I gotta say that while I understand the desire not to be duped by someone seeking to feed their fix, as a patient, it really bites to have to wade through somebody's informal protocols for determining if it's "real". Where am I coming from? Well, I guess a little background is required.
I seem to have a propensity for producing kidney stones. Since 1980, I seem to kick out another stone on a 1.5-3 year schedule. Frankly, I've lost count of how many have come and gone in total. Even today, I'm toting around a 9mm passenger in one kidney and several smaller ones in the other (found during scans for recent appendix/gallbladder surgery). Yes, I'm seeing a urologist and yes, they've run a bevy of tests, and yes, I push fluids. In the past, urologists have NOT wanted to use such treatments as lithotripsy because of coumadin therapy and assoc. risk of bleeding (hist. of DVTs, the first of which happened after kidney stone surgery!) and they don't want to pick up the responsibility of taking me off anticoagulants for any stretch of time to do a procedure. I'll save the "gutless Dr." discussion for another thread...
So here's my dilema. I know that there are attitudes in the ER regarding pain seeking behaviors. I also understand stones are a ploy used to get a shot by some seekers. Knowing that, I can at least wrap my brain around the concept that my complaint will linger in doubt until someone gets a "film" to confirm - even though I'm thrashing around and sweat is pouring off my face, etc. I even understand that the condition isn't an immediate threat to life (after AAA has been ruled out...) which means I'll drop to the lower end of the priority list for attention from ER staff. But what kills me is, why does it take so danged long for the doc's to manage the pain AFTER they have film in hand? Over 8 freaking hours last time (~3 years ago). Now, I also seem to be cursed by not getting relief from the demerols and morphines of the world.
So, as I sit here on this little ticking bomb, the anxiety level gets pumped everytime I think about a) the interminable wait and b) the looks I'm going to get when I say, "no, this drug doesn't work and that drug doesn't work; this is what worked the last time."
I guess what I'm asking is, are there any protocols for how pain is such cases is managed? I'm not looking for time tables (I can just hear the comments in the ER about "clock watching"). I don't want to rob the truely emergent patients from needed attention. And most of all, I dred the thought of becomming a burden to the staff, esp. the nurses, by pestering them with "it's not working, can you check on what to do next?" On the other hand, I don't want to live through that degree of suffering again. Ever.
So is there something I can do or say to facilitate this process? Is it "normal" to wait 2 hours before someone decides the previous shot didn't work? How do I help myself so that I'm not deemed the pain-in-the-arse guy behind curtain #2? Is there some secret handshake?! Or is this one of those deals where "it's just pain - suck it up, you aint gonna die"?
/rant off. Sorry for the long post.
PS: noticed z's link below didn't work. Try this one...
http://www2.nursingspectrum.com/CE/S...html?CCID=3151