Managing Patients on Opioids and When to Taper Off | DEA Licensee SUD Training Course

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  • Опубликовано: 11 дек 2024

Комментарии • 9

  • @Golgibaby
    @Golgibaby Год назад +2

    Candid vivid and real examples were effective in translating scenarios that the salt of the Earth healthcare prescriber would not encounter. Bless your heart. Awesome lecture/presentation.

  • @geraldosborn6365
    @geraldosborn6365 Год назад +1

    Very Practical appreciate the tips and the clarity. thanks!

  • @sarak6860
    @sarak6860 10 месяцев назад +2

    I am a chronic pain patient. A certain dose lasts a lot longer than three days for effects on pain. It takes months and months to begin losing its effectiveness, and even then it's slow. I sometimes skip doses to help keep the tolerance down.

    • @Joseph-f9m7s
      @Joseph-f9m7s 4 месяца назад +2

      I never built up tolerance or had to increase dosage and never got addicted. I actually decreased dose as my back got better esch time I injured it. But now I cannot get opioid meds at all. At 64 my recent MRI now shows 4 annular disc fiber tears, 3 herniated disc's with 2 having bi lateral nerve root impingement. Pain doc will gladly jab a needle in me or surgery but won't give me any damn pain meds. The system is totally broken.

  • @Aa-ji2yf
    @Aa-ji2yf Год назад +1

    Excellent presenter and presentation.

  • @ValouQc
    @ValouQc 8 дней назад

    These tablets aren’t fentanyl, you wish they were. N-desethyl etonitazene and protonitazepyne and other formulas aren’t detected in autopsies and narcan doesn’t work.