A Pained Life: When Disaster Strikes

By Carol Levy

I am watching a TV show. A tornado hits the main character's house. Suddenly, her house and all her possessions are scattered everywhere, broken and crushed, her house virtually demolished.

I watch as she looks through the detritus, more and more frantic in an effort to find something – anything -- that wasn't broken or totally destroyed.

“How can you recover from something like that? She lost everything,” I thought to myself.

My eyes start to tear up, my stomach clutches. This feels familiar.

Then it hits meTrigeminal neuralgia did the same thing to me.

People often try to comfort disaster victims with heartfelt, but meaningless cliches: "You have your health" or "At least you're safe.”

The same words were said to me about my pain, even the line about still having my health. Well, yes, trigeminal neuralgia only caused severe pain to my face. The rest of me was physically whole. But was I healthy? No.

“There's always a chance they'll find something to help you,” was something else I heard -- even after 14 brain surgeries, including one that was 100% experimental. I have tried all there is to try. My neurosurgeon made that very clear to me.

This all started when I was 26, just beginning life. 

I wanted to be a singer.  The year before the pain began, I was in two musicals. It was in the lowest rung of professional theater, but it was what I wanted to do. The pay was less than what it cost me for the gas I used to get to the theater, but a paycheck is a paycheck.

With all my hopes and dreams of becoming a professional singer, and two whole shows on my resume, I packed my bags and moved to New York City, like so many other young people with the same dream.

For most of the first 6 months, I had a job as a receptionist. My boss promised me time off for auditions and classes. I was living my dream, holding the hope and fantasy of success in my hand.

Then, out of the blue, the pain started. Constant, spontaneous and triggered. Just a light touch from a wisp of hair could set it off. I didn’t know when the spontaneous pain would come, and had no control over the constant pain.

Soon, it affected my left eye. Any bright light or use of my eye caused breathtaking pain. The rest of me was fine, but I was now 100% disabled by pain.

It kept me virtually housebound, going out only for groceries, doctor's appointments, and the pharmacy. I stayed in as much as I could. Either the pain was so great I couldn't go out, or the fear of it being triggered kept me its prisoner.

Most of us are fine one minute, then wham, the pain strikes.

Our pain is like a tornado. For some, it comes on suddenly like a whirling dervish. For others, like the buildup to a tornado, it slowly gathers strength before demolishing who we were, what we had, and what we wanted to be. 

The pain took so much from me. The hopes and dreams I had before the pain were turned into rubble, yet I couldn’t let them go.

After a tornado the Red Cross comes in, neighbors and churches offer help.

But I find that isn't the case when it comes to chronic pain. Instead, people tend to look away or mouth platitudes, all while pretending our lives haven't been devastated.

I have had the pain for over 40 years. I still don't accept it. I keep looking for the life I expected to have.  It's never there.

Ultimately, the TV character finds one of her treasured belongings in the wreckage of her home.  She is ecstatic and relieved.  She suddenly sees the rest of the damage as merely a chore she has to deal with.

Maybe, just maybe, one day I can do the same.

Carol Jay Levy has lived with trigeminal neuralgia, a chronic facial pain disorder, for over 40 years. She is the author of “A Pained Life, A Chronic Pain Journey.”  Carol is the moderator of the Facebook support group “Women in Pain Awareness.” Her blog “The Pained Life” can be found here. 

Hurricane Helene Highlights Need for Emergency Prescription Access

By Crystal Lindell

Following the news for Hurricane Helene this week, I’ve been worried about everyone in its path. But it’s the people who rely on prescription pain medication that I am most worried about. 

When natural disasters strike, patients who rely on opioids and other controlled substances can be left to face withdrawal or the black market to fill the gaps until doctors and pharmacies are fully functioning again.

While some states have laws in place to allow people to get early refills of their prescriptions when there’s an impending natural disaster, those laws can specifically exclude controlled substances like hydrocodone and Adderall. 

According to a 2022 article by Healthcare Ready, the laws vary widely state-by-state and are poorly organized. Only 12 states have laws or regulations that allow for emergency prescriptions during a specified public health emergency. About half the states allow for short-term refills of medication during unspecified emergencies. Fifteen states and the District of Columbia don’t have any regulations allowing for emergency prescriptions.

The two states facing the worst from Hurricane Helene, Florida and Georgia, both have laws allowing for emergency prescription refills – but only one allows for refills of opioids. 

Georgia specifically excludes Schedule 2 controlled substances such as codeine, hydrocodone, morphine and amphetamines, according to Atlanta News First

Florida’s law is much more expansive. You can obtain a 30-day refill of any prescription medication, as long as your county meets one of the state’s disaster qualifications. 

My guess is that Florida is more lenient due to the state’s reputation as a retirement destination. Older retired people are more likely to need pain medication and more likely to vote. 

It’s understandable that states more commonly hit by hurricanes would have laws in place to address this issue, but every state should allow for emergency prescription refills. Natural disasters like earthquakes, tornadoes and wildfires can happen anywhere. 

Ideally, this would be something best addressed at the federal level, so that patients who have to evacuate their state during emergencies would know they can get refills no matter where they go. Pharmacists would also need to be aware of how to apply the regulations. 

The Food and Drug Administration recommends that patients have at least a week's supply of  medication in case of emergencies – something that’s impossible for many pain patients. You know things are not functioning correctly when a federal agency is giving medical advice that patients are literally unable to follow. 

The last thing anyone facing the threat of losing their home or even their lives should have to worry about is running out of hydrocodone. Even a small daily dose can cause withdrawal if stopped abruptly.

Medication withdrawal in normal conditions can feel like hell. I can’t imagine what it would be like if you also had to deal with the aftermath of a hurricane or wildfire. It could take days or weeks before power is restored, pharmacies to reopen, and supply chains to start functioning again.

Nobody should have to endure that, and with sensible laws in place across the country, nobody would have to. 

Don't Forget Chronic Pain Patients During Disasters

By Janice Reynolds, Guest Columnist

With the recent hurricanes in Florida and Texas, there was an Associated Press story you may have seen. 

Titled “Hurricanes Drive Addiction Issues into Public Square,” it dealt with the plight of people addicted to alcohol, tobacco, pills or heroin when disaster strikes.  While the article was not the “yellow press” we often see in the coverage of opioid medication, it did err by the sin of omission.

People with all sorts of health problems suffer during a natural disaster. Not only did the AP story not mention this, I didn’t see it covered elsewhere in the national news.

People living with pain are likely to be the ultimate casualties.  Anxiety and stress increases pain levels, and some pain sufferers will be difficult to evacuate. 

Most critical is the loss of treatment.  If a patient is taking opioids as part of their pain plan, they may not be able to take their medication with them (when leaving in a hurry) and getting a new prescription or even someone willing to fill it would likely be impossible. 

In a shelter, theft would be a worry.  This applies to non-opioid medication as well.  Non-pharmaceutical interventions might also be unavailable.  If pain was already poorly managed -- as it often is -- it would be even worse.

As we know, pain has many harmful side effects that lead to other health emergencies, including suicide. People in pain during a disaster are going to be even more vulnerable than usual.

a hurricane harvey evacuee (texas national guard photo)

All chronic health problems are affected by natural disasters.  In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, thousands of cancer patients had their treatment disrupted.  Records were lost and many did not know their treatment protocol or where they were in it.  Some did not even know the type of cancer they had.

Of course, medication for other conditions was lost as well. People living with heart conditions, diabetes, kidney failure, AIDS, high blood pressure, COPD, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer’s and many other chronic health issues need special medications or treatments. For many, pain is a part of their disease as well.

Patients in hospice or nursing homes are especially vulnerable. Eight elderly nursing home residents in Florida died this week in sweltering heat when the facility they were in lost its air conditioning during Hurricane Irma.

The media has an ethical obligation to address the problems of natural disasters related to chronic health problems, especially for chronic pain, and not just limit their concern to addicts.  It is the right thing to do.

Janice Reynolds is a retired nurse who specialized in pain management, oncology, and palliative care. She has lectured across the country on pain management and co-authored several articles in medical journals. Janice lives with persistent post craniotomy pain and is active with The Pain Community.

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.