I have to wonder, though, if you've maintained the same dosage of opiates for the last 13 years, should you maybe not be compared to addicts all the time?
Admittedly, it's really complicated in my wife's case. Before Fentanyl, she actually WAS addicted to Fioricet. It was an overdose of that drug (caused in part by the cognitively deleterious effects of other drugs that her then-doctor put her on, like Topamax and Neurontin) that almost killed her. And she spent some time off and on Ativan (I mentioned in another thread) that I would say were periods of addiction.
Anyway, shortly after i bit his face off, my friend posted an update saying that he didn't actually mean that opiods should be taken off the table as a pain management drug, he just chose his words poorly. (Given that his wife is a doctor, he really should have known better).
Admittedly, it's really complicated in my wife's case. Before Fentanyl, she actually WAS addicted to Fioricet. It was an overdose of that drug (caused in part by the cognitively deleterious effects of other drugs that her then-doctor put her on, like Topamax and Neurontin) that almost killed her. And she spent some time off and on Ativan (I mentioned in another thread) that I would say were periods of addiction.
Anyway, shortly after i bit his face off, my friend posted an update saying that he didn't actually mean that opiods should be taken off the table as a pain management drug, he just chose his words poorly. (Given that his wife is a doctor, he really should have known better).