar 2008
Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL)
Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n241/a01.html
WARY OF MONITORING
By Linda Paey
That was a wonderful article about the dilemma of pain medication,
however I am strongly against prescription drug monitoring. My
husband is Richard Paey. He is a chronic pain patient who had a high
need for strong pain relievers due to a car accident, a botched
spinal operation and his MS. He was well-documented in having gone to
numerous pain clinics and had not doctor-shopped. Yet he was still
targeted by the police. They stubbornly dragged him through three
trials, he spent 31/2 years in prison and then was miraculously
pardoned in September.
Although it was illegal at the time, the police pulled Rich's
prescriptions from pharmacies and decided he was taking "too much"
pain medicine; that was the sole basis of their actions against my
husband. Therefore, I don't trust the police to act appropriately
with information obtained from the pharmacies. I do not believe our
case is isolated. In most cases, the pain patient accepts a plea
agreement so no one ever hears about it.
I wish prescription monitoring would be the silver bullet that could
solve some of these problems. Unfortunately it will solve some and
create others.
Linda Paey, Hudson
Pubdate: Sun, 2 Mar 2008
Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL)
Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n241/a01.html
Member Comments |
No member comments available...