Monday, November 30, 2015

New Doctors Are Legally Allowed to Enable Opioid Addiction, But Legally Denied the Ability to Prevent It

If a newly graduated medical student during his or her residency can write prescriptions for drugs that are universally known to be habit forming (opioids), then shouldn’t they have access to any programs that would help to lessen potential addiction issues?  Shouldn’t they care enough to take as much time as needed to ensure that they are not enabling and or creating opioid addiction?

According to Felice J. Freyer of the Boston Globe, “Medical residents don’t have access [to the Prescription Monitoring Program, a state-run database of every prescription for controlled substances] — even though they’re allowed to prescribe controlled substances”.  This is a problem that has been going on for some time now, because most doctors, let alone new doctors completing their residencies, don’t have the time, nor do they care to make sure that their patients aren’t abusing the drugs that they are being prescribed.

Even Dr. Sara Schlotterbeck, the first year medical resident that prompted the Globe’s article, confirms that there is truly a lack of time and care when dealing with opioid prescriptions and patients.  She refers to what is needed to gain access to the Prescription Monitoring Program as a resident doctor when she says, “If we really try hard, if we take that extra 15 or 20 minutes — which is actually a lot of time . . .”, but her statement is clearly acknowledging that she and her colleagues, fellow doctors and resident doctors alike, are not trying hard enough, are not taking enough time, and even feel as if 15 or 20 minutes is too much time to help a patient.  Dr. Schlotterbeck makes it more than apparent that she, the state of MA, and other doctors are not doing enough to prevent patients from becoming addicted to opioids.

Can you believe that “15 to 20 minutes is actually lot of time” when it comes to helping patients; human beings?  I don’t know about the whole of the patient world, but I’m normally in the waiting room to see any doctor, for any reason, for longer than 15 to 20 minutes.  I think it’s safe to say that 15 to 20 minutes should not be considered a lot of time when it comes to helping any patient/human being, and especially when it comes to preventing opioid addiction.

If newly graduated medical students, during their residencies, are legally allowed to prescribe opioids, then they should also be allowed to access the database that could give them the ability to prevent opioid addiction.  I say give these new doctors access to the Prescription Monitoring Program, or take away their ability to prescribe opioids until they gain access to it.

4 comments:

  1. It's frightening to think how easy it is for opioid abuse to be facilitated by medical professionals unwilling or unable to double-check the validity of their own patients prescriptions. It makes me wonder what other operations are not being performed efficiently. Such as surgeries for example. The risk of human error is rather high it would seem.

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  2. "I don’t know about the whole of the patient world"
    Clearly.

    I suggest you interview some medical residents, and find out for yourself how hellish their life is, and why 15-20 minutes *is* a great deal of time out of their day.

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  3. I wouldn't be at all surprised to hear how "hellish" it truly is to be in the medical field, or more specifically to be a medical resident, but when it comes to the health, and overall life of a human being, medical residency suffrage cannot possibly compare. A human life can be lost in a matter of seconds, and can never be brought back again once it's gone, so if it takes an extra 15-20 minutes to keep someone alive and well, then by all means please do your best to make it happen. Of course you are entitled to your opinion, as I am to my own

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    1. My opinion is based on conversations with actual medical residents. Yours is not. Did you know that arguing with an uninformed opinion is considered a logical fallacy (Argument by laziness)?

      Who are you talking to when you say, "by all means please do your best to make it happen"? Me, or the medical resident? I have no ability to make any such thing happen. And your presumption that a medical resident is not already doing their best is... problematical.

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