Survey of Physician Perspective towards Management of Pain for Chronic Conditions in the Emergency Department

Mod Clin Med Res. 2017 Oct;1(3):55-70. doi: 10.22606/mcmr.2017.13002.

Abstract

Sickle cell disease (SCD) pain is often acute-on-chronic, likening it to other chronic acute-on-chronic pain conditions. Pain treatment of SCD was already reported as inadequate prior to the current opioid epidemic, but attitudes underlying treatment were understudied. Understanding these attitudes prior to the current epidemic would be revealing. Therefore in 1997, before the current opioid epidemic, we surveyed physicians' attitudes toward pain management and treatment preferences for acute pain exacerbations in the Emergency Department in SCD versus those of chronic pancreatitis and chronic low back pain, two other acute-on-chronic pain diseases. Thirty-nine residency trainees were surveyed in a level one triage hospital. Resident estimates of the rate of opioid addiction in SCD were higher than estimates in both chronic pancreatitis and chronic low back pain. Most residents relied on their personal clinical experience rather than external sources of data or knowledge as the most important driver when they managed chronic pain. This survey research shows that, predating the current opioid epidemic, there was both a backdrop of opioid-phobia and a bias against treating SCD pain compared to other chronic pain conditions among our sample. Repeating this survey research among current training physicians, along with surveys of other attitudes, would provide useful comparisons.

Keywords: Pain management; chronic pain; internal medicine physicians; opioids; sickle cell disease.