Taking opioids for chronic pain means being treated like a criminal and constantly being told that you're exaggerating your pain.

What it’s really like taking opioids for chronic pain

Currently, taking opioids for chronic pain means you’re a pariah, which is why there aren’t enough stories to be more stories out there about what it is actually like to have an opioid prescription for chronic pain.

Taking opioids for chronic pain means you're a pariah that is at best accused of exaggerating pain, and at worse accused of being a criminal with an addiction. Click To Tweet

Why I take opioids for chronic pain

You can read my story here for some background context of my illness, but basically, I went a long time searching for a diagnosis all while my health was getting worse and worse. Ironically I can base my difficulty in getting a diagnosis and eventual descent into long-term chronic pain on the CDC Lyme Disease guidelines. Doctors ignored me or brushed me off and told me I was depressed and as a result by the time I was diagnosed I was almost bedridden and my life had come to a complete standstill. I spent the next year after my diagnosis undergoing treatment for Lyme Disease with no pain medication of any kind. I was in agony and could barely function, but I was determined that I would not take pain medication. I had two young kids and I thought pain medication would make it too difficult to take care of them.

Things eventually came to a head because I was not sleeping and not functioning in any mental or physical capacity. I went to my doctor who at this point I had been seeing for more than a year. I confessed that I couldn’t do it anymore and I just needed to be able to sleep. I’d already tried sleeping pills and they didn’t work because my pain levels were too high. I tried yoga, meditation, massage, vitamins, alternative medicine, you name it. My doctor looked at my chart and told me that I had been her patient for some time and I hadn’t asked for anything before so she felt completely comfortable prescribing me one Hydrocodone per day.  At that time Hydrocodone was considered a schedule III drug, meaning I wasn’t treated like a criminal for taking it and I only had to go see my doctor every three months.  As soon as I started taking it I saw a huge reduction in my pain level and was able to start getting more sleep. I gradually improved as I stayed on the medicine. I was able to play more with my children, I started going out more with friends, I spent quality time with my spouse, started exercising, I cleaned my house more, and started writing on my blog frequently. Hydrocodone didn’t take the pain away, but it lessened it enough for me to live somewhat of a life.

People in pain don't take opioids to get high, they take them to function well enough to life their life

How the opioid epidemic hurts people with chronic pain

I started taking Hydrocodone in 2014. A few months later the DEA published its new rules placing a more restrictive classification on Hydrocodone products. They moved it to a schedule II drug alongside other pain medications like OxyContin, Morphine, and Percocet. This was when I started being treated like a criminal. I was taking the same medicine in the same dosage that I had been from the beginning, but all of a sudden I had to:

  • Go to the doctor every single month, which tripled the money spent on doctor copays
  • Have a written prescription (nothing called into the pharmacy)
  • Face harassment by the pharmacist every time I filled the prescription
  • Pay for regular, and ridiculous expensive drug tests.  The drug test costs 3000 dollars, only half of which my insurance covers because it is considered out of network (I can’t pick the lab they send it to, that’s considered drug addict behavior).
Every day it gets harder and harder to be a chronic pain patient. The harassment from policymakers is getting worse and worse and the support for people in pain has only gone down. Click To Tweet

Every day it gets harder and harder to be a chronic pain patient. The harassment from policymakers like the CDC is getting worse and worse and the support for people in pain has only gone down, not up. I now have a few choices. I could stop taking pain medication,  of which by the way I am taking in the same dosage that I started with two years ago (so maybe I’m not an addict?) However, this would most likely mean I would go back to being bedridden. I am currently working part-time, I’m active in my children’s lives, I volunteer in my community, I can go out with my friends, I exercise, and I blog on a regular basis. If I stopped taking pain medication all of this would most likely be gone. So my other choice is to submit to harassment and pay a ridiculous amount of money just so I can be allowed to function. I have to live in fear knowing that the CDC or the DEA or my doctor could take away my ability to function at any time they feel like it and there’s nothing I could do about it.

These “guidelines” affect people in pain. They affect sick people who don’t have any idea how to sell their drugs on the black market. They affect sick people who are in pain in the first place because of multiple doctors’ negligence and are now being punished for that negligence by being told that it’s all their fault. They affect sick people who are now being told they just need to take Ibuprofen and do physical therapy (out of their own pocket, since insurance won’t pay for it) and get over it.

Opioid alternatives often aren’t an option for chronic pain

Unfortunately for people in pain insurance coverage for pain management is limited and sometimes nonexistent. While every person in pain would most likely benefit from a weekly massage or visit to the chiropractor, it’s not financially feasible for the majority of patients. Additionally, there really are few prescription drugs that work for pain that are not classed as opioids.

It would be nice if we could wish the pain away, but millions of Americans currently live with it. It would also be if we took addiction seriously and actually treated it instead of criminalizing it, but the way to do that is not to take away opioids for chronic pain.

*UPDATE: I lost access to opioids a few months after writing this article which makes my points even more important.

 


 

Taking opioids for chronic pain means being treated like a criminal and constantly being told that you're exaggerating your pain.

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40 thoughts on “What it’s really like taking opioids for chronic pain

  1. Goodness I had no clue it was this bad for a one pill a day need. Clearly CDC & DEA people drafting this BS have not had chronic pain. It’s going to push more people to illegal drugs.

    1. That’s the ironic part. If people can’t get their pain treated by prescription medicine then they might be forced to turn to drugs. If medical marijuana was legal in my stat I would certainly give that a try, but since it’s not pain killers are my option of last resort.

    2. We are all living in a different world than those without chronic pain. I was diagnosed with FMS and CFS in 2000. That was after eight years of being told no reason could be found for my pain and the other symptoms that come with long bouts of chronic pain. I was told it was depression causing my pain but being the soul who lives in this skin, I knew the pain came first and the depression began a couple years later. I finally have a doctor who is treating me with two ten mg oxycodone, four mg of clonazapam, as well as thirty mg of Paxil and Abilify mg?.
      This is daily and most days I am functional. I do get the surprise pee tests and because I supplement my meds with a mix of CBD and THC oils, I’ve been told that if I test positive for this again she will have to stop treating me. I live in Kansas, which has not legalized medical marijuana and a sister in Colorado brings me my meds on the sly. OK, illegally. And yes I feel like a drug addict criminal. I too have many times thought through suicide as the way out but, I have two cats and two dogs who would all probably put down if I left them. Some days the are my only reason to get up and go on. I’ve thought if I did it by taking them to bed with me and turning on the gas overnight, but became concerned if my house blew up people around it may get hurt, so as of now I’m just living one day at a time and praying for my mystery illness to just leave my body the way it came in. Unexplained and uninvited. I would like for everyone who happens to read this to join me (if you believe in a higher power), in praying, affirming the healing of chronic pain in all who suffer with it. Thank you and my empathy and hope for a pain free life are for you as well.

      1. I feel really bad for you but suicide is not the answer . Keep asking god for strength help and answers . If you have to order your meds from over seas.
        It is shameful and downright disrespectfull fot people like us to not only live in paid but eveything else we have to suffer with .

      2. I do beleve in GOD and the power of prayer and y u will be in mine. I have osteo-arthrits , fms chr fatigue etc etc also.

    3. I wish some of these lawmakers could experience my pain for just one day. Maybe then they would empathize. Yesterday, even with meds, my pain was so bad I cried and then cried some more, almost wishing my life would end and then…the pain would stop. I gave birth to four children and this pain is worse than labor. At least labor ends. This doesn’t. My spine is shaped like the letter Z. Try cooking, working or doing laundry with unrelenting pain! This is the card I drew but unless people know it and understand it, they have no idea how we suffer. Please, don’t punish the innocents.

  2. I sincerely wonder how many of the drug overdose deaths they cite are from people with chronic pain who are only seeking relief of their pain through intentional or unintentional overdosing.
    I know that some days the pain can be bad enough to make that decision a reality. I am sure these people are counted in the over dose deaths as I read that they include suicides. Yes I also believe that making life more and more difficult for chronic pain suffers to get medication is only going to drive up the illegal drug deaths more as the sufferers will have no option but seek illegal avenues to alleviate their pain. Telling a person who has been on opioid pain medication that they need to take an aspirin and call them in the morning is a bullshit response and more irresponsible than the over prescribers. Why are chronic pain sufferers put into a separate group and treated like some sort of pariah. We are not all drug seekers, addicts (in a way we are addicts, addicted to trying to be pain free) or resellers. We are a group of people who try to live our lives the best we can given the shitty card we have been dealt. We didn’t ask for this and don’t deserve to be treated with disrepect or derision.

    1. I have wondered the same. It’s ironic that taking away people’s way to minimize pain may actually increase suicides, but no one seems to think this through.

  3. My doctors in both Washington and California write me 3 scrips at a time carefully dating them 30 days apart. There are lines for both date written and date to be filled. It’s legal in both states though I don’t know about Texas. Talk to your doctor about it. At least you’d only have to him/her every 3 months. I take Oxymorphone ER at a low dose 3/day & have for the 7 years since I’ve been diagnosed. It’s starting not to be enough but I’m afraid to ask for more. Sigh. Good luck to you. Feel free to email me if you have questions or something.

    Mary Kay
    marykay.kare@gmail.com

    1. Do your doctors know that you get a prescription from another doctor. I just asked because if my doctor knew I was getting a prescription from another doctor she would fire me from her practice in the blink of an eyelash. Because that’s considered drug-seeking Behavior.

      1. I’m sorry – I was really unclear about that. I was living in Seattle when I first started taking opioids & have sinc moved to CA. So the the scrips were serial rather than concurrent.
        MKK

  4. Thank you for this article. I am hearing these same sentiments from EVERYONE that suffers with chronic pain since the new cdc guidelines. I was diagnosed with Fibro 16 years ago at age 20 but started having symptoms at age 14. I have several other chronic illnesses that leave me with no other medication options besides opioids (after taking NSAIDS for almost two decades my body said no more!). I hate having to rely on these medications just to function and take care of my kids. But I hate even more the stigma attached to it and the assumption that I must be an addict!

    I worked for years with substance abuse as a social worker but society doesn’t understand the difference between dependence and addiction. But they have no problem with alcohol! I finally found a medication regiment that was working fairly well for me, including the butrans patch, until one day five months ago when my GP told me – oops we can’t prescribe your pain meds anymore because of the DEA so good luck! And here’s a referral to an addiction clinic. I had a panic attack in the parking lot and called my husband sobbing. I went to my old rheumatologist who totally understood and trusted me but also couldn’t take me on because he can’t see me every month to hand write a script! So he referred me to a pain specialist and now it *looks* like I will get the meds I need…but I have to go in every four weeks like clockwork, submit to drug testing, and live in CONSTANT fear that one day they will just say no.

    The ironic thing is that they tell you the most important thing is to cut out stress from your life to ease pain – and I am more stressed than I’ve ever been! I feel victimized and marginalized by the government and society – something I’ve been lucky enough to not have experienced before. I don’t tell ANYONE that I take opioids for fear that they won’t trust me with their kids (I volunteer a lot). I wish we had a powerful chronic pain patient lobby that could educate these cruel and ignorant politicians. It also makes me “ragey” as you put it. But what can we do?

    1. I couldn’t agree more with everything you are saying here. I am terminally ill and have been for years. I also have been on chronic pain medications. I also the medical records to hack up my issue’s but it is difficult to find a Dr that’s not scarred of being fined or lossing their licence. They also say lower your stress levels buts that’s very difficult to do when you go month to month wondering what will happen this time when I see the Dr. Thank you for your input on this subject it’s nice to know I’m not alone in this matter.

  5. Thank you so much for your article. I completely understand the humiliation of being made to feel like a criminal or being made to feel weak for needing pain medication. I have suffered with chronic pelvic floor muscle pain for over 4 years. I have tried everything, Botox injections (not covered by my insurance, by the way,) nerve blocks, physical therapy, yoga, meditation, and a multitude of other treatments. I can only function with Percocet. I have taken 7.5 mg of Percocet a day for the past 3 years. I take 2.5 mg three times a day. I have only taken more for a couple of days after procedures that made my pain worse. Otherwise, I have been on the same dose the whole time. Every time I take that 2.5 mg, all those feelings of guilt and shame swarm through my head. I dread having to go to my doctor every month to get my prescription refilled. I feel like I’m a weak person, I feel like I’m doing something illegal. It’s just an awful feeling. Because I have to get a physical written prescription, not one that can be called into my pharmacy, I have to make sure to plan any trips (the very few I take, like helping my kids move into college) around the time I need to pick up my prescription. I understand that there’s an opioid addiction epidemic in the country, but some of us can’t live a productive life, with a semblance of normalcy and a bit of joy and happiness without opioids. We, chronic pain sufferers are being thrown under the bus. We are not weak, we are not criminals, we are just in pain every hour of every day.

  6. This is how dark and corrupt the Congress really is. They do not know any better and most of the people who do work for Congress have not used the brain for thinking in years and this is all they could come up with. I am fed up with it all!!! I have been on pain meds for my fibro, Hashimoto’s, fibro, degenerative disc disease, arthritis of the spine, stenosis, spondylosis etc and the list goes on…. for 20 yrs. tried surgery, injections, physical therapy, over the counter medications….now with a failed back surgery, I now have a spinal stimulator implant, with the pain so bad in my hips now, I can hardly even get up! and that is with Oxycontin and Hydrocodone….I am undertreated, dare I say anything about that though….I’m in NC, I wonder if medical marijuana is legal here…

  7. I am diagnosed with Degen. Disc disease, fibro, and I am a MRSA carrier. Because of the new guidelines on the pain meds, my doctor will not authorize anything. I was told to use OTC. Like I haven’t done that already. My pain has made it to where a shower and 1 to 2 chores a day. If I can do that. Medical marijuana is legal in my state; however, I get drug tested because of the new guidelines because I am prescribed Xanex. They reclassified it. I am homebound and barely functionable. I have never been an addict of anything. I have only used pain medications after surgeries or a serious injury. I cannot sleep, shower, dress myself because of the pain. Insurance dictates what I can and cannot do. PT? Is absolutely too expensive for my husband to work more overtime for. It is a horrible state of affairs when my spouce has to work overtime to the point of his exhaustion to make up for my lack of income. And to pay for me to see doctors who do not do anything but say exercise and hang in there.

  8. Thank you – great article. I heard about Lyme disease 30 years ago. A singer by the name of Darlene Neptune came to our church singing and shared her testimony of contracting Lyme disease. She lives in pain and seclusion for a decade, completely disabled, until one doctor finally listened and diagnosed her. I am so sorry this happened to you. Also what can I do to shed light on this crisis too? My mom has metastatic breast cancer and lived on her own until she started losing function in both her arms. I still remember the struggle of having to drive the Denver traffic to get her script for pain from her oncologist and then to stand in ridiculous lines at the pharmacy every month. An unneeded burden on her and her care takers. Again thank you for the article.

  9. I was in a tractor accident, 7 days after graduating high school. Broken pelvis, back, hips, etc. lots of nerve and stuctural damage. At 25 I started goin to a chiropractor, looked like a question mark.
    At At 50 started to have bone pain from arthritis in back. I’m 62, now have 8 vertabre fused, hips and pelvis continually hurt, with arthritis and nerve pain. I’ve had a open X-ray for 5mg norco for last 10 years, now for every 7 days worth I have to have insurance approval, takes a week for approval. Chronic back pain is diagnosis.
    Our politicians need a good dose of chronic pain for a week, let them find how pain is all you think about, 24 hours a day.

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