Treating the Pain Epidemic
The New York Times
Nov 5, 2009
By John Tierney
Chronic pain affects more than 70 million Americans, which makes it more widespread than heart disease, cancer and diabetes combined. It costs the economy more than $100 billion per year. So why don’t more doctors and researchers take it seriously?
That is the challenge raised by a new report from the Mayday Fund, a nonprofit group that studies pain treatment. The report, which been endorsed by an array of medical groups, advocates a revolution in the training of doctors, the financing of research and the education of law-enforcement officials.
“The fact is that people aren’t getting competent and cost-effective treatment for chronic pain,” said Dr. Russell Portenoy, one of the co-chairmen of the panel that prepared the report.
Dr. Portenoy, the chairman of the department of pain medicine and palliative care at Beth Israel Medical Center, was one of the pain experts who supported William Hurwitz, the Virginia doctor who was imprisoned for prescribing opioid painkillers to patients who resold them. (Dr. Hurwitz’s sentence was reduced after a retrial in which Dr. Portenoy and other experts testified on his behalf.)
At a news conference Wednesday, Dr. Portenoy and the other co-chairman of the Mayday panel, Dr. Lonnie Zeltzer of the University of California, Los Angeles, said patients’ needs had to be better balanced against the concerns of law-enforcement officials, whose prosecutions of Dr. Hurtwitz and other doctors have made physicians reluctant to prescribe opioids. Dr. Zeltzer said doctors were especially reluctant to prescribe such painkillers to young people, and she cited the example of a teenager who had been incapacitated for six months until finding a doctor willing to prescribe opioids.
“Don’t assume that your doctor knows what to do to treat your pain,” Dr. Zeltzer advised patients. Read more…
She and the other members of the panel urged better pain-management training in medical schools and more money for pain research, which, according to the report, receives 1 percent of the budget of the National Institutes of Health.
The panel also urged the federal Department of Health and Human Services to reform the way doctors are reimbursed for treating pain. Dr. Portenoy said that the current system had “misaligned incentives” encouraging doctors to preform procedures like injections and surgery and that doctors who performed those procedures could make 10 times as much per hour as doctors who treated pain in other ways.
Distorted incentives and inadequate treatment are hurting patients at the same time they are driving up health costs, according to the report:
Instead of receiving effective relief, patients with persistent pain often find themselves in an endless cycle, seeing multiple health care providers, including many specialists in areas other than pain, who are not prepared to respond effectively. They often endure repeated tests and inadequate or unproven treatments. This may include unnecessary surgeries, injections or procedures that have no long-term impact on comfort and function. Patients with chronic pain have more hospital admissions, longer hospital stays and unnecessary trips to the emergency department. Such inefficient and even wasteful treatment for pain is contributing to the rapid rise in health care costs in the United States.
You can read the rest of the Mayday report and its recommendations here. Do you have any recommendations on what should be done, and any guess as to the likelihood of reforms in the treatment of chronic pain?
http://tierneylab.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/11/05/treating-the-pain-epidemic/#more-7005


At a news conference Wednesday, Dr. Portenoy and the other co-chairman
of the Mayday panel, Dr. Lonnie Zeltzer of the University of
California, Los Angeles, said patients’ needs had to be better balanced
against the concerns of law-enforcement officials, whose prosecutions
of Dr. Hurtwitz and other doctors have made physicians reluctant to
prescribe opioids. Dr. Zeltzer said doctors were especially reluctant
to prescribe such painkillers to young people, and she cited the
example of a teenager who had been incapacitated for six months until
finding a doctor willing to prescribe opioids.Chronic pain affects more than 70 million Americans, which makes it
more widespread than heart disease, cancer and diabetes combined. It
costs the economy more than $100 billion per year. So why don’t more
doctors and researchers take it seriously?
This comment may not have alot to do with treating chronic pain but then again it just might end up being the answer to all chronic pain and a lot of other things.
I just read an article about a robotic arm on yahoo news written by Ariel David for the associated press that was dated: Wed. 12/02/09 @ 5:06pm eastern standard time. I think everyone should read this article and think about the implications of the technology that probably will develope from this. Personally I think it means the begining of cyborg tech.
The guy said he could acually feel his robotic hand! The implications of this are unreal…
I`ll see if I can add the url to this message.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091202/ap_on_sc/eu_italy_robotic_hand
Sorry, that`s the best I can do at the moment.
But It is an interesting article and I just “HAD” to tell some body.
Chronic Back Pain Linked To Changes In The Brain
ScienceDaily (Nov. 30, 2006) — A German research team using a specialized imaging technique revealed that individuals suffering from chronic low back pain also had microstructural changes in their brains. The findings were presented today at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA).
The researchers, led by Jürgen Lutz, M.D., a radiology resident at University Hospital, Ludwig-Maximilians University in Munich, Germany, used a technique called diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to track the movement of water molecules in the brain’s gray and white matter.
“A major problem for patients with chronic pain is making their condition believable to doctors, relatives and insurance carriers. DTI could play an important role in this regard,” Dr. Lutz said. “With these objective and reproducible correlates in brain imaging, chronic pain may no longer be a subjective experience. For pain diagnosis and treatment, the consequences could be enormous.”
Individual water molecules are constantly in motion, colliding with each other and other nearby molecules, causing them to spread out, or diffuse. DTI allows scientists to analyze water diffusion in the tissues of the brain that indicate changes in brain cell organization.
“In normal white matter, water diffuses in one main direction,” Dr. Lutz explained. “But when fiber pathways are developing during childhood or are extensively used, their microstructural organization becomes more organized and complex with measurable changes in diffusion.”
Dr. Lutz and colleagues studied 20 patients experiencing chronic back pain with no precisely identifiable cause and 20 age- and gender-matched healthy control patients. DTI was performed to measure the diffusion in several areas of each patient’s brain.
Compared to the healthy volunteers, the patients with chronic low back pain had a significantly more directed diffusion in the three pain-processing regions of the brain, including the cingulate gyrus, postcentral gyrus and superior frontal gyrus.
“Our results reveal that in chronic pain sufferers, the organization of cerebral microstructure is much more complex and active in the areas of the brain involved in pain processing, emotion and the stress response,” said co-author Gustav Schelling, M.D., Ph.D. from the Department of Anaesthesiology at Munich University.
The researchers said the findings may help explain the extreme resistance to treatment for chronic low back pain and provide much-needed evidence for individual sufferers. However, it is unclear which occurs first, the chronic back pain or the microstructural changes in the brain.
“It’s difficult to know whether these are pre-existing changes in the brain that predispose an individual to developing chronic pain, whether ongoing pain creates the hyperactivity that actually changes the brain organization, or if it is some mixture of both,” Dr. Schelling said. “DTI may help explain what’s happening for some of these patients, and direct therapeutic attention from the spine to the brain,” he added.
Co-authors are Maximilian F. Reiser, M.D., Olaf Dietrich, Ph.D., Lorenz Jaeger, M.D. and Robert Stahl, M.D.
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