• J Gen Intern Med · Aug 2017

    Review

    Managing Chronic Pain in Primary Care: It Really Does Take a Village.

    • Karen Seal, William Becker, Jennifer Tighe, Yongmei Li, and Tessa Rife.
    • San Francisco VA Healthcare System, Box 116-A, 4150 Clement Street, San Francisco, CA, 94121, USA. karen.seal@ucsf.edu.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2017 Aug 1; 32 (8): 931934931-934.

    AbstractSome healthcare systems are relieving primary care providers (PCPs) of "the burden" of managing chronic pain and opioid prescribing, instead offloading chronic pain management to pain specialists. Last year the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended a biopsychosocial approach to pain management that discourages opioid use and promotes exercise therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy and non-opioid medications as first-line patient-centered, multi-modal treatments best delivered by an interdisciplinary team. In the private sector, interdisciplinary pain management services are challenging to assemble, separate from primary care and not typically reimbursed. In contrast, in a fully integrated health care system like the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), interdisciplinary clinics already exist, and one such clinic, the Integrated Pain Team (IPT) clinic, integrates and co-locates pain-trained PCPs, a psychologist and a pharmacist in primary care. The IPT clinic has demonstrated significant success in opioid risk reduction. Unfortunately, proposed legislation threatens to dismantle aspects of the VA such that these interdisciplinary services may be eliminated. This Perspective explains why it is critical not only to maintain interdisciplinary pain services in VHA, but also to consider disseminating this model to other health care systems in order to implement patient-centered, guideline-concordant care more broadly.

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