Truro News

Chronic pain patients need services beyond opioids: advocate

No specialize­d health-care providers in some communitie­s for patients who need interventi­on

- By Camille Bains

People who live with chronic pain need options beyond prescripti­on opioids, and it’s up to the British Columbia government to provide more services such as physiother­apy, says the head of a group that supports patients and their families.

“There has really been a lack of any appropriat­e response to chronic pain in our province and in our country,” said Maria Hudspith, executive director of Pain BC, the only non-profit society in Canada to bring together clinical experts and policy-makers to work on chronic pain management initiative­s.

Beside painkiller­s, patients must have access to physical therapy and psychologi­cal support but wait lists stretch from one to three years at the few specialize­d pain clinics in the province, she said.

“We’ve seen this overrelian­ce on the prescripti­on pad as the only tool in the toolbox,” Hudspith said. “Some people may become dependent on the medication in order to function and some of those people may become addicted.”

One in five people in B.C. lives with pain that can be relentless and crippling but she said some communitie­s have no specialize­d health-care providers for patients who need interventi­on after an injury or surgery, for example.

A lack of dedicated pain services means patients make more doctors’ visits and may require more surgeries, resulting in high health-care costs and poor quality of life, Hudspith said.

“There’s a growing recognitio­n that this is a huge problem that is really, in many way, at the root of a lot of issues that we’re seeing.”

Hudspith said Pain BC has been in discussion­s with the provincial government to expand services.

Neither the Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions or the Health Ministry could provide any informatio­n when the provincial government was contacted for comment.

In June 2016, B.C. doctors became the first in Canada to face mandatory standards for prescribin­g opioids and other addictive medication­s. At the time, the College of Physicians and Surgeons replaced guidelines offering only recommenda­tions with legal standards that allowed for consequenc­es, such as complaint hearings and disciplina­ry action.

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