
 
        
         
		52 THE QUEENS COURIER • HEALTH • SEPTEMBER 6, 2018  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
  health 
 Opioid crisis illuminates the need  
 to see pain medicine specialists  
 Th  e opioid crisis has made physicians  
 increasingly  wary  about  prescribing  
 the potentially addictive drugs to their  
 patients in pain. But there is a silver lining  
 - experts in pain medicine, such as physician  
 anesthesiologists, can create individualized  
 pain management plans that  
 include alternatives to opioids that are  
 not only safer, but oft en work better. 
 “Opioids, or narcotics, can be helpful for  
 short-term relief, but they are not a longterm  
 solution for managing pain because  
 of their many downsides, from signifi cant  
 side eff ects to a high risk of dependence or  
 addiction,” said Greg L. Th ompson, M.D.,  
 physician anesthesiologist, pain medicine  
 specialist and member of the American  
 Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA). “Pain  
 medicine specialists can help people in  
 pain get relief and reduce or eliminate  
 opioids oft en by using a combination of  
 techniques  from  physical  therapy  and  
 nerve blocks to non-addictive pain medications.” 
 Opioids alleviated the excruciating pain  
 37-year-old mother of two Beth Hunt suffered  
 while recovering from multiple surgeries  
 aft er her leg was crushed in an accident. 
  But aft er three months in the hospital  
 on opioids, she came to rely on them  
 just to be comfortable. Hunt turned to Dr.  
 Th  ompson, who used ultrasound and tiny  
 catheters, or tubes, to direct medication to  
 the major nerves in her leg that were the  
 source of the pain. Th  is therapy reduced  
 her opioid use by 90 percent while her  
 leg healed and she learned to walk again.  
 Now she is opioid-free, has regained her  
 quality of life and is spending time being  
 active with her children. 
 Hunt  never  dreamed  she’d  become  
 dependent on opioids, but her experience  
 shows it can happen to anyone. ASA  
 urges people to learn how the opioid crisis  
 is changing the way physicians treat  
 pain responsibly, and the reasons why  
 your physician may limit or avoid prescribing  
 opioids: 
 Th  ey are not the only option:  
 While opioids can provide general pain  
 relief for a short while, they are not the  
 solution for all pain because: 
 • Th  ere are more eff ective methods for  
 treating pain in a specifi c site, including  
 nerve blocks or stimulation therapy. 
 • People who take them can begin tolerating  
 the dose, and may need higher doses  
 to get the same relief. 
 Th  ere are many side eff ects and risks: 
 • Addiction and dependence are major  
 worries. If there are signs of risk for  
 addiction your physician may be more  
 hesitant to prescribe opioids. 
 • Other side eff ects  include:  sleepiness;  
 constipation; depression; life-threatening  
 shallow breathing; and slowed heart  
 rate, which could be a sign of an overdose. 
 • In older people, opioids can increase  
 the risk of falling as well as interact with  
 other medications, making them less  
 eff ective or causing side eff ects. 
 It’s the law:  
 Legislators have enacted many rules  
 and regulations in an attempt to stem  
 the opioid crisis. For example, because  
 studies show the longer people take opioids, 
  the more likely they are to become  
 addicted, some states have enacted prescribing  
 limits on opioids. ASA supports  
 patient-centered prescribing policies that  
 consider individual patient needs, drawing  
 on guidelines developed by medical  
 specialty organizations. 
 It’s important to know there are many  
 other options for managing pain, from  
 targeted therapies (e.g., nerve blocks) to  
 non-addictive medications (e.g., antidepressants, 
  antiseizure medications, acetaminophen  
 and nonsteroidal anti-infl ammatory  
 drugs (NSAIDs) such as ibuprofen) 
  to high-tech methods (e.g., spinal  
 stimulation and radiowave therapy) to  
 alternative treatments (e.g., physical therapy, 
  acupuncture and meditation). Learn  
 more about non-opioid options for managing  
 pain. 
 The  American  Society  of  
 Anesthesiologists 
 Founded in 1905, the American Society  
 of Anesthesiologists (ASA) is an educational, 
  research and scientifi c  society  
 with more than 52,000 members organized  
 to raise and maintain the standards  
 of the medical practice of anesthesiology.  
 ASA is committed to ensuring that physician  
 anesthesiologists evaluate and supervise  
 the medical care of patients before,  
 during and aft er surgery to provide the  
 highest quality and safest care that every  
 patient deserves. 
 For  more  information  on  the  fi eld  
 of  anesthesiology,  visit  the  American  
 Society  of  Anesthesiologists  online  
 at asahq.org. To learn more about the  
 role  physician  anesthesiologists  play  
 in ensuring patient safety, visit asahq. 
 org/WhenSecondsCount. Like ASA on  
 Facebook; follow ASALifeline on Twitter. 
 Courtesy BPT