Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 11 | Page 9

FEATURE closed. And many prescribers became terrified of treating pain with opioids. As a result, patients like John were left with few options. In other words, John was trapped. In his case, this captivity had gone on for over 10 years. But his independence day had come. John found his way to my office. After about 45 minutes of evaluation, I gave him the good news: he was not addicted after all. John was not craving or com- pulsively using or overusing his medications. John was using the methadone he received in two-week supplies to treat his pain. He did not have a primary, chronic disease of brain reward, motivation, memory and related circuitry. In reality, he had developed physical dependence on methadone, as would anyone who had taken opioids for more than a few years, regardless of the reason. Better yet, John didn’t have to go to the methadone clinic any longer. He could come to see me and be prescribed methadone pills that are strictly for pain, instead of the little bottles of liquid Later that evening, during a phone conversation with my col- league, Dr. Wayne Tuckson, I vented my frustration about this suffering patient, who had come to me seeking comfort, but left my office probably more despondent. I certainly hadn’t solved his problem. And as I told Wayne the story, I began to realize that my patient and I had more in common than I originally thought. I had called Wayne trying to garner a unified response to help patients suddenly left without pain care, through no fault of their own, due to DEA raids on their pain clinics - a growing unintended consequence to our current response-to-the-opioid-crisis world. And as I talked with Wayne, I began to see reflected in my own patient’s dilemma, the precarious footing upon which I also stood. I could not solve my patient’s problem, because my patient was not confident I could solve my own. He could not be sure that my practice, my profession, my life’s calling, would survive in the wake of the pendulum’s swing. In the methadone issued to him every two weeks from the clinic. Oh happy day! This was great news! end, my patient chose the safe harbor of his fraudulent methadone clinic over my offer of legitimate pain care, albeit on turbulent seas. So why did John begin to tremble and tear up when I told him? That experience with my new patient, no less a privilege despite the foreboding outcome, has left me thinking, “Where will I find a safe harbor?” John declined my offer to take over his methadone, even though it would be covered by his insurance and dispensed in monthly supplies from a pharmacy of his choice convenient to where he lives. He thanked me for the news, and he agreed that he was not addicted. But he looked deflated, defeated. He told me he couldn’t risk it. It had taken him years to jump through the hoops at the methadone clinic - the daily visits that eventually became weekly and then monthly, the requisite number of “clean drug screens,” the mandatory counseling sessions, and finally earning the privilege of actually taking home two-week supplies of the liquid medication. John’s life had become manageable, even if it was in captivity. John did not take me up on my offer because he was satisfied with being labeled an “addict” in order to get some measure of ef- fective pain relief. He turned me down because he could not accept the risk that I might not be able to prescribe for him chronically. He could not risk that I would eventually be closed down or that I might stop treating pain. He could not risk having to start all over at the methadone clinic with daily visits. His job, his lifeblood, his ability to provide for his family, might not survive another reboot at the methadone clinic. C M Y CM MY James Patrick Murphy, MD specializes in Pain Medicine and Addiction Medicine, is a past-president of the Greater Louisville Medical Society, December 2018 Harding Shymanski quarter page ad GLMS.ai 1 11/1/2018 2:45:39 PM and is president-elect of the Kentucky Society of Addiction Medicine. HSC is a company that truly focuses on relationships. Given their focus on people and relationships, they have gained my trust. My trust is solidified when I witness them take the time and energy to do the right thing for my business. Tax planning for our business has been thorough and very advantageous. David Braun Braun’s Nursing Home CY CMY K So, instead of a new beginning, potentially better pain relief and successful tapering of methadone, I gave John the steroid injection he had come to me for in the first place. That does not change the fact that transitioning his medication management to my care was entirely appropriate. John does not belong in a methadone clinic. He is not an addict. But he is a prisoner. Contact Michele R. Graham, CPA, MST 800.880.7800 • www.hsccpa.com Louisville, KY • Evansville, KY Parent of HSC Medical Billing & Consulting, LLC APRIL 2019 7