退伍军人疼痛管理的进展:研究现状和未来方向。

Q Medicine
R. Kerns, A. Heapy, A. Heapy
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By 1998, former VA Undersecretary for Health Kenneth Kizer, MD, identified the need for more pain research as one of the objectives of a VA Pain Management Strategy [10]. A special topic issue of the Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development (JRRD) in 2007 highlighted sustained growth in the VA pain research portfolio [11], and annual reports since that time provide evidence of yearly growth in terms of the number, scope, and financial expenditures in support of the VA's pain research portfolio. This special topic issue of JRRD presents results from pain research projects taking place in the VA healthcare system, with a focus on innovative research and its practice and policy implications. 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引用次数: 7

摘要

退伍军人被认为是特别容易发展和持续疼痛的人。据估计,在2300万美国退伍军人中,多达50%的男性退伍军人和多达75%的女性退伍军人患有慢性疼痛。肌肉骨骼疼痛是最近从伊拉克和阿富汗战争中返回的退伍军人中最常见的疾病,超过了所有精神疾病的发病率总和。这些退伍军人的疼痛与这些冲突的“标志性损伤”高度并存,即创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)和创伤性脑损伤。尽管并非退伍军人独有,但与成功管理慢性疼痛相关的挑战是,持续有证据表明,医疗服务提供者在评估和管理常见疼痛状况方面准备不足,镇痛药物和其他非药物方法的有效性有限,以及对长期阿片类药物治疗相关危害的担忧日益增加。2011年,医学研究所(IOM)发表了一份开创性的报告,《缓解美国的疼痛:改变预防、护理、教育和研究的蓝图》,并呼吁退伍军人事务部(VA)和其他政府和利益相关者团体重申他们对这一国家变革努力的承诺。对退伍军人疼痛的研究并不新鲜。事实上,一些早期的开创性工作已经在VA进行,以推进慢性疼痛的多维评估,并建立心理方法对疼痛管理的有效性[8-9]。到1998年,退伍军人事务部负责卫生的前副部长肯尼斯·基泽(Kenneth Kizer)医学博士认为,需要进行更多的疼痛研究,作为退伍军人事务部疼痛管理战略bbb的目标之一。2007年《康复研究与发展杂志》(JRRD)的一个专题突出了VA疼痛研究组合的持续增长,从那时起的年度报告提供了支持VA疼痛研究组合的数量,范围和财政支出方面的年度增长的证据。本期《JRRD》专题报道了VA医疗保健系统中疼痛研究项目的成果,重点关注创新研究及其实践和政策影响。该问题的具体目标是教育读者(1)退伍军人所面临的特殊问题,特别是最近在伊拉克和阿富汗战争中的退伍军人;(2)可能与退伍军人特别相关的疼痛护理不公平的潜在来源;(3)评估和治疗退伍军人疼痛和合并症的新方法。因此,对本期特刊的贡献来自退伍军人事务部的临床、康复和卫生服务研究社区,而不是进行基础实验室科学和临床前研究的调查人员。最后,我们希望包含本期特刊的一系列原创文章能够传达出VA中与疼痛相关的强大研究项目的意义,并为进一步研究退伍军人和其他群体的疼痛管理提供一个议程。对这一专题问题的贡献提供了一个窗口,了解VA正在进行的令人兴奋的,创新的和重要的疼痛相关研究,直接通知VA应对IOM挑战的努力。仅举一个例子,移徙组织的一项重要发现是,缺乏记录疼痛的发生率和流行程度及其对日常生活和工作活动的影响、保健和社会服务的使用、疼痛和疼痛护理费用的一致数据,以及关于"改进疼痛数据的收集和报告"的建议。VA是解决这一建议的理想定位,因为它拥有美国最全面的电子健康记录(EHR)系统之一,其中包括纵向临床评估(e. ...)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Advances in pain management for Veterans: Current status of research and future directions.
Military Veterans have been identified as being particularly vulnerable to the development and perpetuation of pain [1]. Among the 23 million U.S. military Veterans, it has been estimated that as many as 50 percent of male Veterans and as many as 75 percent of female Veterans experience chronic pain [2]. Painful musculoskeletal conditions are the most common disorders among Veterans returning from the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, surpassing the rates of all mental health conditions combined [3]. Pain among these Veterans is highly comorbid with the "signature injuries" of these conflicts, namely posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury [4]. Although not unique to Veterans, compounding the challenges associated with successful management of chronic pain is continued evidence of a provider workforce that is ill-prepared to assess and manage common pain conditions [5], limited effectiveness of analgesic medications and other nonpharmacological approaches [6], and growing concerns about harms associated with long-term opioid therapy [7]. In 2011, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) published its seminal report, "Relieving pain in America: A blueprint for transforming prevention, care, education, and research," and called on the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and other Government and stakeholder groups to renew their commitment to this national transformational effort [1]. Research on pain among Veterans is not new. In fact, some of the early pioneering work to advance the multidimensional assessment of chronic pain and establish the efficacy of psychological approaches for pain management was conducted in the VA [8-9]. By 1998, former VA Undersecretary for Health Kenneth Kizer, MD, identified the need for more pain research as one of the objectives of a VA Pain Management Strategy [10]. A special topic issue of the Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development (JRRD) in 2007 highlighted sustained growth in the VA pain research portfolio [11], and annual reports since that time provide evidence of yearly growth in terms of the number, scope, and financial expenditures in support of the VA's pain research portfolio. This special topic issue of JRRD presents results from pain research projects taking place in the VA healthcare system, with a focus on innovative research and its practice and policy implications. The specific objectives of the issue are to educate readers about (1) special issues faced by Veterans with pain, especially Veterans of the recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; (2) potential sources of inequities in pain care that may have special relevance for Veterans; and (3) novel approaches to the assessment and treatment of pain and comorbid conditions for Veterans with pain. As such, contributions to this special issue come from the VA clinical, rehabilitation, and health services research communities as opposed to investigators conducting basic laboratory science and preclinical research. Ultimately, we hope that the series of original articles that comprise this special issue will convey a sense of the robust pain-relevant research program in the VA and inform an agenda for further research addressing the management of pain in Veterans and other groups. Contributions to this special topic issue offer a window into the exciting, innovative, and important pain-relevant research being conducted in the VA that directly informs the VA's efforts to address the challenge of the IOM. As just one example, a key finding of the IOM was the lack of consistent data that document the incidence and prevalence of pain and its effects on activities of daily living and work, use of healthcare and social services, and costs of pain and pain care and the recommendation to "improve the collection and reporting of data on pain" [1]. The VA is ideally positioned to address this recommendation because it has one of the most comprehensive electronic health record (EHR) systems in the United States, which includes longitudinal clinical assessments (e. …
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