Louisville Medicine Volume 65, Issue 3 | Page 29

OPINION DOCTORS Lounge CAN’T WE ALL JUST GET ALONG: Medical Care, Not Politics L Larry Griffin, MD et me make a few disclosures. I am a physician, a veteran and a life- long Republican, (though I have, when appropriate, voted for other parties’ candidates). I hope and believe I am respectful of those whose opin- ions differ from my own, though I reserve the right to disagree respectfully with some of them. I love my God, my family and my country. I love the Navy and the Marine Corps. I love my profession, and have de- voted my entire professional life to an effort to improve health care and outcomes for women and their babies. I favor government which provides for essential programs and safety, but then stays out of our lives and supports and encourages individual respon- sibility. I support true safety nets for those who really need them, but not for those who simply choose to accept them in lieu of being responsible for themselves and their own choices and lifestyles. I do not accept that throwing money at every problem is the solution. I do not believe that when a government program is given life, it should necessarily be eternal. I do not believe we can tax ourselves out of the debt quagmire in which our politicians have placed us. I voted for Donald Trump, and I support most of his policies, though certainly not all, and yet I am troubled by the apparent lack of discipline he exhibits by his continual off-the-cuff comments and tweets. As do many of us, I do not believe either of the candidates from which we had to choose in 2016 fully measured up to the standards we should expect of a president. I am chagrined by the many people who complain about the debt, rail against taxes, and yet steadfastly hold to the opinion that their favorite program or institution should be protected against any budget cut, reduc- tion in profile, etc. because in the overall scope of a huge budget (federal or state), their favored program is only a proverbial drop in the bucket. No one questions the value of the Arts, after school programs, etc. but at some point, we have to set priorities, and some things can no longer be support- ed by public funds if we are to provide the essentials for which we depend on govern- ment in the first place. Additionally, with enough “drops in the bucket,” that bucket overflows, and the big bucket begins to look drained. Having said this, though I may sound like a hard hearted, soulless individual to some, I wish to make my own case for not defunding a public program. Regardless of what ultimately happens in the debate about the Affordable (hardly) Care Act, or its potential replacement, whatever it is be- ing called today, there are programs which have received funding which simply are too valuable to remove, and which should not only be funded at the current level, but given additional funds. One of the most critical today is treatment - effective treatment - for narcotic use disorder. We simply must not permit lack of funding for these patients to curtail their treatment (which is long-term by necessity), increasing relapse and the complications which accompany it. Every day, I become aware of more preg- nant women affected by this disorder, result- ing in complications not seen for years in civilized societies: vegetative endocarditis, amputations from septic injection sites, an- tibiotic resistant sepsis, septic emboli with strokes. The effect on their babies is equally dire. They suffer from neonatal abstinence with prolonged withdrawal, parental neglect and abuse, prematurity and its associated complications, stillbirth, and sudden infant death. The list goes on and on. Pregnant and postpartum women with substance use disorder must remain in a long-term treatment program in order to prevent the very high rate of relapse seen in this population. Such long-term care is critical to any level of successful treatment. Appropriate counseling, social support and medication, if needed, are key elements of a potential return to health and narcotic-free life for both themselves and their children. Politicians at all levels seem to have shift- ed emphasis from a war on illegal drugs to a war on legal, but misused ones. As a result, legislatures across the country have passed well-intended but, in my opinion, some- times misguided laws to address this issue. Better education and increased awareness on the part of physicians is most appro- priate, but some of the other regulations enacted may be less so. A clear, unintend- ed consequence is an increase in the com- plications seen from an increased use of illegal drugs with tainted contents and of uncertain potency, as well as an increase in the difficulty of patients who actually have a medical need for legal drugs, to gain appropriate access to them. I have not yet seen compelling evidence that stricter legal limits on pain medication prescribing effec- tively decreases the incidence or severity of (continued on page 32) AUGUST 2017 27