The Survey Says…the CDC Opioid Guideline Needs to Be Honestly Assessed

By Lynn Webster, M.D. / March 18, 2017 /

One-Year Anniversary of the CDC Opioid Prescribing Guideline On the one-year anniversary of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) opioid prescribing guideline, an online survey of patients, doctors, and healthcare providers conducted by Pain News Network and the International Pain Foundation (iPain) found that the guideline has “harmed pain patients, reduced access to…

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An Epiphany

By Lynn Webster, M.D. / March 11, 2017 /

  Myra Christopher is the PAINS Director and someone I’m proud to call a friend. She has given me permission to re-post her blog, An Epiphany, here. It was first published at PainsProject.org.  This morning I was a guest on Central Standard, a program which airs on the local Kansas City NPR station.  The program’s focus…

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The United State of Grief

By Lynn Webster, M.D. / March 4, 2017 /

Steven D. Passik, Ph.D., is a Pennsylvania-based pain psychologist. I’m proud to call him a friend. He is a giant in the field of pain medicine, but that doesn’t make his family and friends immune to suffering from terminal illness. Steve lost his mother on September 14, 2016. Her story, The Painful Later Years of…

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Do Patients Need Opioids Following Dental Procedures?

By Lynn Webster, M.D. / February 25, 2017 /

According to Fox News, “The American Dental Association recently reported dentistry is responsible for prescribing 12 percent of all instant-release opioids.” The article quotes Dr. Mojgam Fajiram, DDS, of Sutton Advanced Cosmetic Dentistry, who claims the dental industry gives out opioid prescriptions much too quickly “just to treat chronic pain.” Treating Pain from Dental Procedures…

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As CDC Guidelines Approach One-Year Anniversary, Questions Loom

By Lynn Webster, M.D. / February 18, 2017 /

“Next month will mark the one year anniversary of opioid guidelines released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention – guidelines that discourage primary care physicians from prescribing opioids for chronic non-cancer pain,” writes Pat Anson in the February 15, 2017 edition the Pain News Network newsletter. My Expectations for CDC Opioid Guidelines One…

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Constipation Isn’t a Fitting Punishment for People With Pain

By Lynn Webster, M.D. / February 11, 2017 /

Deb was in a near-fatal car accident. Her arms, legs, and pelvis were severely injured and would require multiple surgeries. She relied on opioids to ease the pain. Along with her other day-to-day medical challenges and constant setbacks, she suffered from constipation which her doctor attributed to her use of painkillers. But he offered no…

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Hurting Pain Patients Is Not the Way to Solve the Opioid Crisis

By Lynn Webster, M.D. / February 4, 2017 /

  “The insurance industry appears to have played a major role in the development of a new strategy by the federal government to combat the abuse of opioid pain medication,” writes Pat Anson, editor of Pain News Network. This Orwellian act by powerful insurance companies in collaboration with the US Department of Health and Human…

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Can You Feel My Pain?

By Lynn Webster, M.D. / January 28, 2017 /

  Are patients qualified to determine whether or not opioids help in treating their pain? Pain Medicine Advance Access published a study that was conducted at the Back and Pain Center, University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor, MI. The Back and Pain Center is an outpatient tertiary care pain clinic where patients are evaluated for…

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Creating Positive Change for Babies, One Word at a Time

By Lynn Webster, M.D. / January 20, 2017 /

I’ve been critical of the media’s language in describing aspects of the opioid crisis. To solve the opioid crisis, we have to understand it and use terms that are factual but without spin. I believe the media could be a force in motivating people — the public as well as lawmakers — to take constructive…

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What Happens When Pain Changes a Cop’s Perspective?

By Lynn Webster, M.D. / January 13, 2017 /

  A cop who arrested addicts is now experiencing life as a pain patient and has a much different perspective.  You can read Nick Selby’s first-person account of “what happens when pain meets bad health policy and bad drug laws” in the Washington Post. He tells his story well, and it’s one that’s familiar to…

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