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The good news about pain treatment: the Drug Enforcement Administration recently posted new guidelines on the DEA website to stop the unjustified harassment and prosecution of pain doctors.


THE GOOD NEWS ABOUT PAIN TREATMENT:

The Drug Enforcement Administration The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) was established in 1973 by President richard m. nixon as part of the Justice Department, thus uniting a number of federal drug agencies that had often worked at cross-purposes.  recently posted new guidelines on the DEA DEA - Data Encryption Algorithm  website to stop the unjustified harassment Ask a Lawyer

Question
Country: United States of America
State: Nevada

I recently moved to nev.from abut have been going back to ca. every 2 to 3 weeks for med.
 and prosecution of pain doctors.

THE BAD NEWS ABOUT PAIN TREATMENT:

Two months later the DEA deleted the guidelines, citing unspecified "misstatements."

No one knows why the DEA suddenly withdrew its own rules--the Agency isn't talking. But it may have been the fact that the guidelines protected doctors from prosecution if they unwittingly prescribed opiates Opiates
Analgesic, pain killing drugs, such as heroin and morphine that depress the central nervous system.

Mentioned in: Withdrawal Syndromes
 to addicts who deceived them. The government is currently prosecuting several physicians for exactly that conduct.

Over 30 million Americans suffer from chronic pain. A great many may need double or triple the normal amount of medication--and they are almost always under-treated. These people could legitimately get relief with opioid opioid /opi·oid/ (o´pe-oid)
1. any synthetic narcotic that has opiate-like activities but is not derived from opium.

2. any of a group of naturally occurring peptides, e.g.
 drugs but they can't find doctors willing to prescribe enough to kill the pain. Taking opioids Opioids
One of the major classes of semi or fully synthetic psycho-active drugs that includes methadone.

Mentioned in: Cancer Therapy, Palliative, Methadone

opioid 
 for pain relief rarely leads to addiction but physicians fear that prescribing large doses will attract the attention of over zealous federal agents, a risk that includes lengthy prison terms. So victims of severe accidents, failed surgery, terminal cancer, and the like are often left to writhe in agony.

Over the last two years the DEA tried to address this crisis, working with medical specialists from the University of Wisconsin's Pain and Policy Studies Group. They set guidelines that would both instruct and safeguard physicians, allowing them to prescribe adequate levels of pain medication without fear of harassment.

These guidelines or something like them should be reinstated so that no one has to suffer needlessly.

Common Sense for Drug Policy www.CommonSenseDrugPolicy.org www.DrugWarFacts.org Mike Gray, Chair; Robert Field, Co-Chair
COPYRIGHT 2004 National Review, Inc.
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Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Publication:National Review
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 13, 2004
Words:276
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