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#1
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Stop robbing my pharmacies, junkie motherfuckers!!!
Just got a frantic text from a friend while I was at work today:
"We were just robbed, I think I'm going to pass out." For the umpteenth time in 3 months, another pharmacy in my area has been robbed by junkie scumbags looking for as much oxycodone they can lay their hands on. They're jumping over counters, holding guns to people's heads, and in one instance a couple years back, beating a 70 year old pharmacist with a crowbar. I have known people who work in every store that's been robbed in my district recently. These are stores I've worked at, places I've spent a lot of time in. These are my friends. And I am sick and fucking tired of wondering when it's my turn, wondering if every guy who walks up to the pharmacy with a funny look on his face is about to pull a gun on me. I'm tired of wondering if the piece of paper he's sliding towards me says "Amoxicillin 500mg" or "Give me everything in the safe and nobody gets shot." I'm tired of my pharmacists being afraid to work alone at night because they too know it's just a matter of time, and they don't want to be alone when it happens. Walgreens experienced so many robberies that they stopped carrying all forms of oxycodone in their regular stores. Now they have one store in each district that will stock it, with a 24/7 armed guard in the store. One guy I know put up a sign when he was working overnights alone that said he didn't keep it in stock. Didn't stop the guy who put a gun to his head, and it made us all sick to watch the video of him pleading for his life for well over 10 minutes, wondering if this psycho was going to blow his brains out. The guy eventually found some in the bins and left with it. But it's not just overnighters that have cause to be concerned now. In June, a Sweetbay in my county was robbed at 11:30 in the morning. The one that got hit today was 1pm with 2 female techs and one pharmacist while patients were sitting in the waiting area. I mean, what the fuck? Last edited by ladyfoxfyre; 07-23-2008 at 03:35 PM. |
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#2
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It's definetely an issue, especially since Oxycontin is so addictive and expensive. I wonder if there are equally effective painkillers that aren't so damn sought after or narcotic.
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#3
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Yeah - that truly sucks.
It hits a little close for me - my cousin is going through hell right now because his wife got strung out on the stuff working as a nurse. She lost her nursing license, almost landed in the clink for stealing tons of oxy from the hospital, had to go through rehab, and now their marriage is pretty much over. He's wringing his hands because he knows his kids have to come first in whatever happens next, and he's a bit at a loss on how to help them. Awful stuff. |
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#4
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Yeah, I've thought that perhaps somebody needs to do some sort of societal cost/benefit analysis on that stuff. It sure seems like a whole bunch more people are fucked up because of it rather than not fucked up because of it. Of course, people in real pain shouldn't have to suffer because of a bunch of addicts, either.
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#5
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Living with pain is no joke. And with really bad pain and an end-of-life issue, addiction becomes something health care workers typically don't worry about quite as much.
The real sticking point is with terrible acute pain, or a long-term painful chronic condition that resolves in time. These present the real challenges in pain management. Winding up with an addiction this way is just a real mess all around - and adds a huge complication to the lives of people just trying to get healthy again. And then there are the dickheads who never are in pain and just grab hold of these drugs for kicks. That's hard to defend. |
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#6
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The previous pharmacy I worked in was robbed on Memorial Day, while I was there. What did the guy want? Oxycontin. Fortunately, he believed us when we said we had none (we really didn't) and demanded something else instead, which we gave him and he bolted. It's sad, really, since many people do benefit from these medications. |
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#7
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But it does take a lot of practice to figure out the dosing, and ya gotta make sure their kidneys and livers are in good enough shape, or dosing it will get even tougher. There are no easy answers to the problem of chronic, non-malignant pain. Narcotics are one tool in myoolbox, but not the first one I reach for. And for patients with a significant addiction history, they probably should not be reached for. There's very little actual need for a drug like oxycontin. It's widespread use is due more to marketing than to unique benefit over other available meds. |
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#8
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#10
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#11
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#12
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Isn't part of the problem with these narcotic painkillers that the person that is given a legitimate scrip for a legitimate pain issue becomes dependent on the drug in such a way that the body "tricks" the mind into believing that the pain still exists, even when it doesn't anymore, thereby continuing to feed the addiction because the patient is still reporting pain to the doctor?
Last edited by FoieGrasIsEvil; 07-23-2008 at 08:07 PM. |
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#13
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<semi-hijack> On the topic of Oxycontin, I know I've told this story here before but I'll do it again. I'm on a research review board (IRB for those who know the terminology) for the medical center I work at. We review research involving human subjects being done at our institution. One study a few years back wanted to research Oxycontin versus some other pain treatment for arthritic knees or something like that. Anyway, the issue was that the subjects would be given a plain-looking pill to take daily for weeks; neither they nor the doctor would know which drug it was because the sponsoring company would send code-numbered bottles of meds that all looked like each other. At the end of the study - they would stop taking them. Cold turkey. I was one of the people on the panel who objected strenuously. We sent the study back telling them the sponsor needed to create "tapering" doses of the drugs being used and wean them off the drug. The response we got was that they didn't think it was needed, and their means of following up was a phone call 3 days after dose stoppage, and they'd deal with it then if needed. One of our members worked in anesthesiology, and he was the most knowledgeable and vocal on the subject. His rant was a thing of beauty and sadly I would do no justice if I tried to remember it and reproduce it here. We found it cruel that they would go ahead and put subjects through withdrawal just because they didn't want to be bothered with tapering them off the meds slowly. We sent the study proposal back with our commentary. I don't recall it coming back to us again, but I wasn't going to every meeting at that time.</hijack> Last edited by Ferret Herder; 07-23-2008 at 08:12 PM. |
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#14
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Gross oversimplification follows: Narcotics work pretty good on acute pain, and relieve it well, with minimal risk of dependency. Any resultant physical addiction is pretty easily treated with a taper. And inadequately treated severe acute pain often results in nerve remodeling changes, which can cause long-term chronic pain. So it's important to treat moderately severe acute pain, with narcotics if necessary. But often for chronic non-malignant pain, the med works at first, but eventually the effect diminishes, the patient requires more narcotics to get the same level of relief, etc etc until the patient is on enough morphine to kill an elephant, is constipated to hell and back, us tremendously physically addicted (and maybe psychologically too) and still has the same pain he started with. Plus, for certain susceptible individuals, narcotics not only relieve physical pain, but the resultant euphoria reduces mental, emotional, spiritual pain too. And when the narcotic wears off, they want relief from those pains too! And the patient tends to not recognize the nature of these non-physical pains, but somatizes them into physical complaints. Plus a lot of other stuff and factors, etc. It's complicated. That's why I went thru training until I completed the 21st grade, and still do continuing education, including on how to treat pain. And I'm still learning slowly in this area. |
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#15
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#16
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Methadone maintenance has its role, but I'm not a big proponent of it. It's interesting to hear they're treating pain too. Any doctor with a DEA number for Sched II can prescribe methadone for pain. But it takes special licensing and certification to be able to prescribe methadone for an addiction. Last edited by Qadgop the Mercotan; 07-23-2008 at 08:23 PM. |
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#17
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#18
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#19
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This article isn't clear but other news reports did make it sound like it wasn't entirely for addicts, but I could be wrong. |
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#20
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It's not exactly a fun place to go though. The motives for being there are not all good ones, unfortunately. As far as I know, our clinic does not treat pain and they take many steps not to overmedicate. You have to go through paperwork and doctor's orders to be stepped up even a little bit. And again, IMO, it's better to be a little overmedicated on a drug that you are being supervised on than to be out on the street taking whatever you want. In no way is it a perfect system, but for a lot of us, it is a hell of a lot better than the alternative. And the nifty thing about methadone is its ability to block other opiates once you are at a therapeutic dose. It's pretty hard to abuse opiates once you are on MMT, at least for me. And I know I never would have stopped otherwise. YMMV Last edited by Indygrrl; 07-23-2008 at 10:07 PM. |
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#21
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Last year a couple of geniuses tried to rob a pharmacy in a nearby community. According to the security cam video (which friends of mine have seen) one of them got out of the car and watched out while the other one drove to the edge of the parking lot, aimed at the pharmacy's front door, and floored it. The impact didn't breach the door, but it did manage to send the driver's face into the windshield, because this young scholar neglected to put on his seat belt before his ramming maneuver.
Providence protects idiots, so the guy was addled for a few seconds but recovered quickly. He backed the car up and made another run at the door, which didn't give way completely but opened enough for one of them to get inside. Unfortunately, it also sent him once again face-first into the shattered windshield, because even after his previous misadventure he still didn't put on his seat belt. It's a testament to the humanity of his partner-in-crime that he passed up the chance at a wide-open pharmacy and drove his now-unconscious buddy to the hospital. |
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#22
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And....my Google ads are for oxycodone and vicodin.
![]() I've got a chronic pain issue from nerve damage in my foot due to multiple surgeries in the same small area. I take a regular dose of oxycodone (plus gabapentin) to calm it down, and it works like a charm for me. I've taken the same (quite small by pain management standards) amount for the four years I've been treated by the pain specialist, but I'm also insanely careful about not taking more than the absolute minimum to maintain the pain at a tolerable level -- the only time I can recall being completely pain-free in the last five years was when they had me on morphine for a few days after a knee replacement last year. So it really pisses me off that people abuse a medication like this, and rob pharmacies and injure or kill completely innocent people, all to get high off something that makes a huge difference in my quality of life. I'm in nice, polite suburbia, and as far as I know the pharmacies around here are all robbery-free, but they still often don't carry my medication; sometimes I have to check 2 or 3 in my area to find one that has it. I'm sure it's for safety reasons. I'm sorry your friends/coworkers are being robbed like that, ladyfoxfyre. It's a lousy situation all the way around. Last edited by Mama Tiger; 07-23-2008 at 11:13 PM. |
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#23
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I haven't written for a long-acting narcotic (including methadone) in the three years I've been in private practice. Around here if you write one script for oxycontin, you have ten people in your office the next day with beat-up folders of medical records, essentially normal MRIs, and sob stories about how they got kicked out of all the pain clinics. (It gets out through the pharmacies.) It's really that ridiculous. I get one or two patients a day like that anyway. That's one of the reasons why I'm getting out of private practice and getting back into academics. It's just exhausting. |
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#24
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Get on with your bad self. Good job kicking the nod. Now keep it. Sounds like you are. |
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#25
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There has got to be a profit motive in there somewhere, as I imagine Oxycontin is cheap to produce but not to sell. This is a one-off, but anymore I feel generally that we are an overprescribed. over-medicated nation. My son is a little "hyper"! No! He has ADDHD! Treat him with this chemical! (No belittlement of honest conditions implied) |
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#26
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#27
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#28
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#29
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Small pay cut; big pain-in-my-ass cut. |
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#30
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To work with drug seekers, or to work with residents? [channeling Jack Benny]I'm thinking, I'm thinking![/channeling Jack Benny] |
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#31
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#32
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Pharmacies in my area have been getting hit, too. I don't think mine is a likely target because its in a busy grocery store in the middle of a busy shopping center, but you never know.
I'm a technician, and get daily phone calls asking if we have Oxycodone 30 mg in stock, the blue ones, not the white. (That part confuses me. It's the same medication, different manufacturer, thus the difference in color. Why does it matter?) Last Saturday I got 3 calls in a row within 5 minutes, from 3 different males who I think were together. I didn't work Sunday but one of the techs told me they got several phone calls that day as well. It's crazy shit. Per the pharmacists I work under, the answer is always no, we don't have them in stock. If we answer yes to one of these callers, within a couple of hours we get flooded with people with scrips for Roxicodone 30 mg, #360 or #240 or some other crazy high number. Those things go for like $15-20 per pill on the street, and we're located fairly close to some really shitty neighborhoods that are crawling with drug seekers and addicts. We do have 2 or 3 regular patients who we are familiar with and regularly get prescribed the medication, and we do fill it for them. If we get a new patient with a new prescription, we deal with it on a case by case scenario. It's at the pharmacist's discretion whether we fill it or not. What I'm curious about is the doctors who prescribe this stuff. It's not like people are bringing us fake prescriptions, they're legitimate. Why is a 20ish year old kid, who looks perfectly healthy and doesn't appear to be in any sort of discomfort(and I know not all pain can be detected by looking, but come on ) getting prescribed this shit? Do the docs get kickbacks from the drug companies? Or just get tons of patients when it gets out that Dr Whoever hands the stuff out like candy? (Note I'm not including people who legitimately need the stuff. Please don't think I'm underestimating what people who live with constant pain deal with.) Anyways, sorry to hear that, ladyfoxfyre. Hope you(or I) don't have the same experience your friend did. |
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#33
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Some docs are pill docs, who will prescribe anything for a cash payment, then fake records to document a need. They are few but very popular. Some docs are easy to con. Some docs are intimidated by aggressive patients, or just want to please their 'customers'. Some docs started out prescribing them for what they thought were legitimate needs, and got sucked deeper and deeper into providing more and more, and just can't seem to say 'no more'. Last edited by Qadgop the Mercotan; 07-24-2008 at 09:21 PM. |
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#34
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Where the hell was the Internet when I was using?!?
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#35
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#36
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I think several states have cracked down on this since then though. |
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#37
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She's been taking her "medical visitors" with a hefty chunk of salt since. |
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#38
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#39
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And yes, I'm getting a shitload of under 25 year olds with scripts for #240, #360, etc. It's getting really insane. ETA: And, you live and work in my town. Maybe you are me....
Last edited by ladyfoxfyre; 07-25-2008 at 09:06 PM. |
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#40
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Psst! You've just dropped to Guest status.
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#41
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This led me to go out and find my own sources, which is part of why I think I got addicted (that and unfortunate genetics). I really believe that a lot of addicts start out as desperate pain patients who can't get the medication they actually need. You'll do anything when you have pain like that. And those pill docs know it, which is why they can charge you $200 for an appointment every two weeks. And they know you'll get addicted, which keeps you going even once your pain is gone. Anyway, there are at least two doctors in Indianapolis who have been busted multiple times for unscrupulous prescription writing. We're talking cash only docs that have waiting rooms full of junkies. They make the news and then two months later you hear that they are back in business. How the heck do they get away with it? |
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#42
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In case it was keeping anyone up nights, ladyfoxfyre and I discovered via IM we are in fact two separate people who happen to work right down the street from each other. Quote:
I hear you, and I don't quite get it, either. I have back pain that has been growing steadily worse over the past few years. It got worse after I got rear ended in my car(twice!) by a hit and run driver. So after the accident I finally told my doc about the problem. Was told to use Aleve and a heating pad. Didn't help. Got prescribed Soma, finished the prescription and refill. Didn't help. Put me to sleep, mostly. Got prescribed Diclofenac, finished the presciption. Didn't help. I finally stopped mentioning the pain because I didn't want my doctor to think I was a drug seeker. I guess it's just a matter of finding the right doctor. Some prescribe it only as a last resort, others hand it out left and right. And I certainly don't want 30 mgs of oxycodone. That shit is wayyy stronger than I could stomach. Just something to dull the pain, especially after a 10 hour workday with a throbbing back. Ugh. |
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#43
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I wish I had some of your docs. I had multiple surgeries on my right foot a few years back, and now I have severe nerve damage in all the major nerves in my right lower leg. Anything that touches my foot causes pain, anything. My doctor wouldn't give me anything for pain after he determined that it had healed. He assured me it would get better. Well, it's been three years, and putting on a sock still hurts like hell. I could definitely use something, if just to help me get to sleep at night.
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#44
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#45
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I live in a very small town, and the pharmacy was broken into Sunday afternoon.
The perp, in a very long and convoluted story, fled the scene in a car, abandoned it south of town, crossed a very dangerous swamp wearing only blue jeans, and wound up at the house of the pharmacist's brother in law, asking for a ride home north of town, which he got. Drove right past the sheriff's deputies investigating the break-in, too. He's still at large, but the perp is known, several witnesses saw the break-in, and the amount of blood he left behind at the scene will be hard to beat for DNA evidence. If he doesn't die from the infections he'll get from swimming the swamp with all those lacerations... |
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#46
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#47
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#48
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The drugs that you named, are they different or the same as the ones I named? |
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#49
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Can you go to another doctor? I think that pain management is given more priority these days, and it seems that your current doctor isn't with the program. I take Cymbalta, primarily as an antidepressant, but it also helps with my neuropathy. Of course, living with chronic pain is liable to depress anyone. |
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#50
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Amitriptyline is Elavil, a tricyclic. And if you haven't tried a class of tricyclics to see if they help nerve pain, you might want to discuss that with your doc. |
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