Literature DB >> 15629412

Ethical challenges in the management of chronic nonmalignant pain: negotiating through the cloud of doubt.

Mark Sullivan1, Betty Ferrell.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: After successful cancer pain initiatives, efforts have been recently made to liberalize the use of opioids for the treatment of chronic nonmalignant pain. However, the goals for this treatment and its place among other available treatments are still unclear. Cancer pain treatment is aimed at patient comfort and is validated by objective disease severity. For chronic nonmalignant pain, however, comfort alone is not an adequate treatment goal, and pain is not usually proportional to objective disease severity. Therefore, confusion about treatment goals and doubts about the reality of nonmalignant pain entangle therapeutic efforts. We present a case history to demonstrate that this lack of proportionality fosters fears about malingering, exaggeration, and psychogenic pain among providers. Doubt concerning the reality of patients' unrelieved chronic nonmalignant pain has allowed concerns about addiction to dominate discussions of treatment. We propose alternate patient-centered principles to guide efforts to relieve chronic nonmalignant pain, including accept all patient pain reports as valid but negotiate treatment goals early in care, avoid harming patients, and incorporate chronic opioids as one part of the treatment plan if they improve the patient's overall health-related quality of life. Although an outright ban on opioid use in chronic nonmalignant pain is no longer ethically acceptable, ensuring that opioids provide overall benefit to patients requires significant time and skill. Patients with chronic nonmalignant pain should be assessed and treated for concurrent psychiatric disorders, but those with disorders are entitled to equivalent efforts at pain relief. The essential question is not whether chronic nonmalignant pain is real or proportional to objective disease severity, but how it should be managed so that the patient's overall quality of life is optimized. PERSPECTIVE: The management of chronic nonmalignant pain is moving from specialty settings into primary care. Primary care providers need an ethical framework within which to adopt the principles of palliative care to this population.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Health Care and Public Health

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15629412     DOI: 10.1016/j.jpain.2004.10.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pain        ISSN: 1526-5900            Impact factor:   5.820


  12 in total

1.  Persistent pain facilitates response to morphine reward by downregulation of central amygdala GABAergic function.

Authors:  Zhi Zhang; Wenjuan Tao; Yuan-Yuan Hou; Wei Wang; Yun-Gang Lu; Zhizhong Z Pan
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2014-04-01       Impact factor: 7.853

2.  Malingering? No evidence in a predominantly Hispanic workers' compensation population with chronic pain.

Authors:  Kristynia M Robinson; Jose J Monsivais
Journal:  Pain Manag Nurs       Date:  2010-04-09       Impact factor: 1.929

3.  Let's talk about pain and opioids: Low pitch and creak in medical consultations.

Authors:  Peter Joseph Torres; Stephen Gresham Henry; Vaidehi Ramanathan
Journal:  Discourse Stud       Date:  2019-12-19

4.  Trends in the prescription of opioids for adolescents with non-cancer pain.

Authors:  Laura P Richardson; Ming Yu Fan; Carolyn A McCarty; Wayne Katon; Mark Edlund; Andrea DeVries; Bradley C Martin; Mark Sullivan
Journal:  Gen Hosp Psychiatry       Date:  2011-05-31       Impact factor: 3.238

5.  The effect of discussing pain on patient-physician communication in a low-income, black, primary care patient population.

Authors:  Stephen G Henry; Susan Eggly
Journal:  J Pain       Date:  2013-04-24       Impact factor: 5.820

Review 6.  Police officer, deal-maker, or health care provider? Moving to a patient-centered framework for chronic opioid management.

Authors:  Christina Nicolaidis
Journal:  Pain Med       Date:  2011-05-03       Impact factor: 3.750

7.  Functional disability among chronic pain patients receiving long-term opioid treatment.

Authors:  Tina A Valkanoff; Andrea H Kline-Simon; Stacy Sterling; Cynthia Campbell; Michael Von Korff
Journal:  J Soc Work Disabil Rehabil       Date:  2012

8.  How much time do low-income patients and primary care physicians actually spend discussing pain? A direct observation study.

Authors:  Stephen G Henry; Susan Eggly
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2012-01-10       Impact factor: 5.128

9.  A comparative study of pain in heart failure and non-heart failure veterans.

Authors:  Joy R Goebel; Lynn V Doering; Lorraine S Evangelista; Adeline M Nyamathi; Sally L Maliski; Steven M Asch; Cathy D Sherbourne; Lisa R Shugarman; Andy B Lanto; Angela Cohen; Karl A Lorenz
Journal:  J Card Fail       Date:  2008-11-13       Impact factor: 5.712

Review 10.  Opioid therapy for chronic pain in the United States: promises and perils.

Authors:  Mark D Sullivan; Catherine Q Howe
Journal:  Pain       Date:  2013-09-11       Impact factor: 6.961

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