Hello,
I know you must be a physician to post here, but I'm begging you to please leave this, so as to possibly find help. I have searched endlessly online and still cannot find the answer and I truly need the help by people who are in the field. Please, try and understand my situation....please.
My husband and I live in long island, ny. He has been in treatment with a pain management specialist for about 4 years because of his back. And is on prescribed narcotics.
I searched online and found alot of guidelines and other articles that suggest to monitor patient to prevent addiction and toxicity. They state things like 'monitoring is crucial to prevent the risk to kidneys and liver posed by long-term therapy' and 'opioids 4 treatment of chronic pain periodically assess functional status, opioids effects, and medication misuse' or 'as noted in the supreme court (gonzales v. Oregon) ensures patients use controlled substances under the supervision of a doctor so as to prevent addiction and recreational abuse'
but...
The guidelines and/or articles, don't discuss 'how' the physician should monitor, example: by performing xyz steps to patient, like check his blood pressure, take his pulse. How can you monitor for addiction?
The question: what are some required steps or guidelines, a physician could perform to monitor their patient for adversely affected signs of addiction? Also, is a physician required to routinely monitor medication levels, either by blood, urine, pill counts? Or run a diagnostic test and drug screening, if prescribing a controlled substance?
I hope I don't sound a little rude or nasty, its just becoming extremely frustrating not being able to find the answer. Its almost like this is a big secret.
I apologies for taking up any of your time and tried to find the correct words to express my concern, with the fewest words possible. I will be extremely grateful for any help.
Thank you so much,
lisa s
I know you must be a physician to post here, but I'm begging you to please leave this, so as to possibly find help. I have searched endlessly online and still cannot find the answer and I truly need the help by people who are in the field. Please, try and understand my situation....please.
My husband and I live in long island, ny. He has been in treatment with a pain management specialist for about 4 years because of his back. And is on prescribed narcotics.
I searched online and found alot of guidelines and other articles that suggest to monitor patient to prevent addiction and toxicity. They state things like 'monitoring is crucial to prevent the risk to kidneys and liver posed by long-term therapy' and 'opioids 4 treatment of chronic pain periodically assess functional status, opioids effects, and medication misuse' or 'as noted in the supreme court (gonzales v. Oregon) ensures patients use controlled substances under the supervision of a doctor so as to prevent addiction and recreational abuse'
but...
The guidelines and/or articles, don't discuss 'how' the physician should monitor, example: by performing xyz steps to patient, like check his blood pressure, take his pulse. How can you monitor for addiction?
The question: what are some required steps or guidelines, a physician could perform to monitor their patient for adversely affected signs of addiction? Also, is a physician required to routinely monitor medication levels, either by blood, urine, pill counts? Or run a diagnostic test and drug screening, if prescribing a controlled substance?
I hope I don't sound a little rude or nasty, its just becoming extremely frustrating not being able to find the answer. Its almost like this is a big secret.
I apologies for taking up any of your time and tried to find the correct words to express my concern, with the fewest words possible. I will be extremely grateful for any help.
Thank you so much,
lisa s