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New Report Sounds 'Call to Revolutionize Chronic Pain Care'

By David Mitchell

Chronic pain costs the United States more than $100 billion a year in direct medical costs and lost productivity, and it leads to more than 50 million lost workdays annually. That's according to a new report from the Mayday Fund that has been endorsed by the AAFP and more than 30 other professional medical organizations.
Stylized photographic image of patient holding head in pain
The report, "A Call to Revolutionize Chronic Pain Care in America: An Opportunity in Health Care Reform," addresses chronic pain, which affects more than 70 million Americans.

"We're really facing an epidemic of undertreated and mismanaged pain," said Lonnie Zeltzer, M.D., director of the pediatric pain program at Mattel Children's Hospital at the University of California-Los Angeles, or UCLA, and co-chair of The Mayday Fund committee that drafted the report. She called the situation "a major disaster" during a Nov. 4 media teleconference.

Check Out AAFP's Chronic Pain Resources

The AAFP has developed a number of activities to help enhance members' ability to diagnose and manage their patients with chronic pain,

For example, the AAFP is offering free courses on pain management through the AAFP Live! and LearningLink CME programs.

The AAFP Live! pain management courses are offered in collaboration with the American Academy of Pain Medicine, the Center for Practical Bioethics, the Federation of State Medical Boards and the Federation of State Medical Boards Foundation.

The program, which includes three one-hour instructional sessions and two question-and-answer sessions, has four scheduled dates remaining: Nov. 14 in Minneapolis; Jan. 9, 2010, in San Antonio; Feb. 20 in Seattle, and March 13 in Atlanta. Each session is limited to 300 primary care professionals.

Ann Karty, M.D., medical director of AAFP's Continuing Medical Education Division, said the live courses are being repurposed and will be available to members online in spring 2010.

The Academy's Learning Link pain management series already offers six online CME activities:
According to Zeltzer, who also is a professor of pediatrics, anesthesiology, psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at UCLA's David Geffen School of Medicine, one in four Americans suffers from chronic pain, and one-third of those people are disabled by the condition.

Zeltzer said that a number of factors contribute to the problem, including inadequate training about pain diagnosis and treatment in medical schools, a lack of time that primary care physicians are able to spend with their patients, and limited access to specialty care.
Committee co-chair Russell Portenoy, M.D., chair of the department of pain medicine and palliative care at Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, and professor of neurology and anesthesiology at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine there, said during the teleconference that if health care reform passes, primary care physicians will face enormous strain, as millions of new patients seek treatment for chronic pain.

Portenoy said medical training shortfalls and a consequent lack of established best practices lead to repeated tests, unnecessary surgeries, inadequate or unproven treatments, more hospital admissions, longer hospital stays and unnecessary emergency room trips.

"All of this drives up the nation's medical care spending and contributes to a system that is ineffective and wasteful," he added.

The Mayday Fund report stresses the importance of primary care and calls for all Americans suffering from chronic pain to have access to a well-trained primary care physician who can coordinate high-quality, effective care.

Furthermore, says the report, patients who do not respond to best practices in the primary care setting should have access to evaluation and treatment by a pain medicine specialist.

According to the committee that created the report, chronic pain must be recognized and treated as a chronic illness. The committee recommended several steps to improve access to quality, cost-effective pain care:
  • government, health care payers and health care providers should develop and use coordinated health information technology systems to track pain disorders, treatments and outcomes to improve care;
  • physicians should be trained to assess and treat pain, and licensing examinations should include assessment of clinical knowledge related to pain care;
  • the Health Resources and Services Administration should expand funding for training programs that address pain assessment and management;
  • HHS should establish an independent commission to reform the reimbursement practices for chronic pain treatment;
  • the NIH should increase funding for pain research;
  • the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality should expand funding to establish a set of best practices that could be used to treat specific types of chronic pain;
  • the U.S. surgeon general should create a public education campaign about the risks of untreated and undertreated pain;
  • health care providers, insurers and government should work to eliminate disparities in access to pain care related to race, ethnicity, gender, age and socioeconomic status; and
  • federal, state and local agencies should adopt a balanced approach to the regulation of controlled prescription drugs, particularly opioids.
The report says that with 75 million baby boomers at or near retirement age, pain-related costs to the health care system likely will rise sharply in the near future.