| Literature DB >> 35893729 |
Bonyan Qudah1, Martha A Maurer2, David A Mott1, Michelle A Chui1.
Abstract
Providing patient-centered care to manage chronic pain and opioid use disorder (OUD) is associated with improved health outcomes. However, adopting a holistic approach to providing care is often challenging in rural communities. This study aims to identify and contrast challenges to providing patient-centered care from the perspective of patients and providers. A participatory design approach was adopted to elicit the perceptions of providers and patients with lived experiences of chronic pain and/or OUD in Jefferson County, Wisconsin. Two focus groups were conducted with each stakeholder group to identify problems that participants face with respect to chronic pain management and OUD and possible solutions. Four interviews were conducted with providers experienced in chronic pain management. Analysis of focus group sessions and interviews show consensus among patients and providers that lack of behavioral health and recovery resources create barriers to effectively manage OUD and chronic pain. However, there was discordance among the two groups about other barriers such as patient and provider attitudes, tapering approach, and access to medications for OUD. This tension among patients and providers can influence patients' retention in therapy. More efforts are needed to mitigate stigma among providers in rural communities and support psychosocial needs of patients.Entities:
Keywords: chronic pain; medications for opioid use disorder; opioid use disorder; rural; stigma
Year: 2022 PMID: 35893729 PMCID: PMC9332779 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy10040091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
Figure 1Challenges to providing patient-centered care in the management of OUD.
Quotes from study participants about challenges to the management of chronic pain and OUD in rural Wisconsin.
| Aspects of Each Level of Care | Group | Quotes |
|---|---|---|
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| “And I remember saying to the doctor, Dr. [NAME], he’s going to get addicted, because he had him on like five different pain meds. And Dr. [NAME] said, on, don’t worry, this, in a little, we will get him off.” |
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| “I’m going back to your chart and so I went back like five years before I found out that she hurt her back weeding her garden, and someone started her out on Tylenol-Codeine then they just kept increasing the dose.” | |
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| “And I don’t want to be on opioids. But I don’t want to feel the results of being off of it either.” |
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| “Yeah, well, “why can’t I have more ?” and then explain why we can’t have more and then they seem to understand that but they also don’t seem to understand that if you have too much, that can make the pain worse and if we back down, it might be worse for a couple of weeks but then it might actually be better it’s like they’re too afraid to try that.” | |
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| “Doctors kind of, do it this way, and this is the way they say it should be done, when it really should and that’s where people tend to drop off and fall off here and there in the system, because that particular way is just not working for them.” |
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| “ I think maybe our doctors aren’t really having that conversation with the patient. They keep saying, I would like you to go down I’m not going to fill more for you.” | |
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| “I think Suboxone can be a great treatment, but it’s not, they’re not using it as, I believe, that you’re supposed to. You know, it’s supposed to be a gateway to get off them, but they become long term. My son has been on it for seven years.” |
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| “The ER never called pain management. I almost lost my prescription because they had given me more than what I was allowed to try to get me back down to the pain level.” |
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| “so we just told the patient, you know, we don’t know but we see that you’ve been getting scripts from your primary so like we are not touching that because we don’t want to step on anybody’s toes. Turns out the primary did want us.” | |
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| “So now I’m down to two pills a day instead of four. But that’s not working for me. Can I try three? But it might take the provider a week to get back to me, right?” |
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| NA | |
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| “Physical therapy doesn’t do anything. It just, it makes it just flare up and that. So I have radiofrequency coming up in September because that’s, that’s not for my bulge. That’s for my arthritis that I have on four disks I’m having for that. But my bulge, I had a cortisone shot done. That didn’t do nothing for it.” |
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| “We have really good physical therapy department. Yeah, they do more than just exercises. They have all kinds of modalities they, they’re very, very good. Again, if people would go in there open minded. Most of them actually get help.” | |
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| “And my other issue with [……] County in general, so gigantic, a lack of mental healthcare services. I currently see a psychiatrist and therapist at [……] County Human Services. They are swamped. We need more facilities.” |
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| “I think, as an organization, we need to do a better job of recruiting for behavioral health professionals. And I get that it’s hard. It’s a hot area right now.” | |
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| “It’s on your record, and it doesn’t matter if you’ve been clean for ten years. It shows up on your record, and pain management is all nice, nice, nice, until they scroll further down and read your, and see that it happened in the past, ten years ago. And says, oh, I’m not giving you any pills.” |
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| “I’ll just add on the PDMP, I think this is an immensely powerful tool that is underutilized. And part of that is not due to anybody’s fault. It’s due to our inability to integrate it with the EHR. So you got this immensely powerful tool that is clunky to use.” | |
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| “The insurance companies, they make you go through loophole after loophole after loophole… you got to go through ten different things before the insurance company finally says, hey, why don’t we give that, do that procedure for that person to begin with? |
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| “like we build them up and say, oh, drugs aren’t everything, drugs aren’t everything. And then they’re, we say, oh, we changed our minds. Since it won’t be covered by insurance, drugs are everything.” | |
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| NA |
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| “[Pharmacy name] told me if an MME is over 50, they will not dispense it, period.” |
MME: morphine milligram equivalent, PDMP: Prescription Drug Monitoring Program.