Department of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation, Yale University School of Medicine, 800 Howard Ave, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA.
Yale Anesthesiology, Yale-New Haven Hospital, 20 York Street, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA.
Curr Pain Headache Rep. 2018 Jul 10;22(9):58. doi: 10.1007/s11916-018-0713-5.
This review discusses both obvious and hidden barriers in trauma patient access to pain management specialists and provides some suggestions focusing on outcome optimization in the perioperative period.
Orthopedic trauma surgeons strive to provide patients the best possible perioperative pain management, while balancing against potential risks of opioid abuse and addiction. Surgeons often find they are ill-prepared to effectively manage postoperative pain in patients returning several months following trauma surgery, many times still dependent on opioids for pain control. Some individuals from this trauma patient population may also require the care of pain management specialists and/or consultation with drug addiction specialists. As the US opioid epidemic continues to worsen, orthopedic trauma surgeons can find it difficult to obtain access to pain management specialists for those patients requiring complex pain medication management and substance abuse counseling. The current state of perioperative pain management for orthopedic trauma patients remains troubling due to reliance on only opioid analgesics, society-associated risks of opioid medication addiction, an "underground" prescription drug marketplace, and an uncertain legal atmosphere related to opioid pain medication management that can deter pain management physicians from accepting narcotic-addicted patients and discourage future physicians from pursuing advanced training in the specialty of pain management. Additionally, barriers continue to exist among Medicaid patients that deter this patient population from access to pain medicine subspecialty care, diminishing medication management reimbursement rates make it increasingly difficult for trauma patients to receive proper opioid analgesic pain medication management, and a lack of proper opioid analgesic medication management training among PCPs and orthopedic trauma surgeons further contributes to an environment ill-prepared to provide effective perioperative pain management for orthopedic trauma patients.
目的:本篇综述讨论了创伤患者获得疼痛管理专家治疗的明显和潜在障碍,并提供了一些建议,重点关注围手术期的结果优化。
发现:骨科创伤外科医生努力为患者提供尽可能好的围手术期疼痛管理,同时平衡潜在的阿片类药物滥用和成瘾风险。外科医生经常发现,他们准备不足,无法有效管理创伤手术后数月内返回的患者的术后疼痛,许多患者仍然依赖阿片类药物来控制疼痛。这些创伤患者群体中的一些人可能还需要疼痛管理专家的护理和/或药物成瘾专家的咨询。随着美国阿片类药物流行继续恶化,骨科创伤外科医生可能会发现难以为需要复杂疼痛药物管理和药物滥用咨询的患者获得疼痛管理专家的治疗。由于仅依赖阿片类镇痛药、社会相关的阿片类药物成瘾风险、“地下”处方药市场以及与阿片类药物管理相关的不确定法律氛围,骨科创伤患者的围手术期疼痛管理现状仍然令人担忧,这可能会阻止疼痛管理医生接受成瘾性患者,并阻碍未来医生接受疼痛管理专业的高级培训。此外,医疗补助患者中仍然存在障碍,阻止这一患者群体获得疼痛医学专业治疗,减少药物管理报销率使得创伤患者越来越难以接受适当的阿片类镇痛药疼痛管理,初级保健医生和骨科创伤外科医生缺乏适当的阿片类镇痛药管理培训,进一步导致无法为骨科创伤患者提供有效的围手术期疼痛管理。