Pain, Drugs, and Ethics
Autor Kevin L. Zacharoff, Phyllis Migdalen Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 sep 2024
There is now a challenge to balancing the safe, compassionate, and effective treatment of chronic pain against serious negative outcomes associated with the increased abuse and misuse of these medications. With overdose death rates increasing, tensions running high, a multitude of political and regulatory involvement, and “knee-jerk” reactiveness, it seems as if the only thing being forgotten are the needs of chronic pain patients and the core ethical principles intended to help clinicians maintain the highest ethical standards of care.
This book delves into this background and offers the context of professionalism and ethics taught to most healthcare professionals today, and describes how these principles can help to maximize safety, efficacy, and compassionate pain care, regardless of the direction the “opioid pendulum” is swinging. A framework is provided for clinicians to rely on best practices in managing acute, subacute, and chronic pain. The goal is to help clinicians provide patients with pain the most reliable, contextual, and ethical pain care possible.
Pain, Drugs, and Ethics is written for the multiple disciplines involved in managing patients with pain today.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9783031630170
ISBN-10: 3031630173
Pagini: 300
Ilustrații: Approx. 300 p. 20 illus., 10 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
ISBN-10: 3031630173
Pagini: 300
Ilustrații: Approx. 300 p. 20 illus., 10 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
Cuprins
Introduction.- Chapter 1-The Conundrum of Pain.- Chapter 2-Pain as a Disease.- Chapter 3-The Negotiation of Pain and Suffering.- Chapter 4-Biomedical and Biopsychosocial Approaches to Pain and its Management.- Chapter 5-Roles and Responsibilities of Stakeholders.- Chapter 6-Challenges Facing Clinicians Treating Patients with Pain.- Chapter 7-Dilemmas Surrounding Opioid Analgesics and the Treatment of Pain.- Chapter 8-Bias, Stigma, and Social Determinants of Healt.- Chapter 9-Ethical Decision-Making in Pain Management.- Chapter 10-Autonomy.- Chapter 11-Beneficence.- Chapter 12-Nonmaleficience.- Chapter 13-Justice.- Chapter 14-Individuality, Choice, and Paternalism in Pain Management.- Chapter 15-Ethics, Opioids, and the Overdose Epidemic.- Chapter 16-The Static Pendulum.
Notă biografică
Kevin L. Zacharoff, MD, FACIP, FACPE, FAAP
Clinical Assistant Professor
Course Director Pain and Addiction
Distinguished Visiting Scholar In Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care, and Bioethics
Department of Family, Population, and Preventive Medicine, Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University
External Ethics Consultant Stony Brook University Hospital
Consultant to the Anesthetic and Analgesic Drug Products Advisory Committee to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
Phyllis Migdal
Clinical Assistant Professor
Department of Family, Population and Preventive Medicine, Renaissance School of Medicine
Institutional Ethics Committee member Stony Brook University Hospital
Clinical Assistant Professor
Course Director Pain and Addiction
Distinguished Visiting Scholar In Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care, and Bioethics
Department of Family, Population, and Preventive Medicine, Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University
External Ethics Consultant Stony Brook University Hospital
Consultant to the Anesthetic and Analgesic Drug Products Advisory Committee to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
Phyllis Migdal
Clinical Assistant Professor
Department of Family, Population and Preventive Medicine, Renaissance School of Medicine
Institutional Ethics Committee member Stony Brook University Hospital
Textul de pe ultima copertă
Pain remains one of the most common reasons that people seek medical attention in the United States today. One of the ways health care providers responded to pain being designated the “5th vital sign” was with their prescription pads. In order to respond to subjective pain-ratings, opioid analgesics began to be prescribed more liberally than in the past, presumably with the intention of responding to information about pain-related complaints now captured in routine assessments. This was in concert with several other circumstances, including the appearance and promulgation of “pill mills”, questionable marketing practices by opioid manufacturers, and increasing rates of abuse, misuse, and addiction related to opioid analgesics. All this taking place in an environment of tremendous educational deficits related to pain, its assessment and treatment, and risks of aberrant drug-related behaviors.
There is now a challenge to balancing the safe, compassionate, and effective treatment of chronic pain against serious negative outcomes associated with the increased abuse and misuse of these medications. With overdose death rates increasing, tensions running high, a multitude of political and regulatory involvement, and “knee-jerk” reactiveness, it seems as if the only thing being forgotten are the needs of chronic pain patients and the core ethical principles intended to help clinicians maintain the highest ethical standards of care.
This book delves into this background and offers the context of professionalism and ethics taught to most healthcare professionals today, and describes how these principles can help to maximize safety, efficacy, and compassionate pain care, regardless of the direction the “opioid pendulum” is swinging. A framework is provided for clinicians to rely on best practices in managing acute, subacute, and chronic pain. The goal is to help clinicians provide patients with pain the most reliable, contextual, and ethical pain care possible.
Pain, Drugs, and Ethics is written for the multiple disciplines involved in managing patients with pain today.
There is now a challenge to balancing the safe, compassionate, and effective treatment of chronic pain against serious negative outcomes associated with the increased abuse and misuse of these medications. With overdose death rates increasing, tensions running high, a multitude of political and regulatory involvement, and “knee-jerk” reactiveness, it seems as if the only thing being forgotten are the needs of chronic pain patients and the core ethical principles intended to help clinicians maintain the highest ethical standards of care.
This book delves into this background and offers the context of professionalism and ethics taught to most healthcare professionals today, and describes how these principles can help to maximize safety, efficacy, and compassionate pain care, regardless of the direction the “opioid pendulum” is swinging. A framework is provided for clinicians to rely on best practices in managing acute, subacute, and chronic pain. The goal is to help clinicians provide patients with pain the most reliable, contextual, and ethical pain care possible.
Pain, Drugs, and Ethics is written for the multiple disciplines involved in managing patients with pain today.
Caracteristici
Guides clinicians treating patients with pain with the most reliable, contextual, and ethical care possible Provides a durable framework for clinicians to rely on Authored by leaders in pain management and medical ethics