The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WILL OPIOID LIMITS HURT CANCER PATIENTS?

- Terry & Joe Graedon

Q: I am afraid that the new restrictio­ns on opioids may leave some people without good options. I don’t have chronic pain myself, but when my mother was dying of lymphoma back in the 1970s, she was getting good relief from opioid painkiller­s.

Then her doctors, in all their wisdom, took the drugs away because they thought she might become addicted. Yes, they deprived a terminally ill cancer patient the pain relief she needed because they thought she might become an addict. I remember her screams of pain to this day.

I still feel outraged about this. I wish I could go back in time and sue those doctors. I hope reason will prevail now, and people with chronic pain will be able to get the pain relief they need to allow them to function day to day.

A: Your story is heartbreak­ing. We hope today’s cancer specialist­s and palliative care profession­als are not withholdin­g narcotics from terminal patients. However, the panic over the opioid epidemic has led many physicians to restrict such drugs for people in chronic pain. Until we have more effective and safer medicines, opioids will continue to be an important tool for those in severe pain.

Q: I have been using Tecnu for years to control poison ivy. It removes the poison ivy oil completely when it’s used after contact with the plant. It also helps dry up the rash if I wasn’t able to wash with it soon enough after contact, though I don’t know why.

Some people use Zanfel for their poison ivy rash, but I have found that it is pricey. It costs about 10 times more per ounce than Tecnu.

A: Zanfel Poison Ivy Wash and Tecnu Outdoor Skin Cleanser help remove the urushiol oil from exposure to poison ivy, oak or sumac. If used promptly after contact, these washes can prevent the itchy rash that normally results.

A barrier cream such as IvyX can be applied before going outside. It should help protect the skin from urushiol and make it easier to wash off.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States