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if yes, do you think it should be?

2007-05-21 05:56:06 · 10 answers · asked by me 3 in Health General Health Care Pain & Pain Management

10 answers

i think that the government doesn't own our bodies so it shouldn't tell us what we can put in it. not supporting drug use .. just against all this red tape and bureaucracy.

2007-05-21 06:01:03 · answer #1 · answered by Troy T 2 · 1 0

No heroin (diamorphine) is currently a schedule 1 drug under the Controlled Substance Act. Schedule 1 drugs have no medically accepted use, and therefore cannot be prescribed as medicine.

Heroin is currently only available for research purposes, and may only be obtained legally with a DEA registration and license.

2007-05-24 01:42:17 · answer #2 · answered by BlueDream24 2 · 0 0

It USED to be legal. In fact, it was introduced as a less addictive alternative to Morphine. In the UK, it's called diacetlymorphine or diamorphine, and yes, it can and is prescribed. In the US, the strongest pain medication available is Dilaudid, which is slightly less strong than Heroin but used to be called "drug store heroin".

2007-05-23 11:14:31 · answer #3 · answered by Mandy VZ 4 · 0 0

in reaction on your aditional guidance, are you making a remark or asking a question? i'll attempt to respond to the question. first of all, it relatively is taken into consideration necessary notice that i'm biased as i think of that methadone is an particularly undesirable theory as a maintanence drug. That being suggested, i'll attempt and be even surpassed in answering the question. i think of that there are 2 important motives that methadone is prescibed. the 1st is the "injury alleviation technique" of scientific care. The medical doctors see the data and understand that an opiate addict will probobly proceed to be an opiate addict for something of thier existence. The desire is that for the time of switching human beings to a drug which would be contolled with a universal dosage and a low value will decrease lots of the wear and tear which would be executed to themselves or do society. IE, no AIDS from sharing needles, no resorting to theft or prostitution to make funds for heroin, no overdoses from injecting something that has an unknown power or makeup. 2. there's a lot of money in it - there is in no way a scarcity of people desirous to get on a health center, and clinics tend to tell human beings that they are "no longer waiting" while they request getting a lowar dosage as a fashion to maintain thier paying sufferers. there may well be some health center medical doctors that are noble, yet maximum are merely drug sellers

2016-11-04 21:24:40 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There a whole lot of other options and combinations of options, including non-pharmaceutical tools, to go through long before anyone gets to that point. And most people find that their pain can be managed without heroin. That's managed.

When dealing with chronic pain, for whatever reason, the object is not to make the patient pan free. The object is always to get the patient to the point that they can function reasonably well, despite their level of pain.

For that tiny, tiny minority of pain patients for whom absolutely everything else has failed, yes.

I'm a chronic pain patient.

2007-05-21 06:09:09 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

In the United States it can't be. I know that in the UK it is prescribed. Honestly, I think that if it was prescribed in the United States it would create tons more chaos in the pharmacy than the chaos we already see from addicts who want their pain medication. It tends to ruin it for the people who are actually in pain and use it the way they're told to.

2007-05-21 06:02:57 · answer #6 · answered by Steph 3 · 0 1

Not in the US...it is a Schedule l drug; the class of drugs not allowed to be ts.prescribed. It is routinely prescribed in the UK for sever pain management and terminal patients

2007-05-21 09:00:28 · answer #7 · answered by iraq51 7 · 0 0

Heroin could realistically be used as a painkiller, but the negative effects outweigh the positive ones. Although, an opioid called OxyContin is very similar in chemical makeup and is used to treat cancer patients as well as post-surgery patients. However, this method is becoming less and less popular due to the high risk of abuse and addiction. I would know....

Hope this answered your question.

2007-05-21 06:03:57 · answer #8 · answered by yvkujhbkuyb 3 · 0 2

It cannot be prescribed. And it should not be legal. It is far too dangerous.

2007-05-21 06:42:44 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

NO, methadone and oxycontin work good though.

2007-05-21 13:54:15 · answer #10 · answered by soccer freak 1 · 0 0

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