Feel
No Pain
By
J. K. Tukra
Pain will propel most people
to a doctors office faster than just about any
other complaint. Its usually a sign that something
is wrong, though its not always clear just what
the problem is. Doctors cant measure pain objectively
the way they can blood pressure or cholesterol levels.
So when pain doesnt immediately respond to treatment,
physicians
and patients often, too often, accept it as just another
symptom that has to be lived with.
The suffering
and confusion should begin to lift this year,
however, thanks to the efforts of the Joint commission
on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations,
the group responsible for certifying the quality
and safety of the majority of hospitals, nursing
homes and clinics in the U.S. Starting Jan. 1,
these medical facilities will have to show that
they meet certain standards for the assessment
and treatment of pain in all their patients. Failure
to meet the standards, which were jointly developed
with the University of Wisconsin Medical School
in Madison, could lead to a financially devastating
loss of the right to treat Medicare and Medicaid
patients.
Among the new requirements: all patients have
the right to have their pain assessed and managed
appropriately; medical facilities must ask their
patients to rate their level of pain (children
can, for example, point to pictures showing a
range of faces from mildly frowning to contorted);
and the results must be documented. The idea is
to take pain out of the background and make it
another vital sign that must be attended
to.
Of course, those rules only apply in the U.S.
But you dont have to live there to get relief
from pain. Just follow these simple guidelines:
Dont Suffer In Silence Surveys
have shown that many patients dont tell
doctors or nurses about their pain for fear of
being labeled cranky or difficult or because they
assume that their discomfort will go away. And
yet, says June Dahl, Professor of Pharmacology
at the University of Wisconsin, that reluctance
can backfire. Left uncontrolled, the pain you
thought was temporary can trigger a long-term
chronic condition. It can also interfere with
the healing process and lengthen your recovery
time.
Plan Ahead Find out before you are wheeled
into the operating room what the various treatment
options for pain are, as well as their side effects,
and choose the one that suits you best. Dont
just assume that someone will take care
of it.
Give Feedback If your current treatment
isnt controlling your pain, say so. It often
helps to have a family member make the case for
you.
Bone Up Learn what painkillers can and
cant do. Lots of folks fear they will get
hooked on strong medications. In fact,
though most patients build a tolerance to pain
drugs, they dont become addicted. Others
rely solely on pills and ignore lifestyle changes,
like losing weight that can alleviate pain in
the joints and back.
Unfortunately, says Dr. Kathleen Foley, an attending
neurologist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center in New York City, not all pain can be controlled.
But you know what? she says, Well
never do anything if we dont try.
And no one can even begin to help you until you
say where and how much it hurts. |
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Good
News
Roto-rooter
It took a study of 62,000 patients to confirm
what many cardiologists already suspected: when it comes
to heart attacks, angioplasties save more lives than
clot-busting drugs. Both treatments aim to clear arterial
blockages that deprive the heart of oxygen. But the
odds of dying in a hospital after an emergency angioplasty,
a balloon-tipped catheter is threaded through the vessel,
are 40% lower than after a round of clot busters. Caveat:
the finding applies only to centers that perform angioplasties
frequently, at least 50 times a year.
Golden
Oldies You might not expect to seen an 85-year-old
at an N Sync concert, but researchers in Italy
find that elderly folks with dementia can suddenly develop
surprising tastes in music. In one case, a classical-music
buff began to enjoy, at full blast, an Italian pop band
he had once derided as mere noise. Explanation?
Lesions in the brain may damage areas involved in music
perception. Or perhaps dementia simply changes ones
attitude toward novelty.
Bad
News
Sugar
Coating Sometimes timing really is everything.
A blood test used to screen for Type 2 diabetes may
miss as many as half of all cases if its performed
in the afternoon rather than the morning. Turns out
glucose levels, normal is considered below 125 mg/dl,
naturally drop through the day, so what appears fine
in the afternoon may, in fact, be a problem. Easy solution:
lower the standard for whats normal
for blood drawn in the p.m.
Bated
Breath The use of inhalers containing corticosteroids
is one of the most common treatments for chronic bronchitis
and emphysema. Now doctors report that while the steroids
may improve symptoms like shortness of breath and even
reduce doctor visits, they fail to slow the progression
of these smoking induced diseases. And there are side
effects, like bone loss. Dont toss the inhaler;
talk to your doctor.
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