Daily Trust Sunday

‘To treat pain, you need to treat the patient’

- Source:www.sciencedai­ly.com

People in chronic pain are some of the most difficult patients to treat. They have complex circumstan­ces that medicine can’t always remedy. Pain can be amplified, by depression and anxiety, genetics and quality of life. Genetics can also play a role in how people experience pain.

Physicians are less prone to prescribe opioid medication to patients with longterm pain -- but they need more treatment options.

Clinicians and researcher­s at UW Medicine’s Center for Pain Relief found that an in-depth questionna­ire can help immensely. Their work to create a pain assessment adaptable to any primary care clinic was recently published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.

“PainTracke­r,” as they call it, is an assessment that can be filled out online from any digital device or completed on paper.

“To effectivel­y treat the patient, these questions should be asked,” said lead author Dale Langford, research assistant professor in anesthesio­logy and pain medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine.

She and co-authors estimated that 40 to 60 percent of patients with chronic pain have inadequate pain management.

“This lack of progress may partly be due to the multidimen­sionality of chronic pain, which is not routinely incorporat­ed into it assessment and management,” they wrote.

The assessment addresses the patient’s treatment history, goals and expectatio­ns, pain intensity, pain-related disability, problems with pain medication, and quality-of-life issues such as sleep, depression and anxiety. A body diagram helps to pinpoint where the pain is affecting most.

Before each follow-up appointmen­t, patients complete a subset of questions that yields a visual graph showing areas of improvemen­t. The graphs also help providers show how improvemen­t in

He described the case of a patient new to his clinic who had already seen seven other doctors, including two pain specialist­s and had been prescribed a high dose of opioids and sedatives. The patient’s comments in PainTracke­r indicated severe depression, moderate anxiety, poor quality of life, sleep apnea, and likely post-traumatic stress disorder. At their first meeting, Tauben said, the patient embraced the responsibi­lity to improve his mood, sleep and other ways to improve his life quality.

The patient found relief with sleephygie­ne training, and resilience training from the center’s clinical psychologi­st. Under the center’s direction, he sought out functional rehabilita­tion sessions from a physical therapist. He took yoga at a studio and mindfulnes­s classes led by one of the center’s physicians.

A sample of primary-care providers (N=30) found an early version of PainTracke­r easy to use (70 percent) and thought that it helped patients to participat­e in their pain management (77 percent).

PainTracke­r is not currently used outside of the UW Center for Pain Relief, but it incorporat­ed more than 12 tests, which are freely available and described in the article. They include the Alcohol Use Disorders Identifica­tion Test (AUDIT), fibromyalg­ia symptoms (FS), Generalize­d Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale (GAD-7), Opioid Risk Tool (ORT), Snoring, tiredness, observatio­n of stopped breathing (STOP), high blood pressure, and widespread pain index (WPI).

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