Hi Sandel,
The field of pain management is an ever evolving specialty, still in it's infancy.
That is why it was so important that our Gov here in BC recognized and designated pain as disease in and of itself. With that recognition in place it is much easier for the Pain Centers to get the badly needed funding to expand and yes that that includes education. Also with this designation it will help to attract bright minds to the specialty. But it's not just the specialist that need to be trained as your posting pointed out “With little or no specific training in pain management," "doctors may intend to help but leave most patients under-assessed and under-treated." This applies to all areas of the world.
Here is an interesting article recently published about a pain study in Switzerland. It speaks to the fact universally accepted guidelines are required for all doctors to be able to effectively treat chronic pain patients.
Quote:
October 30, 2009 - 8:59 AM Pain study finds health system chronically ill
Image caption: Does this Swiss doctor know what he is doing? (Keystone)
Findings from a government-sponsored study into how doctors treat chronic pain are in part a condemnation of Switzerland's exploding health costs.
The authors of the study, "Musculoskeletal Heath – Chronic Pain", said that many treatments including surgery were often carried out unnecessarily.
Lead author Andreas Stuck, a geriatrics specialist at Bern University, told swissinfo.ch that the study revealed, for example, surgery for hip, shoulder or knee problems was scheduled 40 times more often in some regions than in others.
"Orthopaedic measures are used when in fact other treatments would have been preferable and the orthopaedic procedure would not have been required. This would have been less costly and perhaps even more effective," Stuck said.
While the authors have no conclusive evidence as to why there are such large differences between Swiss regions, Stuck says the example does highlight the lack of guidelines for physicians to follow when treating patients with chronic ailments.
The five-year study, funded through the National Research Programme, also found that some types of common treatments are ineffective, including electrical stimulation and injections into joints.
On the other hand, some doctors are reluctant to recommend any treatment at all, preferring instead to prescribe painkillers when physiotherapy would in fact deliver results.
Stuck says he hopes the study will lead to universally accepted guidelines since the conclusions "demonstrate that more clarity is needed on what kind of treatment and diagnostic procedure is offered, and at what point".
The comprehensive chronic pain study includes more than two dozen investigations into various aspects of musculoskeletal ailments, how they are treated and the long term impact. The results of three of the projects were presented at a news conference in Bern on Thursday.
« More clarity is needed on what kind of treatment and diagnostic procedure is offered, and at what point. »
Andreas Stuck, lead author Chronic costs
The confusion that reigns on the chronic pain front has major implications for Switzerland's health care system – one of the most expensive worldwide - and the government's efforts to control costs.
It is estimated that people suffering from musculoskeletal ailments cost Swiss taxpayers up to SFr14 billion ($13.69 billion) a year or 3.2 per cent of Gross Domestic Product.
Almost a third of all consultations with physicians are due to such complaints. And employers lose SFr4.3 billion a year through sick days taken by staff suffering from back pain.
Research into different ways of treating back pain found that patients who received physiotherapy took fewer sick days over a three-year period and cost the system around SFr10,000 less than those who were only prescribed painkillers.
Pro-active therapy
"In the case of back pain, there needs to be a more pro-active, function-centred, early rehabilitation therapy," Stuck says.
"This has been well known for several years, but it has not found its way into doctors' practices. In some cases the primary care physician has recommended that patients should not move too much, and not to return to work too early, when in fact, they should do the opposite."
The main findings of the chronic pain study are sobering. The authors concluded that a health care system spending approximately SFr4,000 a year per capita lacks an effective early diagnosis system and does too little in the area of prevention.
Employers are given their share of the blame for reacting too late to staff members suffering from chronic back pain. And patients need to take more personal responsibility for dealing with their ailments, added the experts.
Dale Bechtel, swissinfo.ch
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I often wonder if my orthopedic surgeon had put me in orthotics first instead of operating what my life would be like now. He lied in court documents stating that I had already been using orthotics. NOT! But I digress.
Good interesting topic. Thanks.
MsL