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    Report: More than 100 million suffer lasting pain

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly a third of Americans experience long-lasting pain — the kind that lingers for weeks to months — and too often feel stigma rather than relief from a health care system poorly prepared to treat them, the Institute of Medicine said Wednesday.

    The staggering tab: Chronic pain is costing the nation at least $558 billion a year in medical bills, sick days and lost productivity, the report found. That's more than the cost of heart disease, the No. 1 killer.

    All kinds of ailments can trigger lingering pain, from arthritis to cancer, spine problems to digestive disorders, injuries to surgery. Sometimes, chronic pain can be a disease all its own, the report stressed.

    Whatever the cause, effective pain management is "a moral imperative," the report concludes, urging the government, medical groups and insurers to take a series of steps to transform the field.

    "We're viewing this as a critical issue for the United States," said Dr. Philip Pizzo, Stanford University's dean of medicine, who chaired the months-long probe.

    For too long, doctors and society alike have viewed pain "with some prejudice, a lot of judgment and unfortunately not a lot of informed fact," he said.

    The toll isn't surprising, said Dr. Doris K. Cope, pain chief at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, who paused between patients Wednesday to read the report. The population's getting older and less fit, and more survivors of diseases like cancer live for many years with side effects from treatments that saved them.

    Too many patients think a pill's the answer, she said, when there are multiple different ways to address pain including physical therapy, stress reduction, weight loss, and teaching coping skills. Patients who take control of their pain fare better, but too many have unrealistic expectations.

    "Pain is not simple," Cope said. "We as physicians need to be healers and educators as well as technicians. We certainly don't want to be pill mills."

    Doctors do worry about overprescribing narcotic painkillers, and law enforcement steps to fight the serious problem of prescription drug abuse can be one barrier to pain care. But the institute countered that it's far more likely for a pain patient to get inadequate care than for a drug-seeker to walk out with an inappropriate prescription. While newer, better medicines are needed, those narcotic painkillers are a safe and effective option for the right patient, the report said.

    But barriers to good care extend far beyond that issue, said the panel, which analyzed research and the reports of more than 2,000 patients and caregivers about pain's toll.

    Because pain can't be seen like bleeding, or felt like a lump, or X-rayed like a broken bone, or heard like a skipped heartbeat, health workers who wrongly believe the intensity of pain should correlate to a specific medical finding may diminish or even dismiss a patient's complaint, the report found.

    In fact, pain is highly subjective. Two people with the same injury may feel different degrees of pain depending on genetic factors that affect pain tolerance, what other illnesses they have, stress or depression, and even whether they feel support or criticism from health workers or their families.

    Care must be tailored to each patient. Yet too few doctors are trained in its management, the report said, citing a study that found stand-alone pain courses aren't required in most medical schools. Also, insurance may not cover time-consuming counseling in pain-management techniques, consultations with specialists or even non-drug care.

    Pizzo called the finances sometimes perverse: Some insurance pays for an operation for low back pain but not much cheaper and often more effective physical therapy.

    And prompt care for acute pain, like that from surgery or a broken bone, is important as well. Serious pain that isn't properly treated sometimes can hijack the nervous system and essentially rewire it for pain — leaving misery after the condition that caused the initial pain is resolved.

    The report concluded at least 116 million adults suffer long-lasting pain, consistent with some previous estimates, but couldn't say how many cases are severe or disabling.

    The economic costs, however, are sure to attract attention in Congress, which mandated the report as part of the new health care law. The report found health care for pain costs $261 billion to $300 billion a year, while lost productivity adds another $297 billion to $336 billion. The federal Medicare program accounts for a quarter of those health bills.

    Among the report's recommendations:

    —Health providers should perform and document formal pain assessments of patients, a step toward proper treatment.

    —Medicare, Medicaid, workers' compensation programs and private health plans should cover individualized pain care.

    —Pain specialty groups should create collaborations with primary care doctors to improve patient care and counseling.

    —The government and health organizations should better educate patients and the public about pain, to help eliminate stigma.

    —The National Institutes of Health should increase pain research, including designating one of its centers as the lead institute for pain.

    —Training programs for doctors, nurses, dentists and other health professionals should include pain education.

    —By the end of next year, the Health and Human Services Department should create a strategy for dealing with pain as a public health problem and reducing barriers to care.

     

    34 comments

    • Stacy  •  11 mths ago
      How sad is it that my healthcare won't pay for my physical therapy but will pay for vicodin instead. :(
    • BillW  •  11 mths ago
      My doctor won't perscribe pain pills. He tells folks to excersise, lose weight, meditate, etc while healing, He says we've become a nation of wimps that can't tough out some temporary pain. He also said that alot of this cronic pain is created and perpetuated in peoples' heads once they discovered the buzz dope delivers. My gramps carried his pain medicine in a hip flask. A snort now and then kept him limber!
      • mindbird 11 mths ago
        Report this moron to the State Medical Board and get a new doctor.
      • J 11 mths ago
        I'm uninsured and get NO pain relief whatsoever for my multiple health problems. OK, so I take an occasional store-brand ibuprofen, which will probably eventually kill my liver. Anyway, the point is...your doctor is an ass.
      • 19MCJ50 11 mths ago
        Find another doctor. He's a quack.
    • Space Vegetable  •  11 mths ago
      The biggest problem is that doctors are afraid to prescribe adequate pain meds because of the hysteria over them perpetuated by law enforcement and the "nanny" crowd that thinks they know what's best for everyone else. We need to let doctors prescribe what's needed and stop allowing people to suffer because of a few bad apples who abuse the stuff. It's like saying nobody should drive more than an hour a week because some people speed and cause accidents.
    • Dusty  •  11 mths ago
      you are pretty much on your own with chronic pain issues............even in the last stages of life when there is pain they are quite unwilling to provide sufficient relief. I will NEVER forget how the staff on skilled nursing were unwilling even to provide what mom's physician had ordered.
    • D.  •  11 mths ago
      no kidding - the pain management clinic I went to (associated with a hospital) treated me like a criminal. I understand the need to regulate narcotics and opiates, but not at the expense of humiliating and stigmatizing those with legitimate pain issues.
    • Earl M  •  11 mths ago
      Stop lumping health care workers in with the real barriers to care - insurance company and government red tape!
      • Justin Case 11 mths ago
        The real barrier to good care for all is the lack of competition in the medical and pharmaceutical industries. If medical industry prices were competitive, the insurance industry would get straightened out (i.e., it should be needed only for catastrophic instances). Agree with you about government.
    • Dediadreamer  •  11 mths ago
      They can't see it so it must not exist. I have lived with chronic and acute pain for 40 years, with nothing visually physically wrong. It affects every aspect of my life. The one thing that helps is Chiropractic and deep tissue massage, neither of which are covered by insurance.
      • Skylar 11 mths ago
        Chiropractic and water therapy are the only things that have helped me. I haven't tried the deep tissue massage. Unfortunately I can't afford either and as you said things like that are not covered by insurance.
    • Agopian  •  11 mths ago
      And as far as insurance is concerned: The government has never had any oversight on them. They do and charge as they please. They pay for what they want and dont pay when they want to. It is the only industry that primarily does what they want when they want and the governement is asleep at the wheel.
    • Marc  •  11 mths ago
      Health care worker indifference is less of an issue with pain management than is the rampant abuse of narcotic pain medication, and the resulting strict oversight that law enforcement places on the medical profession. As a result, doctors are very cautious about treating pain.
      • mindbird 11 mths ago
        One major point of the article is that doctors are cruelly cautious about relieving pain. The people in pain are not responsible for drug addiction and drug addicts.
    • FooFighter  •  11 mths ago
      Yeah... not sure it's the health care workers that are the problem here... try insurers that don't believe in paying for things they don't understand because they don't actually understand human health whatsoever. You can't get care if you don't resources to cover it.
    • DrMallard  •  11 mths ago
      Doctors who do legitimate pain management, caring for patients who have genuinely demonstrable injuries (multiple fractures that didn't heal correctly, ruptured disks, severe arthritis, you name it) are, just like their patients, ALSO stigmatised - and subjected to everything from loss of license to loss of liberty (as in prison). This country's tough-minded attitude in this matter is downright inhumane. Now it's
      being carried over to other folks as well, such as smokers first and now the overweight. Things are starting to get REALLY ugly.
    • Skylar  •  11 mths ago
      Those of you posting that pain is just because you are getting older and exercise or calcium fixes everything are ignorant! Maybe for you that helps, but then again you would be lumped in the NOT needing pain management group. Those that feel "real" (yes, there is a huge difference) pain daily that lasts for weeks, months, even years need help. They are treated as drug addicts if they try and get that help. Change is needed!
    • ScorpionLeather  •  11 mths ago
      Some of this is self-created. America has an obesity epidemic with most people in this country packing on too many pounds, and that in turn creates health problems that leads to chronic pain. For example if your knees are always hurting, then think about stopping those daily dinner trips to the Cheesecake Factory.
    • Agopian  •  11 mths ago
      There was a recent change in all this. The GP didnt want to handle it because of the meddling goverment oversite so they send you to a PAIN CLINIC. The pain clinic gives you want you want as long as you will submit to injections in the spine. Of which do no good at all after a few hours. And they are about 8,000.00 dollars every 3 months. So now it is very hard to get treated for pain. And our goverment dont really understand that all they are doing is driving those in need of pain relief to illicit drugs. Boy what a real group of idiots
    • A Yahoo! User  •  11 mths ago
      I don't see the need to regulate narcotics and opiates. If they were available to anyone over the counter at low prices- the need for them wouldn't be as great as they are today.
      They would always be available and over time people would use them responsibly and be tuned in their their own individual need for them.
      They wouldn't be 'abused' (as it's put).
    • Observer  •  11 mths ago
      For me it started with some burning in a leg muscle. I thought I had strained it cycling. The pain never quite went away. About a year after it started it returned one day and stayed. After a year of neurologists, etc, I found a pain management facility that is part of a hospital. I got the meds I needed while we continued to look for other specialists and get a different opinion. Along with the meds there comes urinalysis to make sure no abuse is going on. CT scans, MRI's, neurological and other test proved negative. Then I had a muscle biopsy done. A condition called denervation atrophy presented itself. Because I am in excellent physical condition due to cycling, it is possible this masked the condition. I am relieved to know there is a cause for my pain even though I am not happy having it. I can only hope it doesn't progress.
    • Ann  •  11 mths ago
      I live with pain everyday because I am getting older, I walk and exercise..so stop crying and get moving.
    • 19MCJ50  •  11 mths ago
      I'm sure it's more than one third! Dealing with pain from the medical community is a joke. The only time they seem truly concerned is when you're recovering from surgery. Most doctors haven't a clue how difficult it is to even GET in to see them. Everything is from the perspective YOU ARE FAKING AND JUST TRYING TO GET HIGH. Pain management is behind a huge percentage of the illegal drug trade. If doctors would deal with it openly and with consideration to the people living in pain....I'd love to see what kind of impact that had on street drugs.
    • krisna coco  •  11 mths ago
      acupuncture
    • lilmsb0dn  •  11 mths ago
      The problem we're having in this country is trying to separate the legitimate cases with those who are abusing. Granted, drug companies are taking steps to make it so people cannot do things like crush tablets into powder, turn into gel when water is added, and irritate the nose if snorted.
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