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Published 2008-06-25 16:20:00
 


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Veterans Administration Leads New Effort In Treating Pain.
That's Odd; The Prohibitionists Told Us That Pain Is Being Adequately Treated.

VA SEES PAIN IN A NEW LIGHT—ILLNESS
Agency hopes to cut suffering by helping patients cope with it
January 31, 1999
From The Everett Herald
letters@heraldnet.com
http://www.heraldnet.com/
By JOHN HUGHES, Associated Press

(Marijuananews note: This story ran on the AP wire, but I am using this version from The Everett Herald in Washington State because the Washington State Medical Association and many of the states leading politicians opposed the recent medical marijuana initiative there. In doing so they claimed that there was no need for medical marijuana and that the medical profession was adequately treating pain and the other conditions for which is widely used.

Of course, there is no mention of medical marijuana in this article, although one hears stories of VA hospital wards, notably those for veterans paralyzed with spinal cord injuries, that reek of marijuana smoke. It isn't prescribed just ignored.)

See
Seattle Times Editorial Reports Washington State Lt. Governor Brad Owens Fined
For Using Tax Dollars To Campaign Against State Medical Marijuana Initiative

and
Washington State Medical Association Betrays Its Patients And Shows Its Collective Incompetence
and
The University of Washington Student Newspaper Reports on Medical Marijuana Bill -- The Governor is Bizarre
and
Ralph Seeley, Freedom Fighter -- Obituary by Michael D. Cutler, Esq.

WASHINGTON - In a first for the huge health provider, the Department of Veterans Affairs next month will launch a systemwide effort to reduce pain and suffering for many of its 3.4 million patients.

All VA doctors and nurses will be instructed to treat pain as a "fifth vital sign," which means they are supposed to assess and record patients’ pain just as they would note other health care basics Re blood pressure, pulse, temperature and breathing rate.

The doctors and nurses. are to ask patients to rate the pain on a scale of 1 to 10. They the would consult with patients about ways to deal with it.

"It’s really changing how people think," said Dr. Kenneth Kizer, the VA’s undersecretary for health. "We’re too often obsessed with the diagnosis and finding what’s going on in a molecular, cellular, pharmacological level as opposed to, is the person feeling better?"

It might take two or three years to implement the program at all 1,100-sites where the VA delivers health care, he said.

Arthur Zeeck 44, of Tacoma, had to quit his job as an aircraft mechanic in 1994 because of pain from Crohn’s disease, a stress-related gastrointestinal disorder. He was dissatisfied with his pain treatment at a local civilian hospital.

"They weren’t taking the pain I was having very seriously," he said.

"They thought I was just trying to get drugs."

But after finding his way to the pain clinic at the Seattle VA hospital - and after a year and a half of outpatient visits there - he is ready to begin a new career as a home inspector.

"In the pain clinic, they make you realize that zero pain is something that you’re probably never going to achieve," Zeeck said. "They control the pain medication here. Before, they were giving me pain medication every time I said ouch."

Officials at the Seattle VA say they combine physical medicines with mental-health disciplines and occupational therapy.

"Pain has been treated as a symptom for so long, and it’s really a condition that needs treatment," psychologist Mark Hawley said.

The initiative, which evolved from agency efforts to improve end-of-life care, also calls for staff training in pain treatment and spending $3 million to $5 million on pain-management research.

That such a large medical system - the nation’s biggest - is heightening efforts to fight pain is laudable, health and pain experts said.
See
Study Faults Pain Treatment In Cancer Patients; "Most doctors are not well trained to manage pain." Just Our Lives

It really is a significant step forward," said Richard Muir, executive director of the American Pain Society, a professional society of nearly 4,000 clinicians and academics based in suburban Chicago and founded in 1978. "There are not many large organizations that have put together a systematic approach to pain management."

Dr. Thomas Reardon, a Portland, Ore., doctor and president elect of the American Medical Association, said, "There’s a new awareness out there among the health care industry that we need to do a better job" on pain.

The VA effort is "another circumstance where a hospital system ... is aware that we need to make improvements and is talking steps to improve," Reardon said.

The effort to make pain treatment a higher priority in medicine is not new. Experts have been talking of the need to improve pain treatment at least since the 1970s, and the American Pain Society has urged treatment of pain as a ‘fifth vital sign’ since 1995.

Many hospitals have established pain centers and pain-treatment programs.

Many others, however, are doing little or nothing on the pain front, experts say.

"It’s spotty, and some years ago, it was universally just terrible," said C. Richard Chapman, an anesthesiology professor at the University of Washington and president-elect of the Society.

Studies and experts estimate that tens of millions of Americans suffer from some sort of pain each year, with persistent pain costing around $100 billion a year in lost productivity. A study published " June’s Journal of the American Medical Association found that one of four ‘elderly cancer patients in nursing homes received nothing for their daily pain.
See
"50 percent of patients who died in hospitals suffered moderate to severe pain."
But We Are Told That There Is No Need For Medical Marijuana -- 2 Articles

Part of the blame lies with patients, who don’t want to be seen as whining for pain treatment, said Barbara Coombs Lee, executive director of Compassion In Dying in Portland, Ore.

"Patients are sensitive to be labeled as drug seekers," she said.

"They don’t want to appear as being weak.’

And some doctors worry they will draw the attention of authorities if they prescribe too many painkillers, experts say. Many doctors were taught to be wary of giving large doses of drugs have concerns about addiction.

"The general message that was given was that one had to be very cautious,’ said Dr. Michael Whitcomb, senior vice president for medical education at the Association of American Medical Colleges.

Copyright: 1999 The Daily Herald Co.

 
 

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