Los Angeles Times

Chronic pain sufferers matter

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Re “How I fell for OxyContin,” Opinion, Feb. 3

I sympathize with Dani Fleischer’s past struggles with OxyContin. But she begins her story by mentioning an “Adderall-fueled” nervous breakdown while she was home with her parents from college.

Fleischer does not tell us why Adderall was being used, but it’s a commonly misused drug to enable sleep-deprived students to wake up and deal with the day ahead of them.

Instead of taking Fleischer to a doctor (like a psychiatri­st) for her nervous breakdown, her mother medicated her with OxyContin, an inappropri­ate drug. Why she even had OxyContin on her bedside table isn’t revealed.

I live with chronic pain. I have HIV-related neuropathy, degenerati­ve spinal stenosis and arthritis in my right hip, knees and ankles. I’m treated by a boardcerti­fied pain management specialist. I’m almost never pain free, but I am in an amount of pain that I can tolerate and still function.

This is true of most chronic-pain patients. We aren’t getting high — we’re getting some relief. Mark Rice Palm Springs

Where are the stories of chronic pain sufferers like myself? I took methadone for 20 years and reduced my dosage on my own volition, until I was thrown off this very useful medicine because of hysteria.

I’m not saying there isn’t an opioid crisis; I’m just saying there are two sides to this story, and it wouldn’t hurt to include some of the positive ways opiates have helped pain sufferers

By the way, an “opiate high” doesn’t always “feel like a shimmering.” Sometimes, in non-addicts, it feels like the burning in your feet has stopped. Charles Ruebsamen Rancho Cucamonga

What, no gateway drug? Now we have another scare tactic from the 1960s debunked, namely that marijuana use results in addiction to other drugs.

File this one along with the claim that the Vietnam War helped our national security and that a woman’s place is in the home. Arthur D. Wahl Port Hueneme

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