Opioid epidemic: How are we teaching future doctors to treat pain? (2024)

School of MedicineApril 17, 2024

By Liam Connolly

(SACRAMENTO)

Pain is the most common reason that people go to the doctor. Yet, amid the growing need for the treatment of pain, physicians and medical students in the United States have limited training in pain management and prescribing opioids.

The UC Davis School of Medicine, however, has taken a different approach – it has re-examined how pain management is taught, and adopted a new pain curriculum throughout medical education.

UC Davis medical students undergo more than 100 hours of required and dedicated total pain medicine educational content during their four years of training. The School of Medicine is now among the leading medical schools in the world for pain management education.

Need for increased training in pain management

A recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated 51.6 million United States adults (20.9%) experienced chronic pain, and 17.1 million (6.9%) had high-impact chronic pain that results in substantial restriction to daily activities and unnecessary suffering.

Despite the number of patients experiencing chronic pain, many doctors have not been adequately trained in pain management because medical schools traditionally don’t dedicate much time to teaching future physicians about it.

A 2018 study of pain medicine curriculum in 383 medical schools internationally and found 96% of schools in the United Kingdom and United States, and nearly 80% of schools in Europe had no required dedicated teaching in pain medicine.

Additionally, the study showed U.S. medical students received the lowest number of hours (fewer than 10) allocated to pain management training.

“The data clearly showed that pain medicine education at medical schools internationally was not adequately responding to societal needs in terms of the prevalence,” said Naileshni Singh, professor of anesthesiology and pain medicine. “Therefore, we decided to expand the curriculum at UC Davis School of Medicine to include more education on pain management to better prepare tomorrow’s doctors for the growing need to treat pain and address the opioid epidemic.”

Opioid epidemic: How are we teaching future doctors to treat pain? (1)

We decided to expand the curriculum at UC Davis School of Medicine to include more education on pain management to better prepare tomorrow’s doctors for the growing need to treat pain and address the opioid epidemic.” Naileshni Singh

Shift in landscape – opioid epidemic

Another factor that created a shift in the landscape of pain management and a call for action was the opioid epidemic.

Over a 15-year period, from 1999 to 2014, the number of U.S. prescriptions for opioids nearly doubled from 105 million to 207 million. During that same period, fatal overdoses from opioids, prescription and non-prescription such as fentanyl, soared almost five-fold, from 4,000 to 19,000 deaths a year.

“Part of what contributed to this opioid epidemic was poorly understood prescription paradigms for pain treatment and limited education on pain management in medical and other health professional schools,” Singh explained.

In response to the opioid epidemic, administrators of the six University of California medical schools co-authored a paper calling for a coordinated response to the opioid epidemic in California. The article detailed the UC’s urgent need to develop core competencies for pain, substance use disorder and safer opioid prescribing.

“The article outlined the approach that should be taken, the resulting competencies and related work focusing on pain medicine and substance use disorder from clinical and public health perspectives throughout the extensive University of California academic health system,” Singh said.

UC Davis School of Medicine pain education curriculum

Around the same time, the UC Davis School of Medicine was in the process of implementing a new, competency-based medical education curriculumI-EXPLORE(Integrated EXplorative Patient and Learner ORiented Education) that was launched in 2021. The school began to integrate into I-EXPLORE an entire pain curriculum through multiple aspects of the educational curriculum.

A major aspect of I-EXPLORE was the implementation of threads or core competencies that would be taught across all four years of school, including:

  • Diagnostic medicine
  • Preventive medicine
  • Pain medicine
  • Stages of life
  • Care for vulnerable populations
  • Behavioral health

“The inclusion of a pain medicine thread was an incredible step taken at UC Davis to recognize the importance of pain management in the curriculum,” said Chinar Daivesh Sanghvi, assistant clinical professor of anesthesiology and pain medicine.

Opioid epidemic: How are we teaching future doctors to treat pain? (2)

The inclusion of a pain medicine thread was an incredible step taken at UC Davis to recognize the importance of pain management in the curriculum.” Chinar Daivesh Sanghvi

Starting in the first few months of medical school, UC Davis students begin studying pain-specific curriculum incorporated into lectures, problem-based learning sessions, peer-teaching sessions, self-directed learning and clinical experiences. During their first and second years, students can learn unique integrated topics taught by a variety of instructors during pre-clerkship intersessions. One of the topics explores how childhood trauma can affect the experience of pain years later.

During their third and fourth years, students experience integrated lectures in their OB-GYN and surgery clinical rotations. They also learn about deprescribing medications and palliative medicine in a weeklong intersession before students enter their clinical experience phase. .

In addition, shortly before starting residencies, students take a course on opioid medications for pain management and alternatives to opioids for pain management.

“We know that it’s important to know about opioid management given that the most common reason patients present to the hospital is due to pain and it’s crucial as an intern to know medication transitions as patients travel through various areas of the hospital, whether it’s in the ER, post-surgery, ICU, or the wards,” added Sanghvi. “In addition, we want students to appreciate that pain medicine requires an integrated multidisciplinary approach, which includes pharmacists, physical therapists, pain psychologists, acupuncturists and many other clinicians to deliver comprehensive care.”

With the curricula evolving each year, Singh and Sanghvi are also incorporating the effects of disparities in pain care. Lessons about health inequities based on demographic and socioeconomic factors such as gender, ethnicity, and race are being incorporated into the programming so students can better understand patients who come from a wide variety of backgrounds.

New training on the horizon

The School of Medicine has also created two chronic pain electives for fourth-year medical students: A four-week immersive rotation in the Division of Pain Medicine and a two-week hybrid online and in-person course on the assessment and management of spinal pain.

Additionally, the school has recognized that a multidisciplinary approach is important to pain management. A new clinical rotation is being developed to expose third- and fourth-year medical students to complementary medicine in relation to:

  • Physical therapy
  • Occupational therapy
  • Hand therapy
  • Orthotics
  • Integrative medicine
  • Pain medicine
  • Pain psychology
  • Pain pharmacy
  • Acupuncture
  • Qigong

“I am extremely proud of the pioneering work we have done and are continuing to do to provide our students with a strong foundation of education on pain management and the use of opioids,” added Singh. “I feel like we are preparing our students with the foundational knowledge that they need to meet the needs of the patients they will serve.”

Opioid epidemic: How are we teaching future doctors to treat pain? (2024)

FAQs

Opioid epidemic: How are we teaching future doctors to treat pain? ›

They also learn about deprescribing medications and palliative medicine in a weeklong intersession before students enter their clinical experience phase. . In addition, shortly before starting residencies, students take a course on opioid medications for pain management and alternatives to opioids for pain management.

How will you monitor and treat patients struggling with opioid addiction? ›

These include:
  1. Medication-assisted treatment. In some cases, healthcare professionals provide medication to help alleviate withdrawal symptoms, reduce cravings or treat overdose. ...
  2. Residential (inpatient) treatments. ...
  3. Group therapy. ...
  4. Individual psychotherapy.

What are the patient teaching for opioid use? ›

Do not use alcohol while taking opioids. Use your opioids for your surgical pain only; do not use your pills for other reasons. As your pain gets better, wait longer between taking opioids. Follow your doctor's instructions about other drugs not to take while using opioids.

What are the challenges of the opioid epidemic? ›

Like most complex problems, the opioid crisis has multiple roots,5 including changing social and economic conditions, limited availability of safe and effective analgesics, insufficient treatment capacity for OUD and legal approaches that criminalize OUD rather than fostering treatment.

What is the most important thing to monitor when a patient is on patient controlled opiate analgesia? ›

Monitoring the Effects of PCA

At a minimum, the patient's level of pain, alertness, vital signs, and rate and quality of respirations should be evaluated every four hours. The staff must be alert for signs of oversedation.

What is the most common form of medical treatment for opioid addiction? ›

TREATMENT OVERVIEW

There are three main choices for medication to treat opioid addiction: methadone, buprenorphine and naltrexone. These medications are used along with counseling and other support.

What are the therapeutic actions of opioids? ›

Opioid drugs act by binding to specific receptor sites in the brain (6). These sites also happen to be the binding sites of endogenous opioid-like peptides that produce similar effects, including the prototypic opioid effects of reward, withdrawal, and analgesia, via actions at those very receptors (7).

How do you teach a patient about oxycodone? ›

Oxycodone may be habit-forming. Take oxycodone exactly as directed. Do not take more of it, take it more often, or take it in a different way than directed by your doctor. While taking oxycodone, discuss with your healthcare provider your pain treatment goals, length of treatment, and other ways to manage your pain.

What are the 5 A's of monitoring opioid response? ›

For this reason, we recommend Five A's of assessment: Analgesia, Activity, Adverse reactions, Aberrant behavior and Affect. Every person for whom opioids are prescribed has the potential to abuse their medication (Webster & Dove, 2007).

How do you respond to an opioid crisis? ›

  1. Promote opioid-related primary prevention in schools and communities.
  2. Lead chronic pain management education for providers.
  3. Provide increased access to harm reduction services such as overdose education and naloxone distribution.

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