A lack of laws allowing for paid sick leave, for example. It is easier to sit at home and not take pain meds than it is to have to go to work. If people cannot afford to take time off, there might as well be no sick time.
There is a fault with doctors, but I truly think that for most doctors, they shouldn't have to be the gatekeeper for such things so long as they are prescribing for medically necessary conditions. The responsibility is that they should talk about addiction and symptoms of it with the patients and be prepared to work with patients if there is trouble. This should be without treating them like criminals 5 years later if they have a real reason to have medication (like surgery, for example).
To a lesser extent, yes, it lies with a few doctors for prescribing strong pain killers. But if they are the medical norm for the sort of pain you are dealing with, they aren't being irresponsible either. I'd much rather folks be able to manage their pain than to suffer.
Pain centers are horrible places and not convenient enough for everyone. The ones around where I lived (the first 30+years of my life) generally drug tested people, treating folks with chronic pain like criminals. They would treat folks like an addict for having pot in their system, for example, and were likely to kick folks off the program for such things.
A lack of medical based treatment centers for additiction and to an extent, for mental health. This falls squarely on insurances and government.
It would take government initiative and there would be some public pushback, but there could also be a national (or even state by state) digital medical system that includes prescriptions for these (and all) drugs. This would help doctors and pharmacists catch folks shopping around for different doctors. I hesitate to deny treatment to such folks, though, but instead refer the same folks to medical testing to see the cause of their woes and/or treatment for addiction.
A lack of laws allowing for paid sick leave, for example. It is easier to sit at home and not take pain meds than it is to have to go to work. If people cannot afford to take time off, there might as well be no sick time.
There is a fault with doctors, but I truly think that for most doctors, they shouldn't have to be the gatekeeper for such things so long as they are prescribing for medically necessary conditions. The responsibility is that they should talk about addiction and symptoms of it with the patients and be prepared to work with patients if there is trouble. This should be without treating them like criminals 5 years later if they have a real reason to have medication (like surgery, for example).
To a lesser extent, yes, it lies with a few doctors for prescribing strong pain killers. But if they are the medical norm for the sort of pain you are dealing with, they aren't being irresponsible either. I'd much rather folks be able to manage their pain than to suffer.
Pain centers are horrible places and not convenient enough for everyone. The ones around where I lived (the first 30+years of my life) generally drug tested people, treating folks with chronic pain like criminals. They would treat folks like an addict for having pot in their system, for example, and were likely to kick folks off the program for such things.
A lack of medical based treatment centers for additiction and to an extent, for mental health. This falls squarely on insurances and government.
It would take government initiative and there would be some public pushback, but there could also be a national (or even state by state) digital medical system that includes prescriptions for these (and all) drugs. This would help doctors and pharmacists catch folks shopping around for different doctors. I hesitate to deny treatment to such folks, though, but instead refer the same folks to medical testing to see the cause of their woes and/or treatment for addiction.