Skip to main content
Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection logoLink to Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection
. 2020 Apr 7:pnaa127. doi: 10.1093/pm/pnaa127

Pain Management Best Practices from Multispecialty Organizations during the COVID-19 Pandemic and Public Health Crises

Steven P Cohen p1,, Zafeer B Baber p2, Asokumar Buvanendran p3, L T C Brian C McLean p4, Yian Chen p5, W Michael Hooten p6, Scott R Laker p7, W Ajay D Wasan p8, David J Kennedy p9, Friedhelm Sandbrink p10, L T C Scott A King p11, C D R Ian M Fowler p12, Milan P Stojanovic p13, Salim M Hayek p14, C D R Christopher R Phillips p15
PMCID: PMC7184417  PMID: 32259247

Abstract

Background

It is nearly impossible to overestimate the burden of chronic pain, which is associated with enormous personal and socioeconomic costs. Chronic pain is the leading cause of disability in the world, is associated with multiple psychiatric co-morbidities, and has been causally linked for the opioid crisis. Access to pain treatment has been called a fundamental human right by numerous organizations. The current COVID-19 pandemic has strained medical resources, creating a dilemma for physicians charged with a responsibility to limit spread of the contagion, and their responsibility to treat the patients they are entrusted to care for.

Methods

To address these issues, an expert panel was convened that included pain management experts from the military, Veterans Health Administration, and academia. Endorsement from stakeholder societies was sought upon completion of the document, with a 1-week suspense period.

Results

In these guidelines, we provide a framework for pain practitioners and institutions to balance the often-conflicting goals of risk mitigation for health care providers, risk mitigation for patients, conservation of resources, and access to pain management services. Specific issues discussed include general and interventional-specific risk mitigation, patient flow issues and staffing plans, telemedicine options, triaging recommendations, strategies to reduce psychological sequelae in health care providers, and resource utilization.

Conclusions

The COVID-19 public health crisis has strained health care systems, creating a conundrum for patients, pain medicine practitioners, hospital leaders, and regulatory officials. Although this document provides a framework for pain management services, systems-wide and individual decisions must take into account clinical considerations, regional health conditions, government and hospital directives, resource availability, the welfare of health care providers.

Video-Abstract link: https://youtu.be/m_P17TvZQNA


Articles from Pain Medicine: The Official Journal of the American Academy of Pain Medicine are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

RESOURCES