Anonymous wrote:Since we give it IV, fentanyl provides rapid pain relief. We also give patients IV morphine or dilaudid sometimes. Giving any pain medication IV is not super common on my unit. ICU patients get IV pain medication much more frequently.
Anonymous wrote:This forum is for stupid angry people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was about to have a minor medical procedure and discovered that they were going to use Fentanyl to "put me under." By coincidence, the newspaper that morning had a front page article (above the fold) about overdoses in the DMV. When I raised this issue with the anesthesiologist, I got a nasty earful about how I was not to question the doctor's expertise. Thanks, Doc.
You should reconsider your response. While the anesthesiologist could have been more patient, it’s pretty obvious that a trained professional using a controlled medication in the manner it was designed is substantially different from a random person buying it from a drug dealing using it at home and overdosing and dying. These are not remotely comparable.
This. It's always ok to ask questions about your treatment, and the doctor should not have been rude. But if you really thought the doctor would allow you to overdose on the operating table, why were you even there? At some point you have to let people do the jobs they are trained to do.
Which doctor is trained to help make us healthy again?
Anonymous wrote:This forum is for stupid angry people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was about to have a minor medical procedure and discovered that they were going to use Fentanyl to "put me under." By coincidence, the newspaper that morning had a front page article (above the fold) about overdoses in the DMV. When I raised this issue with the anesthesiologist, I got a nasty earful about how I was not to question the doctor's expertise. Thanks, Doc.
You should reconsider your response. While the anesthesiologist could have been more patient, it’s pretty obvious that a trained professional using a controlled medication in the manner it was designed is substantially different from a random person buying it from a drug dealing using it at home and overdosing and dying. These are not remotely comparable.
This. It's always ok to ask questions about your treatment, and the doctor should not have been rude. But if you really thought the doctor would allow you to overdose on the operating table, why were you even there? At some point you have to let people do the jobs they are trained to do.
Which doctor is trained to help make us healthy again?
Anonymous wrote:There are so many other meds that can relieve pain and aren’t as dangerous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fentanyl is killing 100,000 Americans a year.
Think about that. Many people get addicted to their prescribed fentanyl. This is outrageous.
Yes, all those people self-titrating their home spinal analgesias. Sad.
They've made fentanyl "lollipops" (actiq) for decades now for pain-management, so maybe don't be a clownass?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was about to have a minor medical procedure and discovered that they were going to use Fentanyl to "put me under." By coincidence, the newspaper that morning had a front page article (above the fold) about overdoses in the DMV. When I raised this issue with the anesthesiologist, I got a nasty earful about how I was not to question the doctor's expertise. Thanks, Doc.
You should reconsider your response. While the anesthesiologist could have been more patient, it’s pretty obvious that a trained professional using a controlled medication in the manner it was designed is substantially different from a random person buying it from a drug dealing using it at home and overdosing and dying. These are not remotely comparable.
This. It's always ok to ask questions about your treatment, and the doctor should not have been rude. But if you really thought the doctor would allow you to overdose on the operating table, why were you even there? At some point you have to let people do the jobs they are trained to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fentanyl is killing 100,000 Americans a year.
Think about that. Many people get addicted to their prescribed fentanyl. This is outrageous.
Yes, all those people self-titrating their home spinal analgesias. Sad.