“I came back to the room, and my
Vicodin was gone. The maid threw it out
when she cleaned.”
“And how many pills were in the
bottle?”
“Almost two hundred. I’ve had four
back operations.”
“That’s a lot of Vicodin.”
“Check me out. I’ll show you the
scars. I need your help.”
Plenty of drug abusers lead
productive lives although it depends on the drug. You can’t do this for long
with speed. Amphetamines and cocaine poison tissues, the brain most of all.
Alcohol is also a toxin; alcoholics wreck their health. This doesn’t seem true
for narcotics (Vicodin, Percodan, Oxycontin, heroin, etc). One can consume high
doses for a lifetime with no noticeable harm except chronic constipation.
Street addicts die from overdoses, contaminated drugs, disease, and violence.
In countries that provide clean narcotics to addicts, they have a normal life
expectancy.
Narcotics are probably OK for
selected patients with chronic pain and a competent doctor. But there’s no
denying that too many people are taking more narcotics than they need. Good
doctors object because there are better ways of treating chronic pain.
Moralists object on the grounds that doctors should make patients feel normal
but never better than normal.
“As a hotel doctor, I encounter this
problem now and then...”
“I swear I’m not a junkie, Doctor
Oppenheim. I have chronic spinal pain, and I’m under a doctor’s care.”
“I’m glad to hear that, because I’ll
have to speak to him.”
“He’s in New York. It’s midnight in
New York.”
“I know. So I’m going to phone ten Naproxyn
to the Walgreen’s at Santa Monica and Lincoln. Tell your doctor to call me
tomorrow.”
“The damn hotel threw out two hundred
pills! They said you’d replace them!”
“I don’t work for the hotel. It
sounds like the Naproxyn is unacceptable to you. So…”
“I’ll take the ten.”
This would satisfy him temporarily, but the odds
were one hundred percent that his doctor wouldn’t call, but he would. There was
a small chance he’d be in another hotel and pester another doctor. There was a
large chance he’d behave in a sufficiently obnoxious manner that the staff
would take any complaint about me with a grain of salt.