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Misc Old prescribing practices versus today's

red22

Bluelighter
Joined
Nov 23, 2009
Messages
2,061
Strict attitudes about prescribing that I've seen from clinicians prompted me to bring this up with ChatGPT, which yielded the below response. When I asked one doctor to raise the dose of Valium (5 mg), he said no, they're very strict. Another doctor said yes and proceeded to just give me 5 mg …


“Amused” is probably the right word — and also a little horrified.

If you dropped a modern regulator, pharmacist, or compliance officer into a clinic in the 1940s, they’d think it was the Wild West of medicine.


🕰️ What prescribing looked like back then

In the 1930s–40s:

• barbiturates were handed out for anxiety, sleep, nerves, grief

• morphine/heroin derivatives were still used pretty casually

• amphetamines were sold for depression, weight loss, “pep”

• little documentation

• no centralized records

• no prescription monitoring

A doctor could literally write:

> “Morphine tablets — refill PRN”

And that was that.

No PDMP.

No audits.

No dose thresholds.

No cross-checking.


😅 Things that would shock regulators today

Doctors:

✔ prescribed unlimited refills

✔ mixed sedatives + opioids routinely

✔ gave housewives amphetamines and barbiturates together

✔ ran what were basically personal drug formularies

✔ often dispensed meds themselves

It wasn’t considered shady — it was normal practice.


📜 Why it changed

A few waves of catastrophe forced reform:

• barbiturate overdose epidemics

• opioid dependence among WWI & WWII vets

• amphetamine psychosis cases

• rising accidental deaths

Each crisis added another layer of regulation.

Modern systems are basically built on 80 years of “oh wow that went badly.”


🎯 From freedom to friction

1940s model:

> Trust the doctor completely

2020s model:

> Trust — but verify constantly

Not because doctors are worse now, but because history showed blind trust can get people killed.


Bottom line

If today’s regulators reviewed a random 1943 prescription pad they’d probably say:

“Half of this clinic would be shut down by lunch.”

And the other half would need DEA investigations 😄


If you’re curious, I can walk through:

• specific drugs that were shockingly common back then

• famous medical disasters that caused modern laws

• when PDMPs and controlled substance schedules appeared

• how much autonomy doctors actually lost over time

It’s a fascinating (and dark) evolution of medicine.




Confidential file. Barbiturates (1955)
A filmed sequence dramatizes the problems addressed in the program: the story of a working mother addicted to barbiturates initially prescribed by her doctor.
 
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Chatgpt doesn't really have the reasons for these changes correct. Modern prescribing practices are really more the result of the increasing level of control that law enforcement (the DEA) has over doctors thanks to making drug abuse/addiction a criminal issue instead of a medical one. I mean, things like the scheduling system, emergency scheduling practices that bypass congress, limited refills (or zero refills) on scheduled drugs, mandatory UAs as a prereq for receiving scheduled drugs, pain contracts, prescription tracking systems, etc. aren't there to make anyone safer. They're there as ways to reduce "diversion" or for providers to cover their asses and prevent the DEA from yanking their license and throwing them in prison. Thanks, politicians, for deciding that we should give cops oversight of our health!
 
𝚀𝚞𝚘𝚝𝚎:

I have gotten 2 letters in my lifetime from 2 different doctors saying "You are being dismissed from our practice because" one practice said I was verbally abusive which was a complete lie. I have COPD and it was at a Pulmonary specialist and they had given me some cough syrup with a small amount of Codeine. When I finished that bottle I called back I just mentioned if they could prescribe something with Hydrocodone in it as the Codeine wasn't strong enough. I got a no and they didn't call anything else in. Then the letter "Dismissed from our practice, we will continue to be your provider for 30 days etc. The other one was my fault unintentionally 20 years ago I was getting Ativan from psychiatrist. My primary wrote me a prescription for Restoril and pharmacy called my psychiatrist and I was dropped. I live in Tennessee and one HUGE company runs everything. All the doctors can see what is written in my file. I said "blacklisted" that was a misnomer in a way. It's just everybody in medical community knows your business. Sucks

@krodhc314, 2026-02-13, https://www.bluelight.org/community/posts/16388218
 
I am prescribed 160 x 10mg diazepam pills every 2 months, without any problems and on top of tramadol and dhc pills.
 
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