Saturday, August 31, 2019

Need a painkiller? Read this first!


Need a painkiller? Read this first!

Painkillers, like the ubiquitous, it seems, opioids, continue to confound those needing the relief given by the drugs, while avoiding taking them to the point of becoming addicted to the “high” that often accompanies the relief from pain that was the reason for the prescription in the first place. Once some difficult to predict line is crossed, pain relief changes to an addiction requirement. And, while the initial requirement may no longer be needed, the follow-on requirement brings on a mental/physical requirement that is every bit as strong (or, moreso, even) than the original need which brought about the prescription from the user’s doctor.

This situation being understood places both the user and the doctor in a quandary. How is one to avoid, first, the pain and at the same time not become addicted to the medicine (and that “high” it produces) that is giving the pain relief? One way to achieve the needed avoidance is to first understand the situation. One well done explanation may be found in an on-line publication from Johns Hopkins that was provided almost ten years ago, to wit: https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness-and-prevention/prescribed-a-painkiller-if-its-an-opioid-read-this-first.   Doctors and their patients should review this brief summary before the first pill is prescribed or taken. Information given could be life saving. Two other groups of people who should also take the time to become informed (or more informed) about these drugs and their addictive effects are our lawmakers and the law enforcement community.

If everyone needing to know about these addictive drugs were to take the time to know more about them, perhaps their prescription and proper use could be maintained or initiated without the continued increase in addictive use and deaths seen from the same misuse of the drugs currently continuing to be on the rise, as was found over ten years ago by concerned medical personnel.

Other references that may be helpful are contained in the article. For more recent work, try Google-san. In any case, if you need help with pain, also get help to avoid the problem of addiction--something that would, quite possibly, be worse than the initial problem or the pain associated with it.  Something that, in many cases, led to the addicts death.  Better to deal with the pain some other way than to become one more hopeless addict.

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