Wednesday, March 30, 2016

More Than 100 Million Americans Live with Undertreated Chronic Pain

At least 116 million Americans suffer from serious chronic pain, and for many of them the suffering is not only undertreated, but is also preventable. The information was revealed by new report from the Institute of Medicine (IOM) that addresses the outcry for help in what is described as a “public health crisis” of pain.
There are countless sources of chronic pain that range from back pain and fibromyalgia to arthritis, and from multiple sclerosis to cancer. For the nation, the costs of the unending aching, throbbing pain are great, as billions of dollars are sacrificed to cover medical costs, losses in productivity, and time missed from work.
Chronic pain, by definition, is pain that continues for 30 to 60 days or longer, and in many cases the long-term suffering can drag on for years.
Although the IOM has estimated the number of Americans who suffer from chronic pain in excess of 100 million, the organization acknowledged that they may have actually underestimated just how many people live with chronic pain. This is because their data did not account for the millions living in such environments as nursing homes, didn’t include members of the military, nor could it include the numerous daily additions to this ever-increasing population of people who hurt.
According to Dr. Philip Pizzo, dean of the Stanford School of Medicine, and chairman of report committee, one-third of Americans experience chronic pain. The costs of the ailment, he noted, “Is more than we pay as a nation on cardiovascular disease and cancer…. Pain is an experience that affects virtually every one of our citizens…and can become a disease itself.”
The report, titled “Relieving Pain in America: A Blueprint for Transforming Prevention, Care, Education, and Research,” points out the failure of the nation’s health care system to adequately treat the masses who suffer from chronic pain, and focuses on the need for a “cultural transformation” of the methods by which the U. S. diagnoses and treats patients who deal with pain and it’s management.
The committee concluded that to attain successful prevention, treatment, and management of pain, a combined approach that encompasses all influencing factors of pain will be required. The study was mandated by Congress in 2010 as part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and the research provides a six-step plan set to begin in 2012.source--healthnews

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