@FauxLiz - I just wanted to ask some follow-up questions. Thanks for your post clarifying things in re: the Stadol and why you are using it.
the number of pain patients being removed from pain medication due to the opiate crisis is scary and little to nothing is being done to actually help them
I will inform them that they will need to be prepared when I have a migraine that reaches that pain level with something else or I will be unable to participate for possibly days. I have never lied about what the medication is, what it is used for or failed to turn it over when I have been hospitalized for physical health reasons.
All of this makes a lot of sense. Pain management in US health care is a real mess, and I suspect there are many, many individuals who are struggling with exactly what you describe - losing access to the meds that give them a decent quality of life, simply because of over-correcting on having flooded the market with opiates for any and all pain, back before it was understood what a problem that could turn into. It is a real problem that patients are often not treated like individuals in this regard, and are instead lumped into the statistics.
One way to look at it - there could be an opportunity to try a different migraine med in a controlled setting. That's something that obviously you'd want co-ordination of care on, between your neurologist(s) and the psychiatrist(s).
But my real question is this:
You mentioned that I use the medication for spikes in my mental health condition that is in correct.
I'm curious - it sounds like you are mixing the chiari and the migraines in with mental health. So, it's hard to tell - are you also using the Stadol for things that are purely PTSD-related? I know that there can be physical pain that comes along with PTSD symptoms - but what I'm asking is, whether you are able to separate out what is a PTSD spike vs what is a migraine or something chiari-related. And if so, what would you be using the stadol for, in re: your mental health (mood, anxiety, dysregulation, sleep disturbances, those sorts of things).
Yes I have taken steps to prevent my t from taking it away from me because as most mental health professionals in this day and age he believes that any use of pain medication or alcohol is a crutch and a form of self sabotaging. This is not.
I would agree, that it's not the same as self-sabotage if you are only using it for migraine pain and chiari pain. I think if you were able to express that clearly to your T, and to any psych professional, they would likely probe to make sure you were telling the truth - but it's not hard to see how sometimes a narcotic for pain relief is the best option.
If you are also using it to dull psychological issues, then yeah - I'd say your T is actually right, it's not a good habit to get into. Using narcotics to manage psychological issues may be effective, but it will never be a reliable long-term solution. I know that you'd not be prescribed benzos on top of the narcotic, so I can see where you'd be between a rock and a hard place with needing the migraine med and not being able to give it up for an anxiety med, say. Is that the situation?