Video

VIDEO: Consistency is key to monitoring patients on opioids


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM PAIN CARE FOR PRIMARY CARE

References

ORLANDO – Take a consistent approach with all patients on opioid therapy, regardless of a patient’s perceived potential for abuse, Dr. Melissa B. Weimer advised.

“This is an area of medicine where I feel we need to apply universal precautions to all patients,” noted Dr. Weimer, assistant professor of medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland. “We’re treating all patients as at some level of potential harm from this medication.”

In an interview at a meeting held by the American Pain Society and Global Academy for Medical Education, Dr. Weimer outlined a strategy that employs the same protocol to monitor therapy, even when the abuse potential is considered to be low.

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same company. Dr. Weimer reported no financial disclosures.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

Recommended Reading

PCPC: Avoid these traps when prescribing medical marijuana
MDedge Neurology
IHC: Infantile colic portends adolescent migraine
MDedge Neurology
IHC: Botox for migraine also improves depression
MDedge Neurology
Disability with chronic widespread pain linked to alcohol consumption
MDedge Neurology
PCPC: Get patients to unlearn cognitive distortions that sustain pain
MDedge Neurology
Unvetted drug indications mean safety uncertainties
MDedge Neurology
New shingles vaccine delivers whopping efficacy
MDedge Neurology
Sexual abuse history may promote migraine transformation
MDedge Neurology
VIDEO: Use fiduciary duty to set pain medication boundaries
MDedge Neurology
Prescription opioid overdoses targeted in new CDC program
MDedge Neurology