Opioid Abuse in Chronic Pain — Misconceptions and Mitigation Strategies
National Institute on Drug Abuse · National Institutes of Health · +1 more institution
Abstract
Chronic pain not caused by cancer is among the most prevalent and debilitating medical conditions but also among the most controversial and complex to manage. The urgency of patients’ needs, the demonstrated effectiveness of opioid analgesics for the management of acute pain, and the limited therapeutic alternatives for chronic pain have combined to produce an overreliance on opioid medications in the United States, with associated alarming increases in diversion, overdose, and addiction. Given the lack of clinical consensus and research-supported guidance, physicians understandably have questions about whether, when, and how to prescribe opioid analgesics for chronic pain without increasing public health…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 157.93
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 109
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Chronic pain
- Opioid
- Opioid abuse
- Psychiatry
- Opioid-Related Disorders
- Intensive care medicine
- Opioid epidemic
- Good health and well-being