According to the defense expert in the following case, patients who can’t or won’t engage in alternative treatments for their pain should not be prescribed pain medications as a matter of course. Consider how the overdose in the following case could have been prevented if the internist had followed the CDC opioid prescribing guidelines.
Learn More »Pain Management vs. Treating the Underlying Causes of Pain
Concurrent use of opioid pain medications, benzodiazepines, antihistamines, antipsychotics, antianxiety agents, or other CNS depressants increases a patient’s risk for overdose.1
Learn More »Physicians need to be especially careful when managing chronic pain with opioid medications. Medical practices often seek risk management advice when they suspect a patient is misusing prescription medications, is not complying with treatment, or when the patient is making unreasonable demands for more opioids. If a patient suffers harm as a result of opioid medication use, a physician may become the target of a lawsuit alleging negligent treatment of chronic pain.
Learn More »Dismissing a Patient with Chronic Pain and Opioid Dependency Leads to Allegation of Abandonment
Terminating treatment of a chronic pain patient can become complicated, even when a patient agreement is signed and the termination letter is sent.1
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