Doctors struggle to cope

It’s a sad fact of life that not enough doctors are coming through their training and entering general practice. Those practitioners who remain find time in short supply. When one patient walks through the door for a consultation, tens more wait outside. The result is towns and cities find themselves without primary healthcare, an accelerating problem as older doctors retire. This makes pain controversial. How much time does it take to distinguish between the genuine patients who need drugs like tramadol to get a better quality of life, and the drug abusers who want to get high or the dealers looking for product to sell on the streets. There is an alarming rate of prescription medication abuse in the U.S. and the physicians don’t have the time to make a proper diagnosis. That means a quick prescription of tramadol instead of a more holistic approach. In a perfect world, the physician would look at the patient as a person losing mobility, under threat at work because the lifting and carrying is too difficult, friendships and marriage under pressure because this is all too stressful to manage. As it is, there is a single irony. The few doctors struggle to cope because so many people are in pain and need help.

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