Episode Transcript
Interviewer: What are emergency rooms doing about opioids? That's next on The Scope.
Announcer: This is From the Frontlines with emergency room physician, Dr. Troy Madsen on The Scope.
Interviewer: Dr. Troy Madsen is an emergency room physician at Ï㽶ÊÓƵ of Utah Health. And of course, by this point, most of us know that opioids are a major problem and it seems like taking that first one is what really lead you down that path. And for many people, they might have gotten them in the ER at one point. So I'm curious, Dr. Madsen, is that the case? Did you use to give out opioids for pain and has that changed?
Dr. Madsen: So I've absolutely given out opioids and we still do. I mean, there are cases where people need some kind of pain medication and, often, that's the only thing that's going to help them in the short term. But we've definitely seen the pendulum swing in the last few years. It used to be, in the ER we always talked about, "We're not treating pain adequately. We're not giving enough medication." And I think the response to that, 15, 20 years ago was to say, "Let's get more opioids. Let's prescribe more, let's give more IV medications."
Now, we've seen what's resulted from that. And it's not just the ER, it's primary care physicians, it's pain clinics, it's specialists. It's all across the spectrum of health care in the United States.
Interviewer: In the ER, was the opioid generally in pill form, or did you give it through IVs?
Dr. Madsen: We have often . . . and again, to say we don't do this, we do it because there is a role for opioids, and I think there's something we need to make sure we understand too is that there's a role for these medications people that have severe injury, long bone fractures, things like this, that's the only thing that's going to treat their pain adequately.
And so we do give at IV. There are IV forms of opioid medications like Morphine or Hydromorphone. And then there are pill forms as well that we can prescribe, hydrocodone, oxycodone, things like that. You've heard of Lortab, Norco, Percocet, all these sorts of brand names. So there are those two options that we use in the ER and that people use elsewhere as well.
Interviewer: So if I'm a patient, I find myself in the emergency department, and I'm told that my pain is such that you would recommend that I should have an opioid-based painkiller. Should I be nervous that I could possibly get addicted to it?
Dr. Madsen: I think the big issues with addiction come when we're taking medication not to treat the pain but often for the way it makes us feel. And if this is a new injury, if it's a serious injury, or if it's a serious issue like severe abdominal pain and that's the only thing that's going to control it, I think you need it. And I think you have to make sure you have some balance there and not just think, "Opioids are bad. I'm going to get addicted if I even have a touch of this medication." That's not the case.
So when people take it long term, they're taking it more for the way it makes them feel rather than, say, coming in for severe pain and I'm taking this because I need this pain in my abdomen treated right now because I've got a ruptured appendicitis or something like that going on.
Interviewer: So how have things changed in the ER?
Dr. Madsen: Yeah, so I think one of the biggest changes I've seen, so a couple of areas. Number one, we have a statewide database we can use and it's very useful. I can look up, if someone comes in and I can see have they gotten multiple prescriptions for opioids?
If they have and it's come from lots of different physicians, particularly lots of different ERs, I'll talk to that person and I'll express my concern, say, "We're seeing lots of different prescriptions from lots of different places. I'm concerned about the possibility of, maybe, addiction here. You need to go to one person, get this from one doctor so they can monitor what you're getting and make sure you're staying safe with these medications."
The second thing we've seen are just, like I talked about, decreased prescriptions for opioids for a lot of stuff that maybe we used to prescribe it for, for bumps and bruises and back pain because we wanted to make sure people's pain was taken care of. Now, I think it's more like saying, "Hey, try Ibuprofen. Ibuprofen, it's a great medication. Avoid opioids if at all possible."
Again, still there are cases where opioids are necessary. It's the only thing that's going to really adequately control someone's pain, but a lot of those kinds of gray zone areas. I think a lot more physicians are moving away from opioids altogether or are really limiting the number of opioids they're prescribing to those patients.
Interviewer: So this is a good first step, I would imagine. What else needs to be done?
Dr. Madsen: Well, I think we need to know a lot more about how we can better address pain and if there are other factors. Does anxiety really play into this, is something we studied in our ER. Patients who come in who are feeling very anxious, how much does that amplify the pain? If I address that anxiety, is that going to help with the treatment of pain?
Something else we're doing really new in our ER and one of the few places doing this is we have a physical therapist in our ER as well. So we're using our physical therapist to come in and see a lot of these people with back pain, work with them right there, get them set up with physical therapy to hopefully avoid the opioid prescription, to get them some treatment and say, "Hey, you don't need just to take pills for this. Here's some exercises, some strengthening, some stretching. It's going to give you a whole lot more relief than taking some sort of opioid."
Interviewer: So just like anything else, it's a useful tool. It's just that maybe we haven't been using it the best that we should up until this point?
Dr. Madsen: That's exactly right. I think the pendulum swung too far one direction and it's going back the other way. Hopefully, we can have some nice balance here and address this, what it really is, a nationwide epidemic.
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