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Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Jacob Sullum :: Townhall.com Columnist
Pain Medication: Keep Chilled
by Jacob Sullum
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At a recent congressional hearing, Joseph Rannazzisi, an official in the Drug Enforcement Administration's Office of Diversion Control, proclaimed his agency's "firm commitment to the balanced policy of promoting pain relief and preventing the abuse of pain medications." The DEA, he said, wants to "help physicians meet the challenge of ensuring that people who medically need drugs get them, and that those who are diverting them don't."

This "balanced policy" is a "challenge" because pain cannot be verified objectively. The only sure way of "preventing the abuse of pain medications" is to stop treating patients with them, which would leave millions of people in agony. The alternative, trusting patients when they say they're in pain, means taking a chance that some of them are faking or exaggerating, seeking narcotics to get high or to sell on the black market.

Fortunately, the DEA is there to help by arresting doctors who trust their patients too much. The day after Rannazzisi testified before a subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee, one such doctor, William Hurwitz of McLean, Va., was sentenced to five years in federal prison.

That punishment was much lighter than the 25-year sentence Hurwitz had received after his first "drug trafficking" trial, but it was still pretty severe for someone who had not actually engaged in drug trafficking. Hurwitz's crime was prescribing painkillers for patients who turned out to be addicts or drug dealers.

In his first trial, the Justice Department argued that it did not matter whether Hurwitz had prescribed those pills in good faith, and U.S. District Judge Leonard Wexler instructed the jury accordingly. A federal appeals court disagreed and ordered a second trial.

In addition to new jury instructions, Hurwitz benefited from a more open-minded judge this time around. Although U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema said she was initially inclined to agree with the prosecution that the doses of narcotics Hurwitz had been prescribing were "absolutely crazy," the defense persuaded her that "an increasing body of respectable medical literature and expertise supports those types of high-dosage opioid medications" for patients suffering from severe chronic pain.

Before the case went to the jury, Brinkema dismissed three charges that carried 20-year mandatory minimum sentences, finding that the prosecution had not provided enough evidence to show that Hurwitz's prescriptions had resulted in the death of one patient and the severe injury of two others. The jury convicted him on 16 counts, compared to 50 in the original trial. Continued...

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About The Author
Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine and a contributing columnist on Townhall.com.
 
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Subject: War on Chronic pain
I have chronic degenerative dick disease,back problems,enough said.I want to play with my grand kids, work in the yard ,
Understanding is what you who condone treatment of cp that you lack. I pray you dont have to feel this 24/7 and not get the treatment needed.
There are good doctors, let them do their job ,let them treat those who need it without feeling like there's a gun to their head. And yes I feel for those who lost a loved one for over use,or miss use ect.My heart goes out to you.Soes that make it right for who ever to make others pay for it ,having to live their life in pain.I think not. Heres to all the vets and those who need a voice to be heard.

continued: war on cp
Theres cancer patients that are in pain ,vets in pain, all walks of life . Baby's suffering ,no one thinks they dont feel pain.
And the good doctors are afraid to give you what you need to fuction. I know there are alot worse off then I, but like i was told,pain is pain.Dotors can learn alot from their patients,just because they havent treated something,doesn't mean it cant be true. I hve had 2 neck surgery's,second due to ar rearended, whiplash, has been worse every since.
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