Seen on the street in Kyiv.

Words of Advice:

"If Something Seems To Be Too Good To Be True, It's Best To Shoot It, Just In Case." -- Fiona Glenanne

“The Mob takes the Fifth. If you’re innocent, why are you taking the Fifth Amendment?” -- The TOFF *

"Foreign Relations Boil Down to Two Things: Talking With People or Killing Them." -- Unknown

“Speed is a poor substitute for accuracy.” -- Real, no-shit, fortune from a fortune cookie

"If you believe that you are talking to G-d, you can justify anything.” — my Dad

"Colt .45s; putting bad guys in the ground since 1873." -- Unknown

"Stay Strapped or Get Clapped." -- probably not Mr. Rogers

"The Dildo of Karma rarely comes lubed." -- Unknown

"Eck!" -- George the Cat

* "TOFF" = Treasonous Orange Fat Fuck, A/K/A Dolt-45,
A/K/A Commandante (or Cadet) Bone Spurs,
A/K/A El Caudillo de Mar-a-Lago, A/K/A the Asset., A/K/A P01135809

Friday, November 29, 2019

Tab Clearing: Trump on Afghanistan; Opiates and Pain

In this op-ed, a knee surgery patient exhibits frustration at being treated like a potential drug abuser for using opiates for post-surgery pain. I'll cut to the chase, for those who feel lazy:
The thing is, there are millions of Americans who aren’t an addiction liability just because they want a narcotics prescription post-injury or post-surgery. Yes, the government says nearly 80 percent of heroin users first misused opioid prescriptions, but the research being cited refers to people who illegally obtained those prescription opioids. Not patients.

In conclusion, Orthopedic Surgeon (and all doctors, really), can you ease up on prohibiting medications that help patients in pain to relax a bit? They’re not terrible drugs. They’re terrible drugs in the wrong hands.
I am of an age that I know people who have had major orthopedic surgery and cancer. For orthopedics, there's not much worse than a knee replacement. An orthopedic surgeon told me that the knee is a far more complex joint than the hip, as the knee has several degrees of motion. Despite the glowing ads that some hospitals run for their joint replacement centers, the recovery from knee replacement can be long and brutal. Shoulder surgery has the reputation of having a recovery period that people put off having it.

Add in people dealing with spinal deformities and cancer and you have a large number of people who are dealing with prolonged and debilitating pain. Opiates help, not necessarily to make them pain-free, but to knock enough of the edge off that people can function.

So how are they treated? They're treated like drug abusers. Bring in the pills for a count. Take a piss test to ensure that the drugs are being used. If they try to taper off for a time, that effort is treated as if it's permanent, leaving them high and dry for a reoccurrence of pain. But the worst is the emotional impact of being told that although they are in pain, they're being looked at with a gimlet eye because they must be incipient druggies.

As a result, patients try to deal with pain on their own and they suffer. Nobody seems to care. Certainly not the politicians, who have jumped on the "all opiates are bad" bandwagon. The doctors have been given the message that if any badged-up DEA flunky thinks they may have overprescribed, at the very least, they'll take away the doctor's prescription pad and maybe go after their license. So they'll settle for having patients suffer.

The pendulum has swung too far.

------------------------------------------

Now, on to Trump:
President Donald Trump paid a surprise Thanksgiving visit to Afghanistan ... During his visit, Trump announced that the U.S. and Taliban have been engaged in peace talks and insisted the Taliban want to make a deal after heavy U.S. fire in recent months.
The Taliban's leaders are not stupid. They can read a calendar as well as anyone else. They know, full well, that Trump is standing for re-election next year and that he started campaigning the day after he was sworn in. They know that Trump has promised to get out of Afghanistan. They know that the person who is most anxious for a deal is Trump.

In short, the party that is most eager to make a deal is Trump, not the Taliban. That gives them them the edge in any negotiations, and they know it. Trump may not, for he seems to have an ability to see his own version of reality, a world where there are kind-hearted Nazis, that the Mall in Washington was packed for his Inauguration and so on.

Don't be surprised if Trump gives away the store in exchange for a deal. We've seen this movie already.

7 comments:

CenterPuke88 said...

As long as the Trump name goes on the store, they can have it...that’s his idea of a good deal.

Stewart Dean said...

"We've seen this movie already." More than once. It's a GOP cult movie that's been playing continuously since 2016 to the GOP faithful who respond like Pavlov's dogs (Lock her up!, Benghazi!, Witch Hunt!, Most stable!)...with the rest of us roped in....

w3ski said...

As to pain meds. I am 65 years old, I retired at 62, and I don't even drive anymore.
I also have severe arthritis in my back and shoulders. Yes, I take opiates for the grinding pain. I don't take them all day, but I need them most every day.
Am I addicted? Maybe, do I care? Not at all. I have pain, every day, I don't have to produce anything, and in fact, when I am hurting the most is when I am most unproductive. Just standing to do dishes can be agonizing.
And, yes I am forced to go to a separate doctor just for my medications. They piss test me and the whole 9 yards, just for my relief. It's humiliating, but this doc will write my script and my regular doctor won't.
Why does society feel the need to come between me and my doctor? Either he is allowed to proscribe or he isn't.
w3ski

dinthebeast said...

Afghanistan is a hard issue. I'd say it's precisely the sort of hard issue that calls for a smarter, more competent president than Fergus.

Another thing about opiate pain killers: folks with no access to them tend to substitute high doses of ibuprofen, which turns out to have side effects that can do physical damage to your gut and kidneys, which is not as bad as a fatal opiate OD, but let's face it; pain patients aren't the ones ODing, and damaged kidneys are an existential problem for many, especially the poor folks who are the very people most likely to lack access to a doctor and an current script for opiates.

-Doug in Oakland

Ten Bears said...

Are we absolutely sure it went in(sortof)country. Could be faked, like the moon-shots 🤣

0_0 said...

din-We have HAD smarter, more competent Presidents deal with Afghanistan.

dinthebeast said...

And now we've had a stupider, less competent president deal with it. Let's see which turns out better and use that information to inform our future picks for foreign policy decision makers.
Afghanistan itself isn't likely to look much different no matter what we or anyone else does.

-Doug in Oakland