Mistrust Shadows CDC Over New Opioid Dose Guidance — Pain News Network


“I think the CDC needs to keep his nose out of providers business. I’ve been practicing pain management for 22 years,” a doctor told us. “The CDC guidelines of 2016 have ruined untold lives because they stuck their nose somewhere they shouldn’t have. Leave pain management to the experts and let them decide what each patient needs based on their individual condition.” 

Guideline Expansion

Patients and providers are a bit more receptive about the guideline being expanded to include recommendations for treating short-term acute pain (55%), as well as a handful of specific pain conditions, such as low back pain and migraine (53%).  

Patients with severe constant pain — known an intractable pain — feel left out of the guideline. The word “intractable” is not even mentioned in the draft revision. While some types of severe pain, like cancer pain and sickle cell pain, are specifically excluded from the guideline, others are not.

“I wish that consideration would be given for patients who have intractable pain and have already jumped through the hoops of therapy and other treatments and have found that they didn’t help. It is beyond discouraging to have to repeat trials of treatments that never work for that particular patient,” said one patient.

“There is no difference in cancer and non-cancer pain. Pain is pain. If they’re going to include any conditions (which I don’t think they should) they should recognize rare and incurable illnesses, not just low back pain, sickle cell, and cancer,” another patient wrote. 

End Mandatory Policies

Large majorities also think the CDC needs to do a better job tracking the impact of its guideline on patients (95%) and making sure it is not used to create mandatory policies (96%).

The American Medical Association has even recommended that the CDC undertake a “a national marketing and communications campaign” to make clear to law enforcement and healthcare providers that the revised guideline should not be used like its predecessor to adopt rules that replace individualized patient care. 

Many of our survey respondents agree. Without the elimination of laws and policies that dictate how pain should be treated, no amount of revisions to the guideline will not undo the damage the CDC’s recommendations have already caused. 

“It should be made clear to the doctors willing, but currently afraid, to prescribe opioids now for fear of fines, loss of income and even jail, that they won’t be penalized for properly caring for their patients,” said one patient. “These doctors feel their livelihood has been threatened just for doing their job, which is to help people in pain. They are no longer doing that.” 

For more survey findings, including whether respondents think the CDC guideline should be revised or revoked, click here. You can see the full survey results here.

The CDC recently close a public comment period on the guideline revisions. Over 5,400 comments have been received and publicly posted, which you can read here. The CDC is not expected to adopt the final version of its revised guideline until late this year.  



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