Question: What is Pain Management?
Pain management is a branch of medicine that applies
science to the reduction of pain. It covers a wide spectrum of conditions
including neuropathic pain,
sciatica, postoperative pain
and more.
Answer: Pain
management is a rapidly growing medical specialty that takes a
multi-disciplinary approach to treating all kinds of pain. Dr. Sameh Yonan, a
pain management specialist at the Cleveland Clinic, says "we evaluate,
rehabilitate and treat people in pain." Your doctor may refer you to pain
management if she or he determines that your pain has become out of control.
Pain Management Specialists: What They Do,
How to Find One
Doctors
who specialize in pain management recognize the complex nature of pain, and a
pain doctor "approaches the problem from all directions," Yonan said.
Ideally, treatment at a pain clinic is patient-centric, but in reality this may
depend on the available resources of the institution. Currently, there are no
established standards for the types of disciplines that must be
included, and this is another reason why treatment offerings will vary from
clinic to clinic.
But
at the very least, experts say that a facility should offer to patients three
types of physicians: a coordinating physician, who provides consultation to
specialists on your behalf, a physical rehabilitation specialist, and a
psychiatrist, to help you deal with any accompanying depression or anxiety,
especially if you have chronic pain.
Other
medical specialties represented in pain management are anesthesiology,
neurosurgery and internal medicine. Your coordinating physician may also refer
you for services from occupational medicine specialists, social workers and/or
alternative and complementary medicine practitioners.
To qualify as a pain management specialist in the eyes of
the American Board of Medical Specialties, a health care provider should be an
MD with board certification in at least one of the following specialties:
·
Anesthesiology
·
Physical rehabilitation
·
Psychiatry and neurology.
Dr. James Dillard, an assistant professor of medicine at Columbia
University College of Physicians and Surgeons, says that the pain management
physician should also have her or his practice limited to that specialty in
which they hold the certification. You can check to see if the doctors at the
pain management clinic you are considering are board certified by going to the American Board of Medical
Specialties web site.
Goals of Pain Management
While
some types of pain come from primary sources such as headaches, and others from
secondary sources such as from surgery, the field of pain management treats all
of it as a disease. This allows for the application of science, and the latest
advances in medicine to relieve your pain. And while many patients, especially
those in chronic pain, see a psychiatrist or therapist as part of the experience,
learning to cope with pain is less and less the focus of treatment.
"We
now have many modalities, including medication, interventional pain management
techniques (nerve blocks, spinal cord stimulators and similar treatments),
along with physical therapy and alternative medicine to help reduce the
pain," says Yonan.
The goal of pain management is to minimize pain, rather
than eliminate it. This is because quite often it is not possible to completely
do away with it. Two other goals are to improve function and increase quality
of life. These three goals go hand-in-hand.
As a first-time patient in a pain management clinic, you
might experience the following:
·
Evaluation.
·
Diagnostic tests,
if necessary, as determined in the evaluation.
·
Referral to surgeon,
if indicated by the tests and evaluation.
·
Interventional treatment, such as injections or spinal cord stimulation.
·
Physical therapy to increase range-of-motion
and strength, and to prepare you to go back to work.
·
Psychiatry to deal with depression, anxiety
and/or other issues that may accompany your chronic pain.
·
Alternative medicine
to provide a complement to your other treatments.
Back and neck pain
sufferers who do best with a pain management program, says Yonan, are those who
have had multiple back surgeries,
including failed surgeries,
and are still in pain, those with neuropathy, and
those for whom it has been determined that surgery would not benefit their
condition.
"People
who have become addicted to pain medication actually need more sophisticated
help than what a pain management program can offer them. A chronic pain rehab
program is a better choice for these people," he says.
According
to Pain Physician, results from research studies on pain management are
not always applicable to the problems patients come in with to the clinics on a
day-to-day basis. Unfortunately, this has a negative effect on insurance
reimbursement and other payment arrangements, as well as standardization of
this medical specialty.
"Better
understanding of pain syndromes by communities and insurance companies and more
studies on pain will help increase insurance coverage for pain management
treatments. In the future, the use of technology will help improve the outcomes
of interventional pain management techniques," Yonan says.
Sources:
Manchikanti, L. MD, Mark V. Boswell, M. MD, PhD., James Giordano, J. PhD Evidenced Based Interventional Pain Management: Principles, Problems, Potential and Applications Pain Physician 2007; 10:329-356
Personal Interview. Dr. Sameh Yonan, MD, Pain Management Specialist at Hillcrest, Willoughby and South Pointe Pain Centers at Cleveland Clinic Health System
James N. Dillard, MD., DC. CAc. The Chronic Pain Solution: Your Personal Path to Pain Relief Bantam Dell a division of Random House New York 2003
Manchikanti, L. MD, Mark V. Boswell, M. MD, PhD., James Giordano, J. PhD Evidenced Based Interventional Pain Management: Principles, Problems, Potential and Applications Pain Physician 2007; 10:329-356
Personal Interview. Dr. Sameh Yonan, MD, Pain Management Specialist at Hillcrest, Willoughby and South Pointe Pain Centers at Cleveland Clinic Health System
James N. Dillard, MD., DC. CAc. The Chronic Pain Solution: Your Personal Path to Pain Relief Bantam Dell a division of Random House New York 2003
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