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I don’t stack narcotics in my office. Never have, never will.
Honestly, in this day and age, I don’t understand why anyone would.
I get the occasional patient with a bad migraine who wants to come in for “a shot.” Sorry, I don’t carry that. I suppose I could carry Ketorolac, but I try to run a simple, nonurgent practice. If you have an urgent situation, go to an emergency department or urgent care.
The paperwork and regulations surrounding narcotics only seem to get bigger each year, and I just don’t want to deal with them. Besides, Arlan Cohn, MD, once wrote that narcotics in the office “tempt the burglar latent in the junkie; they tempt the junkie latent in the doctor.”
I couldn’t agree more. It’s better to avoid the problem altogether.
In 1998, on my very first day of work as an attending, the group I’d signed with put me in a satellite office normally used by their headache specialist. While familiarizing myself with what was where, I discovered a bottle of injectable meperidine. It wasn’t locked up, just sitting next to the zolmitriptan (Zomig) samples in an unsecured cabinet. I picked it up in shock to make sure I’d read the label correctly. I put it back down then (somewhat paranoid) picked it back up, wiped my fingerprints off, and put it down in the exact same spot it had been. Although it was obviously a serious infraction, I didn’t want to jeopardize my standing as a new hire. So, I just ignored it. But, I sure worried about what would happen if a DEA inspector showed up.
So, today, I just don’t deal with it. No controlled substances, less paperwork, fewer worries. Simplicity is bliss, and modern medicine has enough worries as it is.
This still gets me the occasional complaint of, “Well, my other neurologist did!” but, frankly, I don’t care. They can run their practice how they want, and I’ll run mine.
In a world of regulations, daily press stories on “pill mills” overusing narcotics, and my quarterly prescription tracking reports from the state board, I want to keep my involvement in them as minimal as possible. I may prescribe them, but I don’t want the potential nightmares of having them on site.
Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.
I don’t stack narcotics in my office. Never have, never will.
Honestly, in this day and age, I don’t understand why anyone would.
I get the occasional patient with a bad migraine who wants to come in for “a shot.” Sorry, I don’t carry that. I suppose I could carry Ketorolac, but I try to run a simple, nonurgent practice. If you have an urgent situation, go to an emergency department or urgent care.
The paperwork and regulations surrounding narcotics only seem to get bigger each year, and I just don’t want to deal with them. Besides, Arlan Cohn, MD, once wrote that narcotics in the office “tempt the burglar latent in the junkie; they tempt the junkie latent in the doctor.”
I couldn’t agree more. It’s better to avoid the problem altogether.
In 1998, on my very first day of work as an attending, the group I’d signed with put me in a satellite office normally used by their headache specialist. While familiarizing myself with what was where, I discovered a bottle of injectable meperidine. It wasn’t locked up, just sitting next to the zolmitriptan (Zomig) samples in an unsecured cabinet. I picked it up in shock to make sure I’d read the label correctly. I put it back down then (somewhat paranoid) picked it back up, wiped my fingerprints off, and put it down in the exact same spot it had been. Although it was obviously a serious infraction, I didn’t want to jeopardize my standing as a new hire. So, I just ignored it. But, I sure worried about what would happen if a DEA inspector showed up.
So, today, I just don’t deal with it. No controlled substances, less paperwork, fewer worries. Simplicity is bliss, and modern medicine has enough worries as it is.
This still gets me the occasional complaint of, “Well, my other neurologist did!” but, frankly, I don’t care. They can run their practice how they want, and I’ll run mine.
In a world of regulations, daily press stories on “pill mills” overusing narcotics, and my quarterly prescription tracking reports from the state board, I want to keep my involvement in them as minimal as possible. I may prescribe them, but I don’t want the potential nightmares of having them on site.
Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.
I don’t stack narcotics in my office. Never have, never will.
Honestly, in this day and age, I don’t understand why anyone would.
I get the occasional patient with a bad migraine who wants to come in for “a shot.” Sorry, I don’t carry that. I suppose I could carry Ketorolac, but I try to run a simple, nonurgent practice. If you have an urgent situation, go to an emergency department or urgent care.
The paperwork and regulations surrounding narcotics only seem to get bigger each year, and I just don’t want to deal with them. Besides, Arlan Cohn, MD, once wrote that narcotics in the office “tempt the burglar latent in the junkie; they tempt the junkie latent in the doctor.”
I couldn’t agree more. It’s better to avoid the problem altogether.
In 1998, on my very first day of work as an attending, the group I’d signed with put me in a satellite office normally used by their headache specialist. While familiarizing myself with what was where, I discovered a bottle of injectable meperidine. It wasn’t locked up, just sitting next to the zolmitriptan (Zomig) samples in an unsecured cabinet. I picked it up in shock to make sure I’d read the label correctly. I put it back down then (somewhat paranoid) picked it back up, wiped my fingerprints off, and put it down in the exact same spot it had been. Although it was obviously a serious infraction, I didn’t want to jeopardize my standing as a new hire. So, I just ignored it. But, I sure worried about what would happen if a DEA inspector showed up.
So, today, I just don’t deal with it. No controlled substances, less paperwork, fewer worries. Simplicity is bliss, and modern medicine has enough worries as it is.
This still gets me the occasional complaint of, “Well, my other neurologist did!” but, frankly, I don’t care. They can run their practice how they want, and I’ll run mine.
In a world of regulations, daily press stories on “pill mills” overusing narcotics, and my quarterly prescription tracking reports from the state board, I want to keep my involvement in them as minimal as possible. I may prescribe them, but I don’t want the potential nightmares of having them on site.
Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.