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H.R. 756, The National Pain Care Policy Act of 2009 (8 comments ↓ | 8 wiki edits: view article ↓)

H.R. 756 would amend the Public Health Service Act with respect to pain care.

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Visitor Comments Comments Feed for This Bill

Juli LaRose

March 15, 2009, 11:27am (report abuse)

All I can say is...it's about time. I need to study the Bill in greater detail but so far, I agree. As a person surviving chronic pain daily, I've been traumatized and financially devastated. Not by pain itself, but by the medical community who made my life worse.

I'll keep an eye on this Bill and make its presence known to the support groups I am a part of.

Teresa Abraham

March 15, 2009, 3:37pm (report abuse)

Chronic Pain is debilitating and maddening. Doctors don't know what to do. Too many are suffering. Please pass this bill. It will save so many lives. Mine included.

Doctors are no equipped to manage pain or are afraid to do so as they are afraid of losing their licenses. We need HELP.

The government has so many people on disability when they could be productive people contributing to the country, but they can't find proper pain care.

Thank you so much for caring.

Richard G. Teasdale

March 28, 2009, 3:32am (report abuse)

As a person who suffers from Adhesive Arachnoiditis, a condition caused by a doctor using a Chemical against the Manufacturer's own Label Warning to do an Epidural Steroid Injection, I'm left in constent SEVERE PAIN! Trying to find a doctor who was willing to 'manage' my pain was a nightmare!

Willingly, I signed a Pain Medication Contract with the Doctor stating He would be my ONLY prescribing Doctor, and that I would use ONLY one Pharmacy to have all my scripts filled. This in an attempt to please the DEA and others who might harass this Saint of a Doctor who only wishes to HELP ME!
But I've read and heard so many stories about doctors getting into trouble for helping people. Yes, there are and will be abusers. Both Patients and Doctors. Punish the Abusers, yes! But Stop punishing those who Truly need Help.
And People need to realize not everyone on Narcotic Pain Meds Wish to be. Stop looking down their noses at people who are already suffering daily, all day every day!

carolyn

April 8, 2009, 10:03pm (report abuse)

This is a much needed bill. my husband is in chronic pain with limited resources. Alternatives must be explored to address this issue.

Delbert

April 18, 2009, 10:57pm (report abuse)

I have been in chronic pain since my first surgury in 2-1980. If anybody could walk in my shoes for one minute after 5 or 19 seconds they would be begging to take them off. This bill needs to seriously pass for the fixed income and any one who can prove they are in chronic pain. Just about the time you mention to a DR. that you are in pain, chronis pain they assume you are seeking drugs.Everybody needs to have the right to be pain free and not looked down upon and judge people who are in need of narcotic medicine. It seems in this area in WV that any DR that is willing to help you gets sent to court by some young DEA official who probably has never worked a real job doing heavy labor. For the love of god please pass this as there are millions who cannot afford the luxury of voting their selves and their counterparts giant pay increases every year. Try living on what I have to live on $563.02 a month. They would go into shock and disbeleif if thatwas their monthly salary.Free RX's pass.

Janet

April 24, 2009, 3:14pm (report abuse)

I agree with the comments made above. Individuals in chronic pain and the physicians and other healthcare providers who are treating them should not live in fear that vital treatments will be cut off due to society's misconceptions about addiction/dependence, etc. And public & the medical community's awareness of the devastation that chronic pain causes should be enhanced. My biggest fear is that we will get caught in the "study it forever" mindset. We have to study it, then move on to action - whatever the studiers determine the appropriate action should be.

Wilma

April 24, 2009, 6:17pm (report abuse)

This country needs to help chronic pain patients. I live in chronic pain and have been for the last 4 years. The doctors are scared to prescribe anything that is effective because of the DEA.

But, they will give you epidural injections and other invasive procedures at the drop of a hat.

We have a generation of Baby-Boomers getting older and entering retirement that are going to need pain care. Please take this bill seriously.

Ashlee

July 28, 2009, 11:46am (report abuse)

I work at a doctors office,in which we provide chronic medical pain management. I see patients who are in pain everyday and the society puts these patients off to be drug seekers or something in that nature. These patients are just like everyone else, except they are in pain, and need something to help the pain. So thats were we come in. We provide chronic medical pain management for those who work.
This bill is a great action that really needs to be taken upon and everyone needs to be real serious about it. There are many people out there in chronic pain and want help, but when they try to get it they are looked at as drug seekers and abusers. Our office has been arrassed many times by the local communtiy who thinks we are just giving everyone pain medication. Which we are not. We are a doctors office in which we like to help people not just make money. Our doctor has been working in this field for nurmerous years and loves to see people without pain.

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