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#952442 - 10/31/09 03:48 AM
Re: Walk in pain clinics in Florida
[Re: platinopega]
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Board Addict
Registered: 07/21/04
Posts: 305
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You know after watching all the latest media stories etc, it got me wondering.
How do they fake their MRI's, all these people I see on TV and news fake a medical problem, but all these clinics require documentation, ie MRI or XRAYS.
Do all these drugdealers or others have something wrong with them. If so, then why are they all coming down to florida, why not just find a compassionate doc in their state. It makes no sense to me. I mean, that is what I am trying to do, find a local compassionate doc.
Or is there something nefarious going on, I mean how would you fake a MRI? Maybe that is what LE needs to tackle, because the people ,faking their condition, are selling or abusing it. And those people had to have altered the MRI or XRAY in some way in order to get treated. IMO, the lied and misrepresented to the doctor. How can you fault the doc if he sees the problem and documentation, patient says he is severe pain, and medication is the desired approach.
So why not just focus in on the XRAY and MRI part of the process, that is where the real fraud is it sounds like. How are they managing get through that loop.
Sorry if this is not that lucid, bad migraine+ 2 perc= no migraine and sleep in about 60 seconds
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#953458 - 11/02/09 02:27 AM
Re: Walk in pain clinics in Florida
[Re: snippets]
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Board Addict
Registered: 07/21/04
Posts: 305
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thats my point snippets, I think that is the missing link in stopping so called pill mills where doctors are legitimately scripting but for conditions that have been faked. They need to implement a system to verify testing etc. So these fools are basically just writing out one of those findings MRI reports and putting that kind of [censored] on them. I mean how obvious can it be. Some of these docs for sure must be what boils down to drug dealers. I mean I have no prob for treating FM or any phantom pain, headaches, and basically any other legitimate pain. I think docs should liberally write whatever script anyone that is in legitimate pain needs and requests for that matter. But I draw the line at doctors who write scripts knowing full well that it is probably going to travel WV to be sold to kids and drug addicts. I am sure that is only a fraction of doctors, but the rest of the doctors need to wise up and start checking records for accuracy so they don't get duped. Of course the government could just give back all our freedoms we lost when they banned controlled substances. Something most people don't know is that it is unconstitutional for them to ban narcotics from p2p sale. But they got by that ingeniously in the early 20th century by taxing all those items, but only handing out tax licenses to posses them to medical practitioners etc. Just incredible. Anyway, however it is handled, the CP patient needs to be protected from the harm both the government and these drug deadbeats are doing to us.
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#953728 - 11/02/09 01:47 PM
Re: Walk in pain clinics in Florida
[Re: meonlyits]
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Board Addict
Registered: 07/21/04
Posts: 305
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Ya absolutely. in th 1910s, they passed the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act. It was the first such piece of legislation to ever try and combat distribution and possession of narcotics. It was initially proposed for very bad reasons, ie racism. Anyway, it set out to disallow distribution except by a licensed doctor. It actually established that phrase in "the due course of practice" by a doctor.
Well it is a tax act, because that is the only way they could do it, and it was quite ingenious. See they could not pass an act of prohibition of a substance in congress. It was considered unconstitutional. The last time it was done was for alcohol, and that required changing the constitution, the 18th amendment, and repealed by the 21st amendment.
So they passed this tax, and the federal government now had the ability to control the sale of narcotics through the use of taxes, and only granting permits to licensed physicians.
I am not a law scholar, so I do not know how the states come into this, but I am under the impression that the states do not have this limitation. They never had the worry of this and so they can make laws punishing possession. Take for example california though: they legalized medical marijuana, but that still does not matter, because federal law trumps state law. So anyone possessing it is still going to be arrested by a federal agent. The only way to accomplish this is to repeal the harrison act and similar acts and leave it up to the states to decide.
Now as for unconstitutionality, I think it is defined in the commerce clause that they could not regulate local affairs. The federal government could not accomplish this without that tax act, and it started the rollercoaster of events that led to the CSA. I am not too knowledgable on the CSA, but I believe that is a whole other beast. It is my understanding that they now disregarded the commerce clause and under supreme court precedent??? now passed the CSA which was basically able to criminalize possession instead of just sales, and on the federal level.
So now who knows, but I will tell you one thing, at the turn of the century, most of our citizens believed, as did the Supreme Court and our government that they neither could regulate narcotic possession nor could they interfere in any other local affairs as per the commerce clause of the constitution. Now, our laws have been perversed to the point where our government has complete control of our lives and the ability to do WHATEVER they want. I mean they can regulate any industry etc etc
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