← Return to Chronic Pain members - Welcome, please introduce yourself

Discussion

Chronic Pain members - Welcome, please introduce yourself

Chronic Pain | Last Active: 22 hours ago | Replies (7049)

Comment receiving replies
@faithwalker007

He has to justify lowering your dosage, woogie. He can’t just spout something like “opioids don’t work for nerve pain.” If you were maintained at a certain level and now you are not, TELL HIM. NOW. Call his office this minute. Report your symptoms, your pain levels. Show him what his actions are doing to his patient. You are the patient, not him. The guidelines are not for him or you, they are for others who do not KNOW WHAT THEY ARE DOING OR DON’T NEED THE MANAGEMENT. You need to be vocal. I know it’s hard to do so when the doctors are the ones who are supposed to know what to do. But they are not acting like doctors right now, they are acting like confused sheep.
Go to the AMA website and print off the opioid letter stating they don’t agree with the guidelines. Take it to him. He is the specialist not you. Ask him to act like one. You are the one who must LIVE with his actions, not the DEA, not the government. And you are suffering. Is that his intentions, what he was taught to do?

Make him think about what he’s doing. Do not speak to him in YOUR language, but HIS. Doctors only understand what they know. Go to him on his level. He took an oath to DO NO HARM. The government DID NOT.

Jump to this post


Replies to "He has to justify lowering your dosage, woogie. He can’t just spout something like “opioids don’t..."

Wow! Maybe the doctor realizes you are taking too many opioids and are totally addicted and he is trying to wean you off the extremely high dose of 3 per day equals 180 pills per month😳
Maybe there is a better way for you🙏

I saw a spine specialist this week and asked if I took any meds for my arthritis...I said no (ie, NSAIDS, Tylenol, etc)....I said they don’t work...he nodded in agreement. I said the chronic pain community used to have pain medication that worked until the opioid crisis took the option away. These medications do work and help chronic pain sufferers and most often do not cause addiction. I am not I need of this level of intervention, at this point, but wanted him to hear the truth.