Jan 28, 2018
Safe and Effective Management of Pain and Addiction was presented on January 16, 2018; by Dr. Carl Christensen, MD, Ph.D., D-FASAM; and Dr. Mark A. Weiner, MD, D-FASAM. The Institute of Medicine estimates around a 100 million Americans suffer with chronic pain, and it’s estimated that about 10% of our population has or has had a substance use disorder. Both chronic pain and substance use disorders are major public health challenges, and treating concurrent pain and substance addiction is especially challenging. Common prescribing practices intended to provide relief of acute and chronic pain can trigger relapse in people with substance use disorders and have also fueled an epidemic of opiod misuse, addiction and overdose death. People with pain deserve relief, and the good news is there are many strategies for both acute and chronic pain management that are safe and effective for people at risk of or in recovery from substance use disorders. This presentation discusses various methods of pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic pain management and their relative risks and benefits, and describes creative approaches to effective pain relief for people in recovery from substance use disorders. The presentation includes a short demonstration of naloxone resuscitation.
This presentation is part of the Dawn Farm Education Series, a
free, annual education series developed to provide accurate,
helpful, hopeful, practical, current information about chemical
dependency, recovery, family and related issues. The Education
Series is organized by Dawn Farm, a non-profit community of
programs providing a continuum of substance use disorder treatment
and recovery support services. For information, please see
http://www.dawnfarm.org/programs/education-series.
About the presenters:
Mark A. Weiner, MD, D-FASAM: Dr. Weiner is the Section Chief of
Addiction Medicine and serves as the Medical Director of Substance
Use Disorders at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Ann Arbor. He is also
the Medical Director of IHA Pain Management Consultants. He is the
chair of the planning committee of the American Society of
Addiction Medicine course, “Pain and Addiction: Common Threads” and
is a member of the planning committee for the American Society of
Addiction Medicine Annual Meeting. He is an editor of the ASAM Pain
and Addiction Handbook. Dr. Weiner is the current Chair of the
Board of Trustees of Dawn Farm.
Carl Christensen, MD, PhD, FACOG, D-FASAM, ABAM: Dr. Christensen is a Clinical Associate Professor at the Wayne State University School of Medicine and has a private medical practice in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Dr. Christensen specializes in the treatment of addiction and of chronic pain, especially pelvic pain. He obtained his MD and PhD in Biochemistry at Wayne State University School of Medicine and did his residency in Obstetrics and Gynecology at Hutzel Hospital. He then completed a Fellowship in Gynecologic Oncology at Duke University Medical Center. He is certified in Addiction Medicine and is a Fellow of the American Society of Addiction Medicine. Dr. Christensen is the current Medical Director of the James Wardell Women’s Recovery Center, the Medical Director at the Tolan Medical Research Clinic in the Department of Psychiatry at WSU, and the Medical Director for Dawn Farm. He is a member of the Advisory Board of Families Against Narcotics in Wayne County, Michigan. He is the past president of the Michigan Society of Addiction Medicine and the current Medical Director of the Michigan Health Professional Recovery Program. Dr. Christensen has received numerous teaching awards. He has been named one of the “Top Docs” in Addiction Medicine in Hour Magazine since 2006.