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DrugBuyersAdministrator
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Not All Back Pain Treated the Same
      #159635 - 05/05/04 08:03 AM

Link to HealthDay

Quote:


Not All Back Pain Treated the Same
Opioids used more in the South and for less educated, low-income patients

By Kathleen Doheny
HealthDay Reporter


FRIDAY, April 16 (HealthDayNews) -- Whether your doctor prescribes potent opioid drugs for your back pain can depend on some unlikely factors: where you live, what type of insurance you have, and your educational level and income.

New research concludes that lesser-educated, lower-income patients and those living in the South are more likely to be given opioids, which are sometimes referred to as narcotics, are prescribed for their potent pain-killing ability, and have the potential for addiction.

Xuemei Luo, a research associate at the Duke University Medical Center, and her team analyzed data from 1996 to 1999 in the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, a national survey conducted by the government. The findings appear in the April 15 issue of Spine.

"To my knowledge, there has been no national study to examine patterns of opioid use among individuals with back pain in the United States," Luo said. "We looked at the pattern of use and the trend of use. We found there is a wide variation in opioid use among individuals with different education levels and income."

In the study, Luo evaluated the use of codeine, morphine, hydromorphone, hydrocodone, oxycodone, methadone, fentanyl and others.

In all, almost 9,000 survey respondents from 1996 through 1999 reported back pain, defined for the study as pain experienced in the spine area.

Overall, opioid use rates increased slightly from 1996 to 1999. During 1996, 11.6 percent of those surveyed had at least one opioid prescription; by 1999 it was 12.6 percent. The rate of oxycodone use doubled during the four-year period. Hydrocodone also increased, but at a slower pace.

Doctors in the South were more likely than those in other regions to prescribe the opioids, Luo found.

The big surprise, she said, was that patients with public insurance rather than private insurance were more likely to be on opioids. In addition, patients with less than a 12th-grade education consistently used more opioids, with rates ranging from 13.1 percent to 14.5 percent during the four-year period; those with a greater than 12th-grade education ranged from 7.6 percent to 10.8 percent. And patients in low-income families were also more likely to get opioids, with a range of 12.8 percent to 15.9 percent, compared to a range of 8.5 percent to 10.3 percent for high-income families. Luo said she did not evaluate these differences.

Back pain is a major health-care concern, Luo noted, with about 20 percent of adult Americans suffering at least one episode during a one-year period. An earlier study by Luo showed health-care expenses for back pain patients totaled more than $90 billion annually, with approximately $26 billion of that amount directly attributable to treating the pain.

Other experts, however, had some criticisms of the study.

For one thing, it didn't delve into some important information, said Dr. Arya Nick Shamie, director of the Comprehensive Spine Center at Santa Monica UCLA Medical Center.

"We have to understand what the source of the back pain was to begin with," he said. "We have to look at whether these patients needed opioid treatment."

"If you have a patient with disk herniation and severe leg pain, if you put them on opioids you have not treated the cause of the pain, and opioids would not be a good treatment," he explained.

Even with the missing links, however, the study does give some good advice for back pain patients, said Shamie and his colleague, Dr. David Fish, an assistant professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation at UCLA.

"You put someone on opioids as a last resort," Fish said. "Make sure you have tried other options for treatment in conjunction with, or before, narcotics."

Added Shamie: "The most important thing is to find out the reason for your back pain before you commit to opioid treatment. There might be something else you can do."

More information

To learn more about pain, visit the American Pain Foundation. To learn more about lower back pain, visit the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons or Spine-health.com.



SOURCES: Xuemei Luo, Ph.D., research associate, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C.; David Fish, M.D., M.P.H., assistant professor, physical medicine and rehabilitation, department of orthopaedic surgery, UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, and physician, Santa Monica UCLA Medical Cener, Ca.; Arya Nick Shamie, M.D., orthopedic surgeon, director, Comprehensive Spine Center, Santa Monica UCLA Medical Center, and assistant professor, orthopaedic surgery and neurosurgery, UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles; April 15, 2004, Spine

Copyright © 2004 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.





--------------------
"Whosoever is spared personal pain must feel himself called to help in diminishing the pain of others." Dr Albert Schweitzer


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redhill
Banned. Flames, offending others


Reged: 06/02/03
Posts: 278
Loc: Hell on Earth, for now
Re: Not All Back Pain Treated the Same [Re: DrugBuyers]
      #160031 - 05/06/04 01:05 PM

Quote:

"If you have a patient with disk herniation and severe leg pain, if you put them on opioids you have not treated the cause of the pain, and opioids would not be a good treatment," he explained.





Now I am curious, since this is what is wrong with me (among other things), and I have done the Vioxx, the steroid shots, even an RF lesioning (microwaving of a nerve to partially sever it, interrupting pain signals, but still allowing enough nerve feedback for muscles to keep functioning.)

So what condition is it going to take to be properly and consistently treated with opiates, if that should be your choice, as a free consenting adult in a free country who pays your doctor royally for his/her services?

Because traditionally you'd hear about people with back and leg pain being treated with OxyContin, Palladone, MST-Continus, and the like.
And they were mostly content, functional, and productive on those medications, or even because of them.

And with a recent spike in media attention, 99 per cent negative, and mostly siding with drug-prohibitionist attitudes (and citing drugwar platitutes - how poetic ..LOL), suddenly millions upon millions are totally, well...out of luck.
Thank you - NewsSpeak magazine...!

They're now being shovelled Vioxx and Neurontin , and told to pray the rosary (not that there is a thing wrong with that, but I do not accept that as an Rx for MY pain) or just think positive thoughts. So it's a giant leap backwards in the field of pain treatment, a trend that's only recent to begin with.

Dang it we were just on the right track, until, say 1995 or so! The heavies (narcotics) were just being made available as viable treatment options, and snap! Newsweek and two consecutive anti-drug presidents (see, I am non-partisan!) just HAVE to ruin it for millions of unfortunate souls.

It's fine to get drunk and medicate pain that way, even though that particular intoxicant is so damaging, yet these benevolent opioids are the scapegoat of a world gone wild with lust for power with a bug up its collective @$$ about drug-prohibition. Where's Bill Hicks when we need him...?

I hereby want to congratulate myself on post # CC (200)!

Red


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carrigaline
Journeyman


Reged: 01/22/03
Posts: 82
Loc: So Cal
Re: Not All Back Pain Treated the Same [Re: redhill]
      #160047 - 05/06/04 01:47 PM

I have very similar medical issues. That is why I am grateful for this board. With my medical records and mri reports, I have found a compassionate doctor through drugbuyers.com, who doesn't try to shoo me away with a prescription for zoloft and vioxx. I will be 50 this year, and it is humiliating to have my very young PCP look at me with a blank stare when I try to talk to her about my pain issues. She knows they are legitimate. I finally realized she's just not interested if it can't be cured by vioxx and countless rounds of PT.

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rockystuart
Enthusiast


Reged: 03/11/04
Posts: 206
Loc: San Fran Bay Area, Calif
Re: Not All Back Pain Treated the Same [Re: carrigaline]
      #160076 - 05/06/04 03:24 PM

Keep at it carrie -
Under US law (Cronic pain suffers act) us cronic pain suffers have the RIGHT to be pain free and live as normal a life as we can. Unfortunately in states without a corresponding Pain sufferers act the local doctors are so scared of DEA/FDA/AMA that many will not uphold their hippocratic oath to 'relieve suffering'

AT the money they earn their more concerned about the BMW, the pool cleaning and would just prefer to NOT TREAT cronic pain - unless you're dying.

Their not worried about terminal patients becoming addicted.

Well, I have a terminal condition - called life.

The only thing everyone has in common about their life is - NOBODY GETS OUT ALIVE!;

PS I have spinal fusions - in degenerate state. apophysical disk degenration and anterior bone spurs - many days I cannot walk without meds. BUt that bone on bone noise still bothers me - even when it doesn't hurt.


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tray1
Enthusiast


Reged: 11/22/03
Posts: 241
Loc: US
Re: Not All Back Pain Treated the Same [Re: rockystuart]
      #160210 - 05/07/04 04:56 AM

We do have to keep at it, but it definately is infuriating. If I wanted drugs I would go get drugs, I wouldnt go thru all this bs with the battery of tests and drs, never mind the money I have spent, street drugs would be immediate gratification and cheaper if what I was looking for was just to get a high.........it is completely retarded as far as I am concerned and I am realy getting sick of it, I just want to be able to function normally again, I dont think that is alot to ask.........

Tray


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henry1
Enthusiast


Reged: 10/08/03
Posts: 278
Loc: North Central USA
Re: Not All Back Pain Treated the Same [Re: tray1]
      #160303 - 05/07/04 01:53 PM

Yes its very discouraging. The look on my PCPs face whenever I mention anything about pain medication is always the same. Then the lecture follows. She always says I need to learn to "manage my pain". I have heard that phrase so much its burned into my brain. Then she sends me onto PT, which helps at times but who can afford to go to PT 3 times a week!

--------------------
treading the backward path...


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