Pain Management and Provider Liability: No More Excuses
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics
- Vol. 29 (1) , 28-51
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-720x.2001.tb00038.x
Abstract
Pain is undertreated in the American health-care system at all levels: physician offices, hospitals, long-term care facilities. The result is needless suffering for patients, complications that cause further injury or death, and added costs in treatment overall. The health-care system's failure to respond to patient pain needs corrective action. Excuses for such shortcomings are simply not acceptable any longer.Physicians have long been accused of poor pain management for their patient. The term “opiophobia” has been coined to describe this remarkable clinical aversion to the proper use of opioids to control pain. If the professional mandate of the health-care professional is to relieve suffering, then physicians are falling far short of their obligations by accepting myths about the use of opioids in the face of evidence to the contrary.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- Why Don't Physicians Follow Clinical Practice Guidelines?JAMA, 1999
- Changing Acute Pain Management to Improve Patient OutcomesJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1999
- Barriers to Cancer Pain Relief: Fear of Tolerance and AddictionJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1998
- Economics of unrelieved cancer painAmerican Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine®, 1998
- In Search of a New Ethic for Treating Patients with Chronic Pain: What Can Medical Boards Do?Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 1998
- Comprehensive pretreatment and outcome assessment for chronic opioid therapy in nonmalignant painJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1996
- Cost issues related to pain management: Report from the cancer pain panel of the agency for health care policy and researchJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1994
- The Physician's Responsibility toward Hopelessly Ill PatientsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Problem-Solving Behavior and Theories of Tort LiabilityCalifornia Law Review, 1985
- Clinical Policies and the Quality of Clinical PracticeNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982