Posted on Mar 13, 2020
SPC Ray Blaylock
1.59K
16
14
3
3
0
Is there anyone else out there having problems with there VA drs about there pain medication? And or any narcotics for that matter.?
Avatar feed
Responses: 5
1SG Retired
3
3
0
Since overprescribing opiates, and the resulting harm it caused, the VA has restricted narcotics. My PCP wouldn't, or maybe couldn't by policy, write a prescription for a narcotic, despite shredded lateral meniscus, torn medial meniscus, torn ACL, and bone on bone contact. He had to have the Pain Management doctor write me 5 days of oxycodone/acetaminophen to permit the topical acetaminophen time to be effective. I was surprised that the combination of ibuprofen and the topical held me off until I could get a knee replacement.
If you haven't been referred for pain management, you may want to request it.
(3)
Comment
(0)
1SG Retired
1SG (Join to see)
4 y
CDR Terry Boles I will say that I'm glad that my knee replacement and physical therapy are through community care for this very reason, though. NSAIDS and acetaminophen, even with gabapentin and meloxicam, aren't enough for the pain, even a month after.
(1)
Reply
(0)
MAJ Byron Oyler
MAJ Byron Oyler
4 y
This is such bullshit. I have administered narcotics for patients for years and really the only people that get addicted are the ones that do not take the right amount of medication for the amount of pain they are in. A good deal of this is the education patients receive when prescribed a narcotic. Narcotics are not like antibiotics, 'follow directions on bottle and finish,' but so many are not taught that. When I have new post op patients, I medicate the shit out of them, both IV and PO, and the better you medicate for new pain, the sooner you can come off the heavy stuff. If I am still giving IV narcs 12-24 hours out, I do not just keep giving them, I call the doctor for concern something is wrong. Same thing for PO narcs, if you are still taking a full dose 2-3 days out from discharge, time to call the doc. Something else people do not realize is ortho docs with fresh surgeries generally do not like NSAIDs, so narcs is the standard until Tylenol works. I have seen nurses give IV narcotics until the moment of discharge and this is so wrong. If I cannot control your pain 12-24hours before discharge on the medication you are going home on, there is a problem. I worked burns while in nursing school and truly feel if you are too scared to use the tools given you to help people, are too lazy to learn about pain and addiction, then maybe you should chose another line of work.
(3)
Reply
(0)
SPC Ray Blaylock
SPC Ray Blaylock
4 y
MAJ Byron Oyler
I also did not mention in my prior post That I was a nurse for 18 years after the military. So I know exactly what you are saying.
(0)
Reply
(0)
1SG Retired
1SG (Join to see)
4 y
MAJ Byron Oyler I believe VA's is policy driven. Similar to my PCP not being permitted to write for a narcolepsy med I take, because their policy is the sleep clinic has to write those.
The community Ortho has been giving me percocet prescriptions for 7 days at a time.
I concur with patient education, but believe VA faced patients with mental health conditions along with chronic pain, and likely other factors unique to Veteran patients that led to their overprescribing and changes.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
CSM Richard StCyr
2
2
0
I have to constantly waive mine off on pain meds. Motrin and topical gels are still working fine for pain control.
(2)
Comment
(0)
MAJ Byron Oyler
MAJ Byron Oyler
4 y
Sounds like you know what you are doing, learn this on your own or did someone in the medical profession properly educate you? Remember you can always ask for a downgrade to T3 and learn other uses of it in your medicine box when no longer needed for pain.
(1)
Reply
(0)
CSM Richard StCyr
CSM Richard StCyr
4 y
MAJ Byron Oyler - Learned on my own by observing the old guys and the progression of and through the meds. Many developed resistance and constantly had to move ever upward through the meds.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SGM Steve Wettstein
1
1
0
SPC Ray Blaylock I have been told, by my last two PCMs, that they weren't able to prescribed narcotics. I had to go to a Pain Management Doc to get them.
(1)
Comment
(0)
SPC Ray Blaylock
SPC Ray Blaylock
4 y
Ya my last two PCM told me they were going to get me I to a pain management dr out side the VA but has never happened.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SPC Ray Blaylock
SPC Ray Blaylock
4 y
Thanks SGM
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close