I am a Nurse and Chronic Pain Patient. Just because a person is sleeping, playing on a phone (distraction from pain), watching tv, or another activity, doesn't not mean a person isn't expierencing real 6-10 pain.
Source my own expierences and evaluation of patients.
Pain is subjective and is what ever the patient say it is and hurts where ever the patient says it hurts.
Someones 2 may feel like a 5 to someone else and so on.
Source medical school.
Some people may want stronger pain medications for various reasons, but you have to treat it.
DO NOT start thinking that some one isn't hurting and they may be an addict and just want drugs.
If you are that type of person get out of the medical field. We don't need more people like this.
I would rather treat 100 drug seeker for pain to make sure the 1 person who was in direr need got the meds they deserved.
It is not for us to decide if they are hurting and influencing MD's that they are drug seekers benifits nobody really. Even drug seekers have level 10 pain.
Sorry if I seem angry and offensive but I deal with a lot of non caring people who are suppose to care for patients with out judgement.
Oh, wow. I just got a PM from someone who wanted to know why I hadn't been back to this thread. I had assumed that I still only had one reply! Boy was I wrong!
Zoey, I do think you entirely misunderstood me. The purpose of my thread was to get some insight, and I never have and never would ever assume that someone is drug seeking and withhold pain medication. I always err on the side of caution. I started this thread to get a little insight but mostly in hopes of starting an interesting discussion. I have always enjoyed a good debate. I would rather give 20 addicts a dose of dilaudid and a script for vicodin than have one patient suffer on my watch.
I started thinking of it reading a thread about pain management, and remembering how I used to perceive pain before I had my son. I was in induced, unmedicated labor with a 9 and a half pound baby for 52 hours before I had an emergency c-section. The epidural never worked, and they induced me with cytotec, cervadil, and pitocin. It turns out I am extremely sensitive to pitocin. I had off the chart back to back contractions with almost no break in between. I had no idea that a human could be in so much pain. I was horrified that the surgical techs and the nurses in the OR were rolling their eyes at me as I screamed, bawled, writhed and vomited in pain. I actually was begging the OB to hurry up and cut me open. When someone who is terrified of surgery is screaming "just hurry up put me under and cut him out of me!", you know they are in pain, lol.
I do not work in pain management, and would not want to. It seems like it would be emotionally draining and depressing. I am a pain patient myself, and I have been on both sides.
I do agree that some professionals are entirely unsuited for the profession. , and the pain medication aspect is merely the tip of the iceburg. I worked with a doctor who was an absolute nightmare. She was/is a family practitioner and treated every patient likethey were drug seekers, idiots, and a nutjobs. She reduced quite a few patients to tears for various reasons (teasing and demeaning them for gaining as little as 3 pounds, telling them they were imagining their depression/anxiety/OCD, abruptly discontinuing meds that were started by other doctors with no taper like xanax or percocet) I heard these stories because a lot of her patients started seeing me for appointments after seeing her a few times.
She is seriously an evil person IMO, and though I feel badly that I didn't stay to help out the patients (for the ones on Tricare and Medicaid we were the only primary care that took their insurance), it was too much for me having to work with her.
I work in Pediatric Gastroenterology right now, which I enjoy immensely. Since the majority of my patients are failure to thrive and are being seen for reflux, celiac disease, crohn's, ulcers etc I only give pain meds now for post op and in some cases as breakthrough meds for older children with severe abdominal pain that has been resistant to other therapies.