Chronic Pain members - Welcome, please introduce yourself

Posted by Kelsey Mohring @kelseydm, Apr 27, 2016

Welcome to the new Chronic Pain group.

I’m Kelsey and I’m the moderator of the group. I look forwarding to welcoming you and introducing you to other members. Feel free to browse the topics or start a new one.

Why not take a minute and introduce yourself.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Chronic Pain Support Group.

Hi everyone! My name is Michelle and I’ve dealt with chronic pain for over 30 years. I was lucky and found a very good pain clinic in Virginia Beach Virginia Wayback win so when I would move due to work I knew what to look for in the new area. Of course the anxiety of finding a good pain clinic that will prescribe medication to help ease the pain it’s always there. I moved to Oklahoma, near Oklahoma City, two weeks ago. I will try to get an appointment with a pain clinic and they keep telling me they haven’t receive my records.I hope that I am able to be supportive of those in the group as well as receive support when I need it. I’m a good listener/reader and love to help people. I look forward to meeting you all have a restful night!

REPLY

Hi Michelle @shellywmf! Welcome to the chronic pain group. I’m glad to read that you have had a good experience with pain management doctors in Virginia - and I agree that moving and finding new doctors that are as open to prescribing appropriate medications is a real challenge these days. Your new clinic seems to be having trouble with medical records, which made me wonder if you had gotten a copy of your medical record to take with you. I’m always fearful of new doctors not having records so I always request hard copies or images on discs that I can hand directly to new physicians. If they need ahead of time, I drop off in person. I’m not sure if you have that option, but I try to do what I can to cut down on things miraculously getting lost.

REPLY
@faithgirl30

Hi Michelle @shellywmf! Welcome to the chronic pain group. I’m glad to read that you have had a good experience with pain management doctors in Virginia - and I agree that moving and finding new doctors that are as open to prescribing appropriate medications is a real challenge these days. Your new clinic seems to be having trouble with medical records, which made me wonder if you had gotten a copy of your medical record to take with you. I’m always fearful of new doctors not having records so I always request hard copies or images on discs that I can hand directly to new physicians. If they need ahead of time, I drop off in person. I’m not sure if you have that option, but I try to do what I can to cut down on things miraculously getting lost.

Jump to this post

@shellywmf Getting medical records might also be as easy as finding out if your old Clinic and the New Clinic use "Epic"... Software and systems. Epic uses a Portal called "My Chart" They are an International Company headquartered in Wisconsin with over 10,000 employees ..Nearly 30% of Acute Hospitals and Clinics use that system.. Both Mayo and my local Hospital/Clinic use Epic and the Medical record transfer is as easy as giving the new place your social Security Number.. Good luck

REPLY
@hazelblumberg

Peach, I think that younger doctors just coming out of med school are actually taught how to have a better bedside and office-side manner. Far too many of the older ones have god complexes. They are right, and YOU are wrong. End of story.

When you think of the amount of study these doctors have gone through, starting with having to achieve, achieve, achieve in high school, then putting in impossible hours throughout med school and residency and so forth, many of them grow to feel entitled. Many simply do not find the time or ability to communicate effectively with patients. Many had no interpersonal skills to begin with; the crushing load of study didn't help. (My oldest friend in the world--we've been buddies since 8th grade--is a psychiatrist. I used to visit him when he was doing residencies and internships, and I rarely saw him. He put in 24- and 36-hour shifts, fell asleep on a cot at the hospital, or came home and crashed. Medicine is a brutal study track.) So, no, it is not YOU.

May I suggest finding a nurse practitioner as a primary care? They actually are trained to listen. They give you far longer appointments. My primary care has a doctorate in nurse practitionership, and she is a marvel. She schedules appointments for at least a half hour. She LISTENS. And she has no problem saying, "I don't know, so I'm going to refer you to a specialist."

Hazel

Jump to this post

Interesting, especially the last paragraph. I'M HERE AFTER BEING OFF FOR YEARS. MAY NOT EVEN CONNECT. SINCE NOV..2020 a mild cough turned into a nightmare of wheezing coughing up stuff, losing my breath. ER TOOK SAMPLES AND AN XRAY
LUNGS OK, BUT INFLAMED. GAVE ME BREATH TREATMENTS, PILLS AND PRESCRIPTIONS.
W/NURSES ALONG THE WAY/ AND A FULL REPORT.
SHE HAD THE TRAINING AS YOU DESCRIBED.
AND HER OFFICE IS CLOSE BY. SHE DOES HOME VIDEO VISITS AS WELL. SHE DID EVERYTHING IN the hours I waited and sent me home. She is taking new patients. Amazing completion for solving.
Which could have sent me to another one or to others.
My name should start with a Gerry.for a female
I'm looking forward to the to the revision of this program. If my experience gets read at all. Hoping to hear about it.

REPLY
@jerry4info

Interesting, especially the last paragraph. I'M HERE AFTER BEING OFF FOR YEARS. MAY NOT EVEN CONNECT. SINCE NOV..2020 a mild cough turned into a nightmare of wheezing coughing up stuff, losing my breath. ER TOOK SAMPLES AND AN XRAY
LUNGS OK, BUT INFLAMED. GAVE ME BREATH TREATMENTS, PILLS AND PRESCRIPTIONS.
W/NURSES ALONG THE WAY/ AND A FULL REPORT.
SHE HAD THE TRAINING AS YOU DESCRIBED.
AND HER OFFICE IS CLOSE BY. SHE DOES HOME VIDEO VISITS AS WELL. SHE DID EVERYTHING IN the hours I waited and sent me home. She is taking new patients. Amazing completion for solving.
Which could have sent me to another one or to others.
My name should start with a Gerry.for a female
I'm looking forward to the to the revision of this program. If my experience gets read at all. Hoping to hear about it.

Jump to this post

@jerry4info @hazelblumberg Our daughter-in-law is a nurse practitioner, and I concur with your assessment of them. My pcp told me yesterday that he will be retiring within the next twelve months, and finding a doctor who will agree to continue to prescribe the only pain medication that has done anything long term, morphine sulfate contin, may be difficult. And taking clonazepam for anxiety, along with a couple of antidepressants and an ongoing search for something that will slow down the progression of peripheral polyneuropathy. I take prednisone for that, and am taking Duloxetine, supposedly for the pain, but the pain just gets worse. At least, since I started taking Duloxetine, I've been doing things that were way overdue, because I actually feel like doing something. Being active does take my mind off the pain, until I quit for the day. Then it hits. I will certainly miss my doctor. He told me he'd ask around to see if there's a doctor willing to take me on. Maybe I'll be seeing a nurse practitioner. That would be fine with me.

Jim

REPLY

@jimhd may I ask how long you have been taking prednisone? Do you have any of the degredation of bone and teeth that is often associated with prolonged taking of it? Do you take a lot of calcium supplements ? A friend who had a liver transplant was on prednisone for years but when taken off of it he had lost his teeth and his bone density was not so good...

REPLY

I'm Sharon and suffer chronic migraine pain and pain from a pinched cervical nerve. I posted on the " old chronic pain" group occasionally, and liked to review it from time to time and see if there is any new drug etc that l should be considering. How do l find that " old group " that was full of information that l may benefit from reviewing?
Thank you for you assistance!

REPLY
@sharonrose1200

I'm Sharon and suffer chronic migraine pain and pain from a pinched cervical nerve. I posted on the " old chronic pain" group occasionally, and liked to review it from time to time and see if there is any new drug etc that l should be considering. How do l find that " old group " that was full of information that l may benefit from reviewing?
Thank you for you assistance!

Jump to this post

Hi @sharonrose1200 - I think you may be in the older largest Chronic Pain discussion now - Chronic Pain members - Welcome, please introduce yourself. If you scroll to the top you can change the order of the posts, go to the first page of posts, etc... If this is not the chronic pain discussion, you can find a list of all of the discussion in the Chronic Pain group by scrolling to the top of this discussion and click on "Chronic Pain" where you see the small house icon with Group / Chronic Pain / Chronic Pain members - Welcome, please introduce yourself. It will take you here - https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/pain/

If you want to see your previous posts, just click your member name at the top right of the page to go to your profile and settings. Then click Comments on the left side. You will see your posts and which discussions they appear in.

REPLY
@sharonrose1200

I'm Sharon and suffer chronic migraine pain and pain from a pinched cervical nerve. I posted on the " old chronic pain" group occasionally, and liked to review it from time to time and see if there is any new drug etc that l should be considering. How do l find that " old group " that was full of information that l may benefit from reviewing?
Thank you for you assistance!

Jump to this post

Hi Sharon, @johnbishop is right. You posted before in this discussion called "Chronic Pain members – Welcome, please introduce yourself"

You can see a history of your posts in your Profile. See here: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/member/00-669aea27428bf2d6225847/activity/comments/

REPLY
@jimhd

@jerry4info @hazelblumberg Our daughter-in-law is a nurse practitioner, and I concur with your assessment of them. My pcp told me yesterday that he will be retiring within the next twelve months, and finding a doctor who will agree to continue to prescribe the only pain medication that has done anything long term, morphine sulfate contin, may be difficult. And taking clonazepam for anxiety, along with a couple of antidepressants and an ongoing search for something that will slow down the progression of peripheral polyneuropathy. I take prednisone for that, and am taking Duloxetine, supposedly for the pain, but the pain just gets worse. At least, since I started taking Duloxetine, I've been doing things that were way overdue, because I actually feel like doing something. Being active does take my mind off the pain, until I quit for the day. Then it hits. I will certainly miss my doctor. He told me he'd ask around to see if there's a doctor willing to take me on. Maybe I'll be seeing a nurse practitioner. That would be fine with me.

Jim

Jump to this post

If morphine sulphate works to relieve your pain find a pain doc who will prescribe you buprenorphine. I had been on Tylenol w/Codeine then oxycodone and now buprenorphine. It works on different receptors in your brain and much more effective and much safer.

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.