adjunct faculty instructor in
the Depart-
ment of Social Medicine, organized the seminar.
“It’s so important to individually
assess patients,”McGrew adds. “This tool is an effective and
cost efficient method that allows clinicians to make an informed
decision about the use of opioids when treating patients with
chronic pain.”
Another tool available to
physicians is Ohio’s Automated Prescription Monitoring Program,
“a godsend for practitioners,” Marx notes. The program allows
doctors to view their patients’ prescription records and search
for possible medication abuse.
But prescription pain medications
aren’t the only answer for chronic pain. McGrew and Marx
champion physical activity to combat a vicious cycle of disease,
resultant loss of function, fatigue and emotions like anxiety,
frustration, guilt and depression.
“It’s counterintuitive. Most people don’t realize that exercise
helps pain,” says McGrew, who lectures osteopathic medical
students on non-drug pain management techniques. These include
osteopathic manipulation, massage therapy, physical therapy,
heat and cold treatment, acupuncture, biofeedback and other
complementary alternatives to prescription pain medications. She
also arranges for arthritis patients to share their experiences
with fi rst-year students.
“Pain affects everyone regardless of socioeconomic status,
educational level, and disease,” Marx says. “It doesn’t fit
nicely into a specialty, so it’s something that falls through
the cracks a lot.”
When Marx was a medical student at OU-COM, information about
addiction, pain or palliative care wasn’t part of the
curriculum. She says the addition of these to the curriculum,
which is taught during an intensive two-week session, ranks OU-COM
among the top medical schools in Ohio for pain
management education.
To learn more about the Pain and Palliative Group, please visit:
www.seopain.org.
- Susie Shutts
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