Appendix H
Expanded Discussion on Special Populations to Consider in Pain Management
ELDERLY AND PEDIATRIC POPULATIONS
Overall findings from the pain research field suggest that pain experienced by pediatric and geriatric populations is understudied and often inadequately managed. Estimates suggest that more than half of older adults in the United States experience regular bothersome pain (Kaye et al., 2010; Patel et al., 2013). Similarly, pediatric studies suggest that up to one-third of children and young people experience chronic or recurrent pain that is often underrecognized and undertreated (King et al., 2011; McCarthy and Rastogi, 2017).1
Certain U.S. Food and Drug Administration–approved pain products may be unsuitable for elderly or pediatric patients—individuals who may have difficulty swallowing oral medications and/or who lack the muscle mass to receive frequent injections (Liu et al., 2014). In addition, the functionality of organ systems (either in developing or aging patients) and the absorption profiles of skin are of great relevance, and a simple extrapolation of pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamics data from healthy adults is likely to be inadequate. As a result, pain management plans for these populations tend to be more complex and may result in suboptimal treatments.
Adding complexity to the situation, pain products formulated for adults may not be appropriate in infants and children who have sensitivities or allergies, or who need more palatable or age-appropriate formulations
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1 Evaluating and managing pain is particularly challenging in neonates, in preverbal children, and in children with complex neurodevelopmental needs (Quinn et al., 2018).
(Berde et al., 2012; Liu et al., 2014; McBane et al., 2019; O’Donnell and Rosen, 2014). Elderly patients who have comorbidities that require polypharmacy further complicates health providers’ efforts to effectively and appropriately treat their pain (Borsheski and Johnson, 2014).2 Importantly, the prevalence of chronic pain is likely to increase as Americans live longer, which may profoundly affect morbidity and health care expenditures,3 and although pain management is a critical part of palliative care, studies suggest that pain experienced by people at end of life is often inadequately assessed and treated (IOM, 2011; Wilkie and Ezenwa, 2012).
GENDER, RACE, AND ETHNICITY
The experience of pain and the quality of pain management are also shaped by sociodemographic factors of gender, race, and ethnicity (Mossey, 2011). In the United States, women and racial and ethnic minorities report more pain complaints than men (Dahlhamer et al., 2018; Mansfield et al., 2016) and experience chronic illnesses (e.g., diabetes, cancer) associated with chronic pain, aging, and disability more frequently and at an earlier age than their White male counterparts. Women who are pregnant commonly experience chronic pain, but the evidence-based guidance on how to best provide safe and effective pain management in pregnant women is understudied, as is the potential effect on their unborn children (Ray-Griffith et al., 2018; Shah et al., 2015). To complicate matters further, gender differences in response to analgesics suggest that biological, sociocultural, and psychological mechanisms underline those differences.
Racial and ethnic minorities who experience certain chronic illnesses associated with chronic pain are more likely to have poorer overall access to primary care and are less likely to be referred for specialty pain care, as compared to nonminority patients (Ezenwa and Fleming, 2012). When their pain is assessed, women and patients of color received less medication for pain (including opioids) and suboptimal pain care in all clinical settings (Green et al., 2003, 2005). Variability in clinicians’ attitudes toward women and racial/ethnic minorities are suggested to reflect clinicians’ implicit, conscious, and unconscious biases that further complicate pain therapy for those groups (Green et al., 2003; Hoffman et al., 2016).
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2 Older adults commonly experience pain caused by health conditions associated with aging, such as musculoskeletal conditions, Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, joint surgeries, compression fractures, and advanced chronic diseases such as end-stage renal disease (Husebo et al., 2016; Smith et al., 2010).
3 The prevalence of chronic pain will increase as the global population ages, driving increases in morbidity and health care expenditures. For example, by 2030, the number of hip and knee replacements is expected to grow by 174 percent (572,000 procedures) and by 673 percent (3.48 million procedures), respectively (Kurtz et al., 2007).
ADDITIONAL SUBPOPULATIONS
In addition to the patient populations listed above, there are additional subpopulations who may also experience disparities in accessing quality pain care, pain assessment, pain treatment, or outcomes of care. For example, many patients living in underserved communities (e.g., rural or urban areas) receive their care in the primary care arena and may have difficulty accessing specialized multidisciplinary and multimodal pain care (Eaton et al., 2018). The potential absence of health services, health care insurance, and other resources (e.g., wealth, positive social support), as well as the potential presence of specific stressors (e.g., social roles, comorbidities), can influence health care access and use, quality of care, and short- and long-term health outcomes (Leeds et al., 2017; Nguyen et al., 2005).
Managing chronic and acute pain experienced by people with current or prior substance use disorder can be challenging because of both the patients’ attitudes and providers’ practical and ethical concerns related to addiction and drug-seeking behavior (Cheatle et al., 2014). Other populations that may have more complex management pain plans include patients with an increased risk of kidney-related complications, or individuals with spinal cord injuries, patients with cognitive disorders (e.g., Alzheimer’s), military veterans, or individuals for which English is not their first language (Davison, 2019; Hama and Sagen, 2012; IOM, 2011; NASEM, 2017).
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