Abstract

Chronic pain is a common condition that impacts quality of life and often precipitates the need for medical attention. Despite evidence that long-term opioid use provides limited relief, prescription opioid therapy remains a cornerstone in the medical management of chronic non-cancer pain. Presently, 13% of Canadians are prescribed opioids for pain management, and physicians play a crucial role in preventing the development of opioid use disorders. However, Canadian physicians lack knowledge of and comfort with evidence-based principles of opioid stewardship. In this article, we aim to highlight ongoing Canadian efforts to address physician discomfort and improve clinical practice. We focus on 2017 Canadian guidelines that provide clinicians with evidence-based recommendations for opioid use in chronic non-cancer pain management. In addition, we call attention to provincial efforts to implement physician accountability measures. In reviewing the existing literature, we uncovered inadequacies in pain management curricula within the Canadian undergraduate and continuing medical education (CME) systems. We consulted the educational practices of the European Pain Federation and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to make recommendations for improvement to current Canadian pain curricula. Based on our findings, we recommend that (1) Canadian medical institutions expand upon current core pain curricula, (2) pain management education be made compulsory, (3) academic detailing be emphasized as a means of CME, and (4) multidisciplinary non-medical management of chronic pain be featured more extensively.

Highlights

  • Chronic pain is a common condition that impacts quality of life and often precipitates the need for medical attention

  • Within the context of Western medicine, prescription opioids have become a mainstay in the medical management of chronic pain

  • In Canada, prescription opioid consumption increased by 155% between 2000 and 2011, and the number of annual opioid related deaths – excluding those related to illicit opioid use – was 325% greater in 2010 compared to 1991.1,2 one in every five hundred patients prescribed opioids for chronic pain died of opioid related causes at a median of 2.6 years after filling their initial prescription.[1]

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic pain is a common condition that impacts quality of life and often precipitates the need for medical attention. Canadian physicians lack confidence in their knowledge of safe opioid prescribing practices, effective screening for addictive potential, and patient education regarding opioid abuse disorder.[3] ongoing Canadian efforts to address deficiencies and improve opioid prescribing practices will be discussed.

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