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#272465 - 18/12/2005 07:09 I am completely outraged
TigerJimmy
old hand

Registered: 15/02/2002
Posts: 1049
I've felt that the "War on Drugs" is a stupid hypocrisy for years. There is no doubt that it is the war on drugs, not the drugs themselves that causes the crime, the ODs, and just about every other negative aspect of the alleged "drug problem".

That's not what I'm outraged about today. At least, not any more than usual.

I have a bad back. I have 5 ruptured disks in my back, one of which was removed in a surgery about 12 years ago. Here's how that happened:

I was having pain in my right leg. I couldn't explain it. It became more chronic, and more severe. I tried to determine if it was related to some repetitive stress or some activity I was doing. It didn't appear to be.

I went to my doctor, who suspected this might be cyatic pain. He suggested I get a CT scan of my lower back to confirm his diagnosis. This made sense to me, so I chose to get the CT scan. It showed the damage he suspected. He then put me in touch with specialists to help me understand my treatment options. Surgery was recommended to me, but I was trying to finish engineering school.

I decided to delay the surgery, hoping I could get through engineering school and do it after graduation. The pain got more and more severe, and eventually immobilized me. I chose to have the surgery mid-term, and basically dropped out of college. This was a big decision for me, as you can imagine. I think you would have to agree that it was MY decision to do this. I decided the consequences of leaving school would have to be dealt with.

The surgery worked; the leg pain was gone. Unfortunately, I have lower back pain that I live with all the time. My back is very sensitive, and certain activities cause really bad back aches for me.

I was really impressed with how my doctor diagnosed what I thought was a leg problem as a back injury. I went back to him and told him about the lower back pain I now had. This was shortly after my surgery. He told me that it would probably always be with me, but that a mild muscle relaxant (cyclobenzaprine HCL, also known as flexorol) might help when it got really bad. He wrote me a prescription and I tried it.

The meds work, but they make me groggy, so I only take them when I'm hurting really bad and only at night. I've done this for over 10 years and it helps. I made the decision to try the meds, and I made the decision to use them only at night and only when I'm in severe pain. I think you'd agree that it was MY responsibility to make those decisions for myself, just like it was MY decision to have the surgery in the first place.

Over the years, I'd call my doctor and he'd renew the prescription for me. It is a "PRN", refill as needed, but prescriptions expire after 1 year. It expired again 2 weeks ago.

I called my doctor. They wouldn't let me talk to him, but I left a message asking for the renewal. He declined it. I called again and asked to speak with his nurse, which they wouldn't let me do. I left the nurse a message explaining the following:

- I've used this treatment successfully for 10 years.
- NOTHING has changed in my situation. My back is no worse -- I'm just out of my "back pills".
- I don't have health insurance and don't want to pay for a doctor's visit.

He refused again, saying that since he hasn't seen me in 3 years, he won't renew the script.

This is absolutely ridiculous. When I first say my doctor, I consulted him with something I didn't understand and he gave me advice. I chose how to proceed based on my respect for his advice.

This is different. I've been using this "treatment" for 10 years. I live with my back every day of my life. NOBODY is in a better position to know if the situation with my back has changed. I am keenly aware of the slightest change; I even know how weather affects my back.

It is clear to me that my doctor is requiring me to see him for reasons totally unrelated to my welfare. I can only guess what those reasons may be, but it is extremely obvious that my welfare is not the reason.

When a doctor does this, he changes the relationship from one where he advises a responsible moral agent who owns their body and assumes all risks of treatment to a relationship where the patient is a subject under the doctor's control. Worse than denying my status as a responsible moral agent, this allows the doctor to place interests above my welfare -- against which I have no recourse. Whether it is business reasons that cause him to compel me to pay for an office visit, his own fear of legal reprisals, or some other reason, the fact remains: he has violated the basic and fundamental principle of his profession -- that his patient's welfare comes first.

This is a profoundly immoral situation. Really think about this. It is a big deal. My doctor is not to be trusted to place my interests first. Neither is yours, because the system in which the doctor operates is inherently immoral.

This is the real horror of the absurd war on drugs. It turns citizens into subjects. Subjects of a priesthood of doctors who have a fundamental conflict of interest with their subject/patients.

It is as illegal for me to try to obtain this mild muscle relaxant as it would be for me to try to get dilaudid, vicodin, or reefer.

As our politicians claim to be protecting our freedoms, we willingly allow them to control what we eat and whether we choose to continue living. Are there really any more basic freedoms than those? They must be using some definition of "freedom" that I'm not familiar with.

People actually think that someone else is a better judge of how I need to care for myself and my back than I am myself! If you are someone who thinks this, consider this: who has to live with my back?

As Tony Soprano might say, "I'm being shaken down." Anyone who thinks this is OK needs to do some thinking. If you agree that I am being screwed, you may then need to rethink your position on whether I should be able to roll a fat one to get a break from my back pain. And why shouldn't I? It's my body. I assume all of the consequences. I have to live with myself. Period. Hold me accountable if I harm someone for harming them. I have the inalienable right to harm myself, if I choose to do so.

Morally, perhaps. But not legally. Not in the "land of the free".

Jim

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#272466 - 18/12/2005 07:29 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: TigerJimmy]
wfaulk
carpal tunnel

Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
Well, while I'm with you in general, I have to point out that maybe your doctor has a reason for wanting to see you. Maybe he has a new treatment he'd like you to try. Even if it's just a different medication, I'm sure that his malpractice insurance makes him schedule an office visit, if it's not a basic tenet of medical ethics. For that matter, maybe his insurer is now making him see patients before renewing prescriptions. Your point about the "War on Drugs" is no less valid because of those things, though. And while I can understand the idea behind restricting potential recreational drugs, why do things like extra-extra-strength ibuprofen prescription-only? I can understand them being restricted so that pharmacists can make people know the dangers behind misusing them (though taking four of those is not any different than taking a handful of ones you don't need any license for), but why make them inaccessible?

Which brings me to my other point, which is that it would certainly be (stupidly) illegal for you to obtain the Flexoril without a prescription, it is most certainly less illegal than the others you list, as it is an unscheduled drug, while Vicodin is Schedule III, Dilaudid is Schedule II. and marijuana is Schedule I.

Edit: Actually, if I understand the law correctly, as an unscheduled drug, it would not be illegal for you to possess your Flexoril without a prescription, only that it would be illegal for someone to dispense it. Which, I suppose, is how the Internet prescription drug trade works. Sounds a whole lot like our 18th Amendment now that I think about it.


Edited by wfaulk (18/12/2005 07:36)
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#272467 - 18/12/2005 07:38 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: wfaulk]
TigerJimmy
old hand

Registered: 15/02/2002
Posts: 1049
Bitt, excellent points. A couple of thoughts:

As I was thinking about it, illegal is an all-or-nothing thing. Sort of like pregnancy. You make a good point that the punishment is harsher depending on the chemical properties of what I obtain and intend to eat.

If the doctor has an alternative treatment, why didn't he just say so? For that matter, why can't that be handled over the phone?

I think you're right about the doctor's motivations. This is probably due to legal or insurer requirements. But that is precisely my point. All reason dictates that this is a matter between me and my doctor, or, more accurately, it is my own issue and I choose to obtain a doctor's advice. NOTHING should be above the patient's interest in the doctor/patient relationship. In reality many things are, which is proof that the system is broken without getting into personal opinions about so-called "recreational drugs", like tobacco or alcohol.

Jim

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#272468 - 18/12/2005 07:45 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: wfaulk]
andy
carpal tunnel

Registered: 10/06/1999
Posts: 5916
Loc: Wivenhoe, Essex, UK
Quote:
And while I can understand the idea behind restricting potential recreational drugs, why do things like extra-extra-strength ibuprofen prescription-only? I can understand them being restricted so that pharmacists can make people know the dangers behind misusing them (though taking four of those is not any different than taking a handful of ones you don't need any license for), but why make them inaccessible?



In the UK you can only buy normal ibuprofen in packs of 16 over the counter. We are still working our way through a bottle of 500 that we bought in the US when we were there a couple of years ago...
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#272469 - 18/12/2005 07:58 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: TigerJimmy]
wfaulk
carpal tunnel

Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
Well, ostensibly, the reason that those rules exist is, ultimately, to protect patients. There are, I'm sure, frivolous lawsuits against doctors, but the ones that his insurer is probably more worried about are the ones that are perfectly legitimate. And if the doctor performed an exam, those problems are less likely to occur. And there is no reason, I don't suppose, that it couldn't be handled over the phone (I think this is the way some doctors work in deepest Alaska) but he'd charge you the same amount. It's still the same use of his time.
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#272470 - 18/12/2005 08:00 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: andy]
wfaulk
carpal tunnel

Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
Someone was telling me that in some US state that the only legal place to buy beer is from a bar, and that the bars are only allowed to sell a case at a time, which means that if you're having a party, you have to go to the bar with your friend, have him wait outside to guard the beer as you wander in and out, buying one case at a time.

How does that work in regards to your 16-only ibuprofen rule?
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Bitt Faulk

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#272471 - 18/12/2005 09:43 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: wfaulk]
CrackersMcCheese
pooh-bah

Registered: 14/01/2002
Posts: 2489
You can get beer from supermarkets and licensed shops. As much as you like!


Edited by Phil. (18/12/2005 09:43)

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#272472 - 18/12/2005 10:58 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: TigerJimmy]
JeffS
carpal tunnel

Registered: 14/01/2002
Posts: 2858
Loc: Atlanta, GA
My own rant on the subject.

I hate that people with legitimate needs for mediciation (like my wife) get treated like criminals because they can't live without the drugs. Every so often my wife goes through a phase where she starts to worry that her pain isn't real and she's just addicted. At that point she'll try reducing her medication drastically and the end up spending the week in bed because of the amount of pain she's heaped on her body.

Living with back pain for the rest of your life is hard enough without adding insult to injury.
_________________________
-Jeff
Rome did not create a great empire by having meetings; they did it by killing all those who opposed them.

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#272473 - 18/12/2005 12:20 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: TigerJimmy]
mlord
carpal tunnel

Registered: 29/08/2000
Posts: 14493
Loc: Canada
Speaking of back pain: Anyone in your situation needs to read this book. Chronic back pain is nearly always curable, without surgery -- and surgery nearly always only makes things worse. The problem is, not many doctors seem to know or accept that, and even fewer modern doctors seem to have the slightest clue about curing back pain. Oh, and another (cheaper) book as well.

Cheers


Edited by mlord (18/12/2005 12:22)

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#272474 - 18/12/2005 13:17 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: CrackersMcCheese]
wfaulk
carpal tunnel

Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
It's different state-by-state. That may be the case where you live. It is where I live. But not everywhere.
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Bitt Faulk

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#272475 - 18/12/2005 14:45 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: wfaulk]
andy
carpal tunnel

Registered: 10/06/1999
Posts: 5916
Loc: Wivenhoe, Essex, UK
Quote:
Someone was telling me that in some US state that the only legal place to buy beer is from a bar, and that the bars are only allowed to sell a case at a time, which means that if you're having a party, you have to go to the bar with your friend, have him wait outside to guard the beer as you wander in and out, buying one case at a time.

How does that work in regards to your 16-only ibuprofen rule?


I guess if you want to top yourself with OTC pain killers you have to just visit a few different stores (or hit a large supermarket where you can visit a few different checkout operators).

Of course a study has since shown that ibuprofen poisoning went up after the legislation came in (though aspirin and paracetamol poisoning fell):

http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/329/7474/1076
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#272476 - 18/12/2005 15:11 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: andy]
wfaulk
carpal tunnel

Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
Quote:
Suicidal deaths from paracetamol (acetaminophen in the US -ed.) and salicylates


Really? People commit suicide with Tylenol and aspirin? Surely they could find something over there better to do it with than by liver failure. No OTC sleeping pills?
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Bitt Faulk

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#272477 - 18/12/2005 15:50 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: wfaulk]
andy
carpal tunnel

Registered: 10/06/1999
Posts: 5916
Loc: Wivenhoe, Essex, UK
I think I am right in saying that there are no OTC sleeping tablets in the UK (excepting those herbal ones that seemed to have zero effect the one time I tried them).
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#272478 - 18/12/2005 16:35 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: wfaulk]
lectric
pooh-bah

Registered: 20/01/2002
Posts: 2085
Loc: New Orleans, LA
Hehe, as far as alcohol is concered, come to Louisiana. You can buy wine, beer and hard liquor when you buy your gas. Oh, and yes, we DO have drive-through daiquiri stores. In fact, there's one near me that is ONLY drive-through. They give you a 32 oz cup filled with the daiquiri of your choice. It has a lid on it and the straw is NOT in the drink. This makes it not an "open beverage container". In Alabama, while in college, you had to plan for your parties if they were on a sunday. You couldn't buy any alcohol on sundays. Yeah, that makes sense.

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#272479 - 18/12/2005 17:22 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: lectric]
julf
veteran

Registered: 01/10/2001
Posts: 1307
Loc: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Quote:
In Alabama, while in college, you had to plan for your parties if they were on a sunday. You couldn't buy any alcohol on sundays. Yeah, that makes sense.

Back in Finland, you still can't buy anything stronger than beer anywhere except government-controlled special stores (also true for Sweden). They used to be closed both Sat and Sun - so everybody would stock up on Friday for the whole weekend (and drink it all on Friday). Now at least they are open on Saturdays...

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#272480 - 18/12/2005 18:44 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: julf]
loren
carpal tunnel

Registered: 23/08/2000
Posts: 3826
Loc: SLC, UT, USA
Quote:
Back in Finland, you still can't buy anything stronger than beer anywhere except government-controlled special stores (also true for Sweden).

Same in Utah, and I think some other states, but I'm too lazy to look it up.
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#272481 - 19/12/2005 02:52 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: wfaulk]
robricc
carpal tunnel

Registered: 30/10/2000
Posts: 4931
Loc: New Jersey, USA
Quote:
Someone was telling me that in some US state that the only legal place to buy beer is from a bar, and that the bars are only allowed to sell a case at a time, which means that if you're having a party, you have to go to the bar with your friend, have him wait outside to guard the beer as you wander in and out, buying one case at a time.

Pennsylvania is something like this. You can only buy beer at a bar, but I am not sure about the "1 case at a time" rule. Hard liquor and wine has to be purchased at state-run stores (I think). I live only 15 mins from the NY/PA border, but their laws still confuse me.
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-Rob Riccardelli
80GB 16MB MK2 090000736

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#272482 - 19/12/2005 03:11 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: wfaulk]
TigerJimmy
old hand

Registered: 15/02/2002
Posts: 1049
Yes, this is what is happening. There is the idea that patients must be "protected" against themselves. So we entrust the patient's care to doctors who:

#1 Don't have to live with the situation and may, in many cases, are less informed about it than their patients.

#2 Have interests other than the patent's care.

You see, the patient is not allowed to care for himself. This is "for his own good". Collectively, our society as decided that we are too stupid, untrustworthy, and incompetent to be entrusted with the care of our own bodies.

People relinquish these freedoms because the feel they can then be free of the responsibilities and consequences of making bad choices. Our society is the result, and insurers against malpractice claims are the ones who end up dictating policy because they foot the bill.

In my view of a moral world, people would own the consequences of eating something (whether its flexoril, alcohol, opium or marijuana). There would be nobody to sue, because everyone would recognize that there is nobody else to blame. We would allow people to make decisions that were different than the ones we would make in the same situation, and then we would require that people lived with the results.

The sad truth, articulated brilliantly in Erich Fromm's Escape from Feedom, is that people -- prehaps especially American people, don't want to be free because freedom means living with the results of bad decisions.

The one thing that everyone seems to agree upon, Democrats and Republicans alike, is that the state should be everyone's big parent. All of the major political arguments of today are simply arguing about what kind of parent people want. Nobody seems to question the underlying idea that it is OK to use government to impose one's own point of view on others. Almost everyone completely accepts this. The Left wants to impose one kind of world, while the Right has a different vision. Both believe in the same fundamental idea that is about as un-American and anti-freedom as you can get. From my point of view, they are idealogically identical, differing only in the details.

Well, I've had enough of it. Its gone too far. It's time to start having another political debate: What gives you the right to impose your morality on me?

Don't tread on me!

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#272483 - 19/12/2005 04:16 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: TigerJimmy]
andy
carpal tunnel

Registered: 10/06/1999
Posts: 5916
Loc: Wivenhoe, Essex, UK
Quote:

In my view of a moral world, people would own the consequences of eating something (whether its flexoril, alcohol, opium or marijuana). There would be nobody to sue, because everyone would recognize that there is nobody else to blame. We would allow people to make decisions that were different than the ones we would make in the same situation, and then we would require that people lived with the results.



Even if say thing you ate was contaminated with something extremely harmful because a third party had been reckless and screwed up ?
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#272484 - 19/12/2005 06:05 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: andy]
TigerJimmy
old hand

Registered: 15/02/2002
Posts: 1049
No, of course not. My view of the world does not have room for negligence or harming others.

I am talking about how people treat themselves.

Jim

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#272485 - 19/12/2005 06:14 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: mlord]
canuckInOR
carpal tunnel

Registered: 13/02/2002
Posts: 3212
Loc: Portland, OR
Interesting book recommendations, thanks! They remind me of some literature I've heard of that claims it's possible to cure most eyesite problems without glasses.

On the back pain subject, a friend's wife decided to go against her doctor's advice to have surgery for her back pain (after which, best case scenario, she would likely need a cane for mobility). She chose some non-invasive procedure, and she's now running around chasing her children.

Some days, I just have no faith in doctors.

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#272486 - 19/12/2005 10:52 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: lectric]
JeffS
carpal tunnel

Registered: 14/01/2002
Posts: 2858
Loc: Atlanta, GA
Quote:
In Alabama, while in college, you had to plan for your parties if they were on a sunday. You couldn't buy any alcohol on sundays. Yeah, that makes sense.
It's that way in Georgia, as I found out when I moved here. My brother in law told me this when we went to the store together one Sunday and I didn't believe him- had to ask the people working there. Not being much of a drinker I had no ideas laws like that existed. Very silly if you ask me.
_________________________
-Jeff
Rome did not create a great empire by having meetings; they did it by killing all those who opposed them.

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#272487 - 19/12/2005 11:07 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: TigerJimmy]
JeffS
carpal tunnel

Registered: 14/01/2002
Posts: 2858
Loc: Atlanta, GA
Quote:
No, of course not. My view of the world does not have room for negligence or harming others.
And there's the rub, of course. Very little that we do affects only ourselves. What is the difference between the negligence of letting food be contaminated and getting so high you decide to drive a car and end up plowing right into a family car, killing everyone inside? I understand that at that point you'd say to prosecute for the bad decision to drive while high, drug use or no, but this isn't much consolation for the loved ones of the people who died. And unfortunately, as a society we don't generally do a very good job of looking at the potential consequences for our actions. A nation full of drug abusers with no external motivation to stop until it's too late would not be a good place to live.

I'm not saying that I know what the solution is. I've seen my wife being treated like a criminal just to have the drugs she needs. It's really terrible and the system isn't working the way it is. I don't think there are any easy answers, unfortunatly, and that is very sad.
_________________________
-Jeff
Rome did not create a great empire by having meetings; they did it by killing all those who opposed them.

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#272488 - 19/12/2005 12:30 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: TigerJimmy]
Dylan
addict

Registered: 23/09/2000
Posts: 498
Loc: Virginia, USA
FYI, Flexeril an be bought over the internet. There are two basic ways:

1. Order from a US site. They'll make you fill out a form which supposedly goes to a doctor who you writes you a prescription. I doubt there really is a doctor involved but they make a show of following the law. You'll get an FDA approved drug from a US pharmacy.

2. Order from an overseas pharmacy where they don't make any pretense of involving a doctor. This will likely be cheaper - sometimes by a lot. What you'll probably get is a generic made by an overseas company that isn't FDA approved. I'm careful who I order from and my experience has been good.

www.drugbuyers.com is a forum where people discuss these places and which ones are reliable. It's an interesting forum because you find the full gamet from recreational Vicodin addicts to responsible people who, for reasons like yours, have decided to take control of their own medical treatment.

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#272489 - 19/12/2005 17:44 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: TigerJimmy]
jmwking
old hand

Registered: 27/02/2003
Posts: 777
Loc: Washington, DC metro
Quote:
I was having pain in my right leg. I couldn't explain it. It became more chronic, and more severe. I tried to determine if it was related to some repetitive stress or some activity I was doing. It didn't appear to be.

I went to my doctor, who suspected this might be cyatic pain. He suggested I get a CT scan of my lower back to confirm his diagnosis. This made sense to me, so I chose to get the CT scan. It showed the damage he suspected. He then put me in touch with specialists to help me understand my treatment options.


and

Quote:
You see, the patient is not allowed to care for himself. This is "for his own good".


I’ll offer a defense of the medical profession (and a disclaimer: I am not a physician but a lot of my relatives are, including my grandfather who was the chair of surgery at Duke for many years).

Beyond the training in anatomy, injury and disease, tests and scans, drug actions and interactions – all those things we think of when we think of what doctors do, doctors are trained to observe, and to observe nuance. This goes beyond just hearing what a patient says about their symptoms; they see things and ask questions that may not occur to a patient – the leg pain that’s really a back problem.

The body is a very dynamic system and we compensate for its changes over time. Chronic pain can lead to poor posture, which can lead to other damage. What a physician saw 10 years ago may well have changed. Frankly, I’m surprised your doctor let you go that long with a “med-check” visit. Yes, in your case, it might not be warranted, but the physician can’t (ethically) decide that over the phone.

-jk

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#272490 - 19/12/2005 18:49 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: JeffS]
TigerJimmy
old hand

Registered: 15/02/2002
Posts: 1049
Quote:
What is the difference between the negligence of letting food be contaminated and getting so high you decide to drive a car and end up plowing right into a family car, killing everyone inside?


The difference is huge, and its right in your post. The key is the "you decide" part.

Quote:
I understand that at that point you'd say to prosecute for the bad decision to drive while high, drug use or no, but this isn't much consolation for the loved ones of the people who died.


You're right, so we should prosecute them not only for their negligence (whether they killed someone or not), but also for the harm they inflicted on others. There is no way to stop these kinds of acts from happening, but we can hold people accountable when they do. This is how we handle drunk driving. Drunk driving is an illegal act because it is negligent to others. When a drunk kills someone, we prosecute them for murder in addition to drunken driving. Getting drunk is not a crime, however, and shouldn't be.

Quote:
And unfortunately, as a society we don't generally do a very good job of looking at the potential consequences for our actions.


This is exactly my point. We don't hold people accountable because they aren't free to make decisions of their own accord. Accoutability, responsibility and authority are all interrelated. This is my whole point, which you seem to agree with but don't understand the root cause. It is precisely the idea that the government needs to impose "moral" behavior that causes a society where people don't consider the consequences of their actions. They don't need to. This is precisely my point about people not really wanting to be free. If you see this as a failing in our society, as I do, really think about why it occurs. Freedom implies responsibility. Lack of freedoms imply lack of responsibility. This is the direct cause of both the litigious society and the general lack of consideration of consequences. People do not start out failing to consider consequences -- they learn that behavior. It is strategic behavior, like any other human behavior. In fact, I would go so far as to say that people do consider the consequences, they just don't care.

Quote:
A nation full of drug abusers with no external motivation to stop until it's too late would not be a good place to live.


This is an opinion of yours (I would say a prejudice) that has no basis in actual experience. It is effective and scary rhetoric, but not the way things actually are. In the 19th century, there was no drug prohibition is the US, and we did not live in a "nation full of drug abusers." Holland is not a "nation full of drug abusers" and is reportedly quite a nice place to live.

This statement reveals your fundamental misunderstanding: You believe that people, left to their own devices, will become a "nation full of drug abusers." In other words, at your very core, you believe that without external coercion people will destroy their lives and the lives of those around them. This point of view is closely tied to religious conservatism, and has been called an "ascending view" -- people are inherently evil and must be controlled, either by the state or by the threat of eternal punishment. I believe this is completely ridiculous. Even if it were true, I believe it is nobody's business but my own if I choose to lead a self-destructive life.

History has proven that a person's motivation to persue their self interest causes them to accomplish much greater deeds than the fear of damnation or imprisonment. Look at the other thread showing the night skies of North and South Korea...

At root, however, I think I have a much higher view of man than you do.

Quote:
I don't think there are any easy answers, unfortunatly, and that is very sad.


There are no easy answers. Freedom is messy business. We need to allow people to make bad decisions for themselves. This is not an easy answer, but it is the moral answer.

I think that much of the "ascending view" that I mention earlier is people's own fear that they will be unable to control themselves. Well, your fears do not give you the right to impose your own values (which may themselves be fear-based) on others.

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#272491 - 19/12/2005 18:53 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: Dylan]
TigerJimmy
old hand

Registered: 15/02/2002
Posts: 1049
Yes, I realize there are ways around the law. We as a society even seem to think that it is OK to circumvent the law. Why don't we have the cojones to take the next logical step and admit it is an irrational and immoral law? Isn't this a lot of effort because we won't simply admit we are wrong?

This attitude leads to selective enforcement of laws (resulting in institutional prejudice and racism), lack of respect for rule of law, and a host of other problems.

I'm not disagreeing with you. I will probably go to one of these grey market alternatives. My point is that I shouldn't have to.

Jim

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#272492 - 19/12/2005 18:58 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: jmwking]
TigerJimmy
old hand

Registered: 15/02/2002
Posts: 1049
I understand all of this, and I think its a good point. It misses my point however, that it isn't morally the doctor's choice. It's mine.

Again, in my fantasy view of the world, the doctor would not be required to get this medicine.

On the other hand, in my fantasy world, I would continue seeing a doctor every couple of years for checkups, etc, because I respect and appreciate the education and experience you describe. Since he knows me, and keeps records on me, he would ask me how my back is doing, etc... Again, it should be my choice whether to seek his counsel. I would, because I know he's dedicated many years to developing his craft and he has insights I can't have. This is the same reason I would hire an attorney. I am not *required* to get an attorney, or an accountant, but many would say its probably a good idea.

I did see this doctor every 2 or 3 years for a physical, or for some other reason (sinus infection or whatever). I'm pretty healthy, so I didn't see him every year.

I really don't know if I can bring myself to seeing him again. I don't trust that my interests come first.

Jim

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#272493 - 19/12/2005 19:41 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: TigerJimmy]
JeffS
carpal tunnel

Registered: 14/01/2002
Posts: 2858
Loc: Atlanta, GA
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What is the difference between the negligence of letting food be contaminated and getting so high you decide to drive a car and end up plowing right into a family car, killing everyone inside?


The difference is huge, and its right in your post. The key is the "you decide" part.
I don't understand your distinction. In both cases someone has made a decision that affects others. In the case of the contamination I will assume it is a failure to properly handle food in a safe way and determine that it is clear of contaminates. The contamination is a natural result of the irresponsibility of the provider. In the case of drugs causing suffering to others, it was the irresponsible use of mind altering drugs that caused the problem. The question is whether you'll do better dealing with the cause rather than the effect, and that's not always an easy question. It often depends on how often the cause leads to the effect. With drugs it is certainly true that some variations bring a higher degree of risk to others.

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I understand that at that point you'd say to prosecute for the bad decision to drive while high, drug use or no, but this isn't much consolation for the loved ones of the people who died.


There is no way to stop these kinds of acts from happening, but we can hold people accountable when they do.
Yes we CAN stop these kinds of things from happening, or at least lessen them. We can make it more difficult for people to obtain substances that will cause them to act in irrational and dangerous ways. Unfortunately, doing so can create more problems than it solves, and that's why these questions get so difficult. You and I have both experienced the negative sides of this.

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You believe that people, left to their own devices, will become a "nation full of drug abusers." In other words, at your very core, you believe that without external coercion people will destroy their lives and the lives of those around them. This point of view is closely tied to religious conservatism, and has been called an "ascending view" -- people are inherently evil and must be controlled, either by the state or by the threat of eternal punishment.
Here you are right about my view of human nature- it's pretty much an impass between our worldviews. I don't believe the state should control people for their own well being, but I do think the state needs to control people for the well being of others.

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I believe this is completely ridiculous.
Such is the evaluation of most with differing viewpoints. I don't think very highly of the concept that people left to their own devices will treat each other the way they ought and make choices that are responsible toward others.

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Even if it were true, I believe it is nobody's business but my own if I choose to lead a self-destructive life.
Once again, it's not about what you might do to yourself, but what you might do to other people.

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At root, however, I think I have a much higher view of man than you do.
Correct. I believe that man is inherintly flawed, meaning my view of man's nature is quite low.

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Well, your fears do not give you the right to impose your own values (which may themselves be fear-based) on others.
My view is not to impose my values on other people through law or politics, though I do try to convince other people of the benifits to my value system. Once again, the issue is when living a destructive life affects other people. There are plenty of things that I think should be legal even though I personally hold them to be wrong and immoral.
_________________________
-Jeff
Rome did not create a great empire by having meetings; they did it by killing all those who opposed them.

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#272494 - 19/12/2005 21:21 Re: I am completely outraged [Re: TigerJimmy]
Ezekiel
pooh-bah

Registered: 25/08/2000
Posts: 2413
Loc: NH USA
I think there's one other aspect of this issue that's not been addressed yet in this thread.

The role doctors play is not only ostensibly for the benefit of their advised patients, it's also to create a system whereby non-qualified people are explicitly barred from offering 'expert' advice on medical issues. While I can't disagree that nobody knows how your body reacts to substances as well as you do, I'm damn sure that non-doctors certainly don't know as well as doctors how well these substances will affect others. Were we to go to a non-regulated/minimally regulated marketplace for physio/psychotropic substances you would have legion such 'experts' dispensing cut rate advise.

There's a good deal of danger in the 'witch-doctor'/anecdotal advice approach to medicine. Is there possibly some up-side? Perhaps, but there are certainly some drastic downsides that outweigh any such upside (such as death from mixing incompatible medicines).

-Zeke
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WWFSMD?

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