Thursday, September 24, 2009

Reason TV Posts New Video on Drug War


WHEN COPS PLAY DOCTOR

How the Drug War Punishes Pain Patients

Reason tv
September 22, 2009

Watch video (5:34) - http://reason. tv/embed/ video.php? id=893

The steady stream of celebrity stories about prescription drug abuse
makes Americans keenly aware of the dangers of overdosing on medications
like OxyContin and Vicodin. And from President Obama's Drug Czar to
California Attorney General Jerry Brown, politicians are calling for
greater power to monitor doctor-patient relationships in order to fight
the "epidemic" of prescription drug overdosing.

But maybe the real epidemic is underdosing. Countless Americans suffer
with severe chronic pain because doctors are afraid to treat them
properly.

Michael Jackson's death unleashed a flurry of media stories about all
aspects of the pop star's life, including his alleged prescription drug
abuse. On the same day countless millions watched Jackson's star-studded
memorial service, reason.tv interviewed another musician.

Seán Clarke-Redmond, a man who enjoyed an active life before the
neurodegenerative disease ALS, often referred to as Lou Gerig's disease,
rendered him nearly immobile—he can no longer even play the piano.

The disease also left him in almost constant pain. Redmond is prescribed
some medication, but not nearly enough to keep his pain under control.
Dr. Frank Fisher says Redmond's case is an appallingly common one.

"Chronic pain in America is an enormously under treated disease," says
Fisher, a Harvard-trained physician. "It's a public health disaster."

Pain specialists like Fisher and patients' groups like the Pain Relief
Network battle law enforcement officials who are forever on the lookout
for "pill mills" and patients who misuse pain medicine. Fisher notes
that the same medications so often associated with celebrity addiction
are the same medications that combat pain most effectively.

Fisher has treated his patients with high doses of opioids-that is,
until a swat team raided his clinic and threw him behind bars.

"They were trying to give me 256 years to life," says Fisher who argues
that fear of prosecution often prevents doctors from treating chronic
pain patients effectively.

What allows doctors' medical decisions to be overruled by police?

"What we're dealing with is a mass insanity," says Fisher. "We call it
the war on drugs."

"When Cops Play Doctor" is written and produced by Ted Balaker and
hosted by Nick Gillespie. Director of Photography is Alex Manning,
Associate Producers are Hawk Jensen and Paul Detrick.

http://reason. tv/video/ show/when- cops-play- doctor

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