Literature DB >> 20590358

Pain relief is a human right.

Michel Daher1.   

Abstract

For centuries, medical and surgical treatment has emphasized saving the life of the patient rather than ameliorating the patient's pain, particularly when there were few options for the latter. Today at the dawn of the 21st century, the best available evidence indicates a major gap between an increasingly understanding of the pathophysiology of pain and widespread inadequacy of its treatment. Epidemiologic evidence has proven that chronic pain is a widespread public health issue. Studies of cancer patients' pain control consistently reveal that up to half of patients receive inadequate analgesia and 30% do not receive appropriate drugs for their pain. Equally, for patients suffering HIV/AIDS, 60%-100% will experience pain at some stage in their illness. In the developed world, this gap has prompted a series of declarations and actions by national and international bodies advocating better pain control. One response to the worldwide undertreatment of pain has been to promote the concept that pain relief is a public health issue of such critical importance as to constitute an international imperative and fundamental human right. The importance of pain relief as the core of the medical ethic is clear. Pain clinicians promote the status of pain management beyond that of appropriate clinical practice or even an ethic of good medicine. They advocate a paradigm shift in the medical professions' perspective on pain management, from simply good practice to an imperative founded on patient rights. There is a need to promote policies which create conditions where human beings can bear even incurable illnesses and death in a dignified manner. This must help health professionals or lay groups to initiate a powerful agenda to reform local statutes. The essential components of such legislation are: 1. Reasonable pain management is a right. 2. Doctors have a duty to listen to and reasonably respond to a patient's report of pain. 3. Provision of necessary pain relief is immune from potential legal liability. 4. Doctors who are notable or willing to ensure adequate analgesia must refer to a colleague who has this expertise. 5. Pain management must be a compulsory component of continuing medical education. For too long, pain and its management have been prisoners of myth, irrationality, ignorance, and cultural bias. We are confident that the Pain Relief and Palliative Care Working Group under the auspices of the Lebanese Cancer Society is the main promoter of Palliative Care in Lebanon whose main goal is to relieve suffering and improve quality of life of the cancer patients, and advocate pain relief as a human right.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20590358

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Asian Pac J Cancer Prev        ISSN: 1513-7368


  5 in total

Review 1.  The Basic Pharmacology of Opioids Informs the Opioid Discourse about Misuse and Abuse: A Review.

Authors:  Joseph V Pergolizzi; Jo Ann LeQuang; Garrett K Berger; Robert B Raffa
Journal:  Pain Ther       Date:  2017-03-24

2.  Application of human factors engineering (HFE) to the design of a naloxone auto-injector for the treatment of opioid emergencies.

Authors:  Robert B Raffa; Robert Taylor; Joseph V Pergolizzi; Srinivas Nalamachu; Eric S Edwards; Evan T Edwards
Journal:  Drug Deliv Transl Res       Date:  2017-02       Impact factor: 4.617

3.  Efficacy of oxycodone in intravenous patient-controlled analgesia with different infusion modes after laparoscopic radical surgery of cervical cancer a prospective, randomized, double-blind study.

Authors:  Yejing Zhu; Kangjie Xie; Junbo Yuan; Bin Gu; Yanhong Lian; Huidan Zhou; Jun Fang
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2019-08       Impact factor: 1.817

Review 4.  Pain Control in Latin America: The Optimized Role of Buprenorphine in the Treatment of Cancer and Noncancer Pain.

Authors:  Joseph V Pergolizzi; Robert Taylor; Jo Ann LeQuang; Argelia Lara; Andres Hernandez Ortiz; Miguel A Ruiz Iban
Journal:  Pain Ther       Date:  2019-05-17

Review 5.  A Guide for Pain Management in Low and Middle Income Communities. Managing the Risk of Opioid Abuse in Patients with Cancer Pain.

Authors:  Joseph V Pergolizzi; Gianpietro Zampogna; Robert Taylor; Edmundo Gonima; Jose Posada; Robert B Raffa
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2016-03-01       Impact factor: 5.810

  5 in total

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