The chronic need to improve the management of pain
In this issue, Drs Morley-Forster, Clark, Speechley and Moulin report on their survey conducted by Ipsos-Reid in June 2001 (pages 189-194). Only physicians who met the eligibility criteria of having written 20 or more prescriptions for moderate to severe pain in the preceding four weeks or having de...
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doaj-a54d1ba660844a28af600fe9e37067172020-11-25T00:29:54ZengHindawi LimitedPain Research and Management1203-67652003-01-018418718810.1155/2003/548943The chronic need to improve the management of painEldon Tunks0Hamilton Health Sciences, Chedoke Site, Chedoke Rehabilitation Centre, Hamilton, Ontario, CanadaIn this issue, Drs Morley-Forster, Clark, Speechley and Moulin report on their survey conducted by Ipsos-Reid in June 2001 (pages 189-194). Only physicians who met the eligibility criteria of having written 20 or more prescriptions for moderate to severe pain in the preceding four weeks or having devoted 20% of their time to palliative care were eligible to participate. Sixty-eight per cent of the respondents thought that moderate to severe chronic pain was not well managed in Canada. Despite this opinion, 23% of physicians in palliative care practice and 34% of primary care doctors stated that they would not use opioids to treat moderate to severe chronic noncancer pain even as a third-line treatment after two previous medications had failed. One-quarter to one-third were concerned about the potential for addiction, and a smaller percentage reported concern about the potential for patient abuse and/or misuse, and side effects. Fear of a College audit resulting in the loss of their medical licence was cited by 10% of primary care physicians. When asked what obstacle hindered their use of strong opioid analgesics, an unexplained 10% of palliative care doctors and 14% of primary care doctors answered "nothing in particular".http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2003/548943 |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Eldon Tunks |
spellingShingle |
Eldon Tunks The chronic need to improve the management of pain Pain Research and Management |
author_facet |
Eldon Tunks |
author_sort |
Eldon Tunks |
title |
The chronic need to improve the management of pain |
title_short |
The chronic need to improve the management of pain |
title_full |
The chronic need to improve the management of pain |
title_fullStr |
The chronic need to improve the management of pain |
title_full_unstemmed |
The chronic need to improve the management of pain |
title_sort |
chronic need to improve the management of pain |
publisher |
Hindawi Limited |
series |
Pain Research and Management |
issn |
1203-6765 |
publishDate |
2003-01-01 |
description |
In this issue, Drs Morley-Forster, Clark, Speechley and Moulin report on their survey conducted by Ipsos-Reid in June 2001 (pages 189-194). Only physicians who met the eligibility criteria of having written 20 or more prescriptions for moderate to severe pain in the preceding four weeks or having devoted 20% of their time to palliative care were eligible to participate. Sixty-eight per cent of the respondents thought that moderate to severe chronic pain was not well managed in Canada. Despite this opinion, 23% of physicians in palliative care practice and 34% of primary care doctors stated that they would not use opioids to treat moderate to severe chronic noncancer pain even as a third-line treatment after two previous medications had failed. One-quarter to one-third were concerned about the potential for addiction, and a smaller percentage reported concern about the potential for patient abuse and/or misuse, and side effects. Fear of a College audit resulting in the loss of their medical licence was cited by 10% of primary care physicians. When asked what obstacle hindered their use of strong opioid analgesics, an unexplained 10% of palliative care doctors and 14% of primary care doctors answered "nothing in particular". |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2003/548943 |
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