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Frank Brennan, Dan Carr, and Michael Cousins (1) provide us with a treatise on the consequences and causes of neglect of pain in medicine. Their broad scope is appropriate for a problem that continues to plague us, even after more than a decade of aggressive efforts at improvement in the United States, efforts in which Dan Carr has been a key leader. The particular strength of their work in this article is that it approaches the questions of pain and pain relief from every direction: as a social issue, an ethical norm, and a legal concern. This is appropriate because the time during which it seemed that discrete, and perhaps easy, changes in policy or education could revolutionize the treatment of patients in pain has passed. Instead, we now have to recognize that what really appears to be operating is a complex ecosystem that supports ambivalence, denial, and suspicion of the circumstances of patients in pain and of those who treat them. Law certainly can influence the system for good or ill; and so legal standards, including recognizing a right to treatment for pain, are significant.
Ethics First If we could come to understand that pain is not merely a cloak that a patient carries and that we can simply push aside, but that it is instead an attack on the human being's core, we might see some progress. As in most medical matters, it is best if ethics takes the lead and law follows.
Trends in the Law This is not to say that there are not still problems with the medical boards in particular states, but a great deal of progress has been made. In addition, although one may believe that increasing the risk of liability for doctors can never be positive, the Bergman case, discussed in their article (1) as well as the very similar Tomlinson case (8), are landmark legal cases. They establish that pain, standing alone and without other physical injury, can be recognized as an injury at law. They demonstrate how patients who suffer in the most egregious cases can seek a remedy in the courtsraw comfort though that may be. When the risk of legal penalty arises only for health care professionals who aggressively treat patients for pain, and not for health care providers who neglect their patients, the scales are out of balance and they could encourage substandard care. Unfortunately, the law has not moved all in one direction. In fact, after some promising developments in 2001 and early 2003, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) took steps backward by withdrawing the consensus document described by Brennan et al. and issuing policy statements that went in the opposite direction. Even the National Association of Attorneys General expressed concern that "state and federal policies are diverging with respect to the relative emphasis on ensuring the availability of prescription pain mediations to those who need them." (9); The prosecution and conviction of a Virginia physician for violation of the Controlled Substances Act, and other similar prosecutions, certainly affects doctors' perceptions of legal risks, even though that conviction was later reversed by a federal appeals court (10). Although the numbers of doctors subject to DEA investigation is quite small, the consequences of such an action are quite severe (11). The DEA has since issued further statements on its policy, leaving its 2003 statement largely intact (11). On the same day, however, the DEA proposed new regulations that would allow doctors to write multiple sequential prescriptions for controlled substances for single patients (12).
The Practice Context Matters For example, treating pain in nursing homes, an area where neglect of pain is particularly prevalent, operates in a legal environment that has created a culture that resists extensive reliance on pharmaceuticals, especially those that may have an impact on alertness. In addition, nursing home patients can present particular challenges in pain management because of the incidence of dementia or other forms of mental confusion. Physicians in that institutional context, however, should feel free of concerns about diversion or addiction. Likewise, physicians treating patients who have cancer or terminal illness, in whatever practice setting and including office-based practice, face essentially no legal risk of medical board or DEA actions for treating patients for pain (13,14). In contrast, concerns about diversion are extreme among physicians practicing in the emergency department, perhaps because doctor and patient are strangers to one another, even though emergency departments are not significant sources of diverted drugs. Emergency departments are not a prime target for investigation and prosecution. It is not the legal risk that explains the hypervigilance in emergency medicine (15). In fact, most concerns about legal risks that might lead physicians to allow patients to suffer arise in the office-based practices that treat patients in chronic pain. The fear of DEA action, in particular, may lead doctors to avoid patients with chronic pain (although there is more to that avoidance than concerns about the DEA) and may steer those who do treat chronic pain patients with controlled substances to undertreat their pain. However, the practice management techniques described in the medical board guidelines will help to reduce those risks considerably.
Where Next? Improvement must begin, again, with professional ethics. The literature on obstacles preventing access to effective pain relief tends to treat these as matters of social or institutional fact. Instead, each of the barriers is essentially a question of ethics. Inadequate skills may be a result of inadequate training in medical or nursing school (16), but failing to learn while in practice breaches the professional's ethical duty to maintain their competencies and continue to learn. Similarly, many of the common "red flags" used to screen out "drug seekers" are ineffective and inaccurate and unethical, as they cause an injustice in excluding entire groups of people solely for irrelevant characteristics. Perhaps the greatest hope is to expand our view of the treatment of pain beyond a question of medical practice and toward a view of pain as a public health crisis. The shift is certainly justified on the basis of the staggering data on the financial costs of untreated pain. A public health approach may shift the focus to systems that will improve outcomes rather than on blaming doctors and other health care professionals. Personal and professional accountability for failing to treat patients competently and compassionately is critical, but so is creating environments that make effective care for patients in pain the norm.
Accepted for publication March 29, 2007.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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