Pain patients beg FDA for more options, easier access to opioids.
SILVER SPRING, Md. One pain patient lay on the floor. Another leaned against the wall, easing her back. A third paced to and fro.
At this weeks Food and Drug Administration hearing on chronic pain, accommodations were at the forefront.
And the agency says it wants to be accommodating in other ways as it tackles the opioid crisis. Thus, a meeting was called simply to listen to peoples stories about their pain and how they may, or may not, handle it.
It was a room full of some very unhappy people.
Suicide is always an option for us, said Mariann Farrell of Pittsburgh, who says she has multiple conditions, including fibromyalgia and the post-herpetic pain that can linger after shingles. Farrell was one of several dozen people who traveled to the FDAs headquarters outside Washington to ask the agency to ease restrictions that they say has made it harder for them to get opioids.
Sandra Flores, a former emergency room nurse from Tucson, Arizona, roused rounds of applause as she told of her repeated efforts to get opioid prescriptions for her pain. Flores said she was diagnosed with adhesive arachnoiditis, an inflammation of the membranes protecting the brain, spine and nerve endings.
I am seeing the true face of medicine, Flores said. Now they are throwing me in the trash.
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