Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my family, DH, both of my teenage kids, and I have all been prescribed narcotics/opioids at least once if not multiple times each, for different injuries in the past 5 years (broken ribs, 2nd degree burn, hip surgery, ankle surgery, kidney stones). We have all stopped taking them once our pain decreased but before our first prescription ran out. DH probably relies on the pills the longest but he still never finishes a bottle. One of my kids and I both strongly dislike the side effects we get from these medications (nausea, itching, sleepiness) so stop taking really quickly and another kid is just super tough and wants to get back to normal routines so stops taking them.
Neither of our families have a history of addiction (alcoholism or drugs) and I firmly believe that some people are just predisposed to addiction, and this issue is more likely to happen to those people. With opioids being so easy to get addicted to, its a terrible combination.
Narcotic for a second degree burn? Rib fracture? This is part of the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a known problem with bias that doctors and nurses believe that black people’s skin is literally thicker and that their pain tolerance is higher. It is a small silver lining that decades of neglect and malpractice treating people of color can result in less opiod addiction.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/news.virginia.edu/content/study-links-disparities-pain-management-racial-bias%3famp
Anonymous wrote:It is a known problem with bias that doctors and nurses believe that black people’s skin is literally thicker and that their pain tolerance is higher. It is a small silver lining that decades of neglect and malpractice treating people of color can result in less opiod addiction.
Anonymous wrote:It's a white trash problem....hillbillies left behind in the economy
Agree. There's not enough recognition that predisposition to addiction can be inherited and people need to educate themselves and their families.Anonymous wrote:In my family, DH, both of my teenage kids, and I have all been prescribed narcotics/opioids at least once if not multiple times each, for different injuries in the past 5 years (broken ribs, 2nd degree burn, hip surgery, ankle surgery, kidney stones). We have all stopped taking them once our pain decreased but before our first prescription ran out. DH probably relies on the pills the longest but he still never finishes a bottle. One of my kids and I both strongly dislike the side effects we get from these medications (nausea, itching, sleepiness) so stop taking really quickly and another kid is just super tough and wants to get back to normal routines so stops taking them.
Neither of our families have a history of addiction (alcoholism or drugs) and I firmly believe that some people are just predisposed to addiction, and this issue is more likely to happen to those people. With opioids being so easy to get addicted to, its a terrible combination.
Nope, I know a white professional who ended up addicted to opioids because of chronic pain following a car accident. And please don't use the terms "white trash" or "hillbillies." Those are pejoratives.Anonymous wrote:It's a white trash problem....hillbillies left behind in the economy
Anonymous wrote:In my family, DH, both of my teenage kids, and I have all been prescribed narcotics/opioids at least once if not multiple times each, for different injuries in the past 5 years (broken ribs, 2nd degree burn, hip surgery, ankle surgery, kidney stones). We have all stopped taking them once our pain decreased but before our first prescription ran out. DH probably relies on the pills the longest but he still never finishes a bottle. One of my kids and I both strongly dislike the side effects we get from these medications (nausea, itching, sleepiness) so stop taking really quickly and another kid is just super tough and wants to get back to normal routines so stops taking them.
Neither of our families have a history of addiction (alcoholism or drugs) and I firmly believe that some people are just predisposed to addiction, and this issue is more likely to happen to those people. With opioids being so easy to get addicted to, its a terrible combination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is interesting for sick and horrible reasons, but please inform me - is the bulk of the opioid crisis directly caused by patients taking drugs prescribed directly to them, or is it junkies taking drugs they bought on the black market? I thought it was the latter -
My understanding is that it often begins with a valid prescription for pain management, then the patient gets addicted, and they have to go the illegal route to keep up with their addiction needs.