Saturday, March 23, 2019

Don't Demonize Opioids

Our preoccupation with opioid misuse could become the tail wagging the dogBob Roehr biomedical journalist. Washington, DC, USABMJ 2017;359:j4727

It is rare that we hear from those who use prescription opioids on a chronic basis. Their voices are important counterpoints to the loud, self-righteous jeremiads of physicians, politicians and law enforcement professionals.
Roehr tells us:
  • Demonising prescription opioids can come to no good end.
  • I use an opioid drug, hydrocodone, every six hours, and have done so for about a decade.
  • The surge in opioid related deaths in the US is troubling. But it is important to remember that it is fueled by street drugs and by fentanyl and its analogues, either alone or laced into a variety of illicit drugs.
  • People who have lost access to prescription opioids have turned to cheaper, more accessible, and more dangerous, potent black market options, according to experts, and the death toll has soared.
Full BMJ article: Download Roehr Don't Demonize Opioids

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Notes on Morphine by FW Peabody (1927)

Notes on Morphine by F.W. Peabody

Notes on the Effects of Morphine 
For full essay Download Notes on the Effects of Morphine

By Francis W. PeabodyFrom The Caring PhysicianThe Life of Dr. Francis W. PeabodyBy Oglesby Paul
The following unpublished essay is “[a]n example of how FWP, the scientist/physician, used his terminal illness to make clinical observations on himself with his description of his reactions to injections of morphine. This document was completed in October, 1927, five days before his death, and is an unique and vivid record of one patient’s response to the powerful narcotic.” This is an extraordinary essay. Why it was never published is a great mystery; but may lie in the fact that morphine and its derivatives are a much-maligned drugs.. Herein, we see how it allowed FWP to be lucid and function masterfully until the end.

Download Notes on the Effects of Morphine

Friday, March 8, 2019

My Three Livers


My Three Livers: how transplants gave me my life back

Photo from Ms. Walker's Twitter page
Patient Commentary by Erin Walker patient insight and involvement lead UCL Partners, London, UK.  Ms. Walker, now aged 36 has survived > 30 years post her first liver transplant. (BMJ, 3 March, 2019)

By the time Erin Walker turned 20 she was on her third liver, after a second transplant. Seventeen years on she reflects how organ donation has enabled her to experience many of life’s rites of passage.

The Full Article is well-worth reading.

Thursday, March 7, 2019

A Mentor's Legacy


Through the Undulations of a Long Career — A Mentor’s Legacy is a moving tribute to her teacher by Ranjana Srivastava, a humanistic oncologist from Melbourne, Australia. 

I heard Ranjana speak a few years ago at a conference and was impressed. Since then, I've read a number of her moving essays in the NEJM. A friend from Australia got me a copy of her book, Dying for a Chat (not available in the U.S.).  This short 75 page volume starts by describing the case of a 90-year-old woman whose care went terribly wrong in a sophisticated Australian medical center. The experience led her to reflect upon medicine, especially about doctor-patient communication. The book is a gem, available only in Australia.

Through the Undulations of a Long Career — A Mentor’s Legacy, in the March 7, 2019 NEJM, will resonate with medical students, trainees, and practitioners at all stages of our careers.  The author visits a retired physician who had mentored her as a student and trainee.  Students loved him because he wasn’t just erudite but also humane. His concern for and interest in the whole person were plain to see.”

Her declining mentor “was someone who was less interested in pointing out my shortcomings and fixing my defects than in helping me find my way. When I slowed down, he persevered. When I found my feet, he stepped into the background. As a result, I am a better person and a more contented physician.”

For those who don’t have access to the NEJM, I have placed a PDF online.

Bertold Brecht: A Worker’s Speech to a Doctor

We know what makes us ill. When we’re ill word says You’re the one to make us well For ten years, so we hear You learned how to heal in ...