Publication | Closed Access
Medical Education for Pain and Addiction: Making Progress toward Answering a Need
25
Citations
4
References
1994
Year
Opioid EpidemicPain TherapyPain DisordersSubstance UsePain MedicineHarm ReductionAddiction MedicinePediatric Pain ManagementPain ManagementHealth SciencesPsychiatryAddiction TreatmentPreoperative PainMedical StudentsPain TreatmentNursingPain ResearchSubstance AbuseChronic Pain ProblemsAddictionPatient SafetyCancer PainPain MedicationsMedicineTrauma PainOpioid Use Disorder
Pain is one of the most frequent presenting symptoms for patients who come to a physician's office. Despite the frequency of this presentation, little consistent, systematic information is provided to medical students or physicians about the treatment of pain. In addition, relatively little information is given about the recognition and prevention of drug abuse and about how to prescribe analgesics rationally to minimize the chances for abuse. This lack of educational preparation for both pain and addiction contributes to significant fear and inability on the part of health professionals to diagnose and treat both conditions. It creates a barrier of fear to prescribe adequate doses of pain medications for patients who present with both acute and chronic pain problems. Inadequate medicating can be caused by the physician's overriding worry about creating addiction in a patient. Morgan has called this problem “opiophobia.”
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