when we talk about a drug problem, what usually comes to mind are images of intravenous users in back alleys, air passengers stuffing contraband into hidden compartments & every known orifice, or patrons high on "ice" in a club.
we all know the problem permeates much wider & deeper than that.
i still remember vividly when i was on-call one evening while training at a teaching hospital. we were considered junior doctors then & were searching high & low for the lecturer-on-call to help us handle a particularly difficult case. despite repeated calls on the phone, pagers (there were no handphones then) & PA system, he was nowhere to be found.
then someone finally located him, on the toilet floor, groaning & frothing at the mouth. found nearby was a used syringe. empty.
to cut the story short, he had been injecting himself with painkillers & this time, he overdosed. he was immediately admitted to the ICU & subsequently recovered. my boss, to his credit, kept things under wraps - told the offender to take medical leave & on completion of his expatriate contract, to return home. the hospital was not informed the real story behind this episode.
later, after i had left the hospital, i was told one of my junior colleagues did the same thing. he was then asked to leave post-grad training.
at another hospital where i worked in UK, i found out 9 years later that one of my peers had been doing the same thing when we were in the same department. he had been depressed because he couldn't pass his post-grad exams. in the end, he also left training & ended up a GP.
so, i know a senior, a colleague & a junior who had abused drugs. well, surprise, surprise, the ugly head has reared again.
now, a male nurse i used to work with had been found to falsify entries in a drug record book, including creating fictitious patients to obtain the pain-killers. doesn't matter if it's for personal use or worse, for resale; he will be punished, subject to an internal inquiry. his HOD is obviously not as gracious as my ex-boss, which is why the misdeed is the talk of the local medical fraternity.
and unless he can pull cable or divine intervention intercedes, his career as a nurse is as good as over. which is a real pity because he has shown such good promise as a capable & competent paramedic.
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12 comments:
Some resort to drugs due to pressure in their studies, work... not necessary mixing with the wrong company.. yeah...
curious to know, what do ppl without any real physical pain intend to achieve from the injections of these pain killers? do they experience a 'high' or something like that?
pain killer kills actually..
A pity on the offender but a waste of public resources too.
Claire,
people take drugs for a variety of reasons, but the path is still downhill after that.
House-tai,
it's the very reason that these painkiller give a "high" that people take them to get away from the real world. unfortunately, it's addictive, & therein, lies the downfall.
Wenn,
that's one way of looking at it.
it kills the person's personality & character, & eventually the physical self.
Yvonne,
i suppose that's why drugs are a big problem.
PainKiller ... to kill pain ? didn't give me any High 5 for sure!
I've been prescribed various painkillers like being given candies, plenty of leftovers & dunno what to do with it. maybe useful oneday for the deadliest cocktail mix :(
MissyC,
you won't get a high if you're in a lot of pain or if you've developed tolerance to the painkiller.
and, if you've developed tolerance, it's unlikely to be deadly to you.
Doc , any reason as to why they resort to things like this despite them being in the medical field & well aware of the consequences ?
UG,
being in medical line exposes one to this temptation. most people resist.
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