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Doctors say US Drug policy forces pain patients to extreme measures, turns
doctors into criminals
Washington, DC -- The more than 48 million people who suffer chronic pain in
the United States are having difficulty finding doctors to treat them as a
result of misguided drug policy, law enforcement, and overzealous
prosecutions.
"The 'war on drugs' has turned into a war on doctors and the legal
drugs they prescribe and the suffering patients who need the drugs to
attempt anything approaching a normal life," said Kathryn Serkes, public
affairs counsel for the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons
(AAPS)
On Monday, Sept. 29, AAPS held a news conference to announce their support
for William Hurwitz, MD, of McLean, Virginia, who has been indicted,
imprisoned, and had all assets seized for prescribing legal pain relief
approved by the Virginia Board of Medicine.
The result of prosecutions such as those against Dr. Hurwitz and more than
30 others tracked by AAPS is that doctors are afraid to prescribe opioids,
and patients can't get the drugs they so desperately need. "Physicians are
being threatened, impoverished, delicensed, and imprisoned for prescribing
in good faith with the intention of relieving pain," said Ms. Serkes. "And
their patients have become the collateral damage in this trumped-up war."
Some patients require very large doses, sometimes literally hundreds of
pills in each prescription - a number that may seem alarming to people
unfamiliar with current treatment standards in pain management. Other
patients report that they have lied about being heroin addicts in order to
get pain medication at methadone clinics.
The situation has become so critical that AAPS has issued a serious warning
to doctors:
"If you're thinking about getting into pain management using opioids as
appropriate -- DON'T. Forget what you learned in medical school -- drug
agents now set medical standards. Or if you do, first discuss the risks with
your family." [See:
www.aapsonline.org]
"If this continues, pain patients will be back in the Dark Ages of 'pain
clinics' that basically told the patients they had to learn to 'live with
the pain' - except possibly if they had cancer and then they wouldn't have
to live with it for very long," said Ms. Serkes.
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"Prosecutors hell-bent on targeting career-making, high-publicity cases on
the backs of patients and doctors," said Ms. Serkes. "Recent actions show
prosecutors have little concern about the trail of destruction left by their
actions as patients face crippling pain and gut-wrenching withdrawal." For
example,
1. Assistant U.S. Attorney Gene Rossi declared to a reporter that "our
office will try our best to root out [certain doctors] like the Taliban.
Stay tuned." And earlier this month, the President pointed to physician
prosecutions as the example of how he wants to pursue terrorists.
2. The prosecutor in the case of Dr. Cecil Knox of Roanoke Virginia told all
of Dr. Knox's abandoned patients on the brink of withdrawal to go to federal
clinics - none of which are allowed to prescribe pain treatment, according
to a court officer.
3. Doctors such as Jeri Hassman of Tucson, AZ, are effectively prevented
from treating patients, sometimes for years, while their cases make their
way through the courts.
4. In Florida, Dr. James Graves is serving more than 60 years for
manslaughter after several of his patients overdosed on pain medications in
combination with other drugs, including illegal street drugs.
"If this continues, there won't be one doctor left willing to prescribe the
drugs that patients so desperately need," said Ms. Serkes.
[More information on the AAPS "Communicate and Cooperate" 3-point plan to
stop illegal drug use is posted on the AAPS website at
www.aapsonline.org]
[Read "Pain Control in the Police State of Medicine" by Dr. William Hurwitz
in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Vol. 8, Number 1, Spring
2003: www.jpands.org]
[NOTE: The Association of American Physicians & Surgeons is a non-partisan
professional association of physicians in all specialties, dedicated since
1943 to protection of the patient-physician relationship. AAPS is dues
supported, and accepts no government funding, or pharmaceutical or other
corporate underwriting.]
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