Surveys find two-thirds of professionals find pain is not well
managed, and insurance companies face challenges when trying to quickly
resolve motor vehicle accident claims involving complaints of chronic
pain.
By: Dr. Jason Mazzarella
In Canada, insurers are
under fire due to the reports of chronic pain post motor vehicle
accident collision. Recent findings have further complicated the chronic
pain issue in Canada.
The World Health Organization has stated
on recommendations set forth by the International Association for the
Study of Pain that chronic pain treatment is a basic human right.1 The
Canadian Pain Coalition at the September 3, 2010 International Pain
Summit in Montreal stated that "access to pain management is a
fundamental human right.2 And court judgments, including Martin vs.
Workers Compensation Board of Nova Scotia, addressed severity of pain as
a violation of the Canadian Charter of Rights.3
These findings
provide further evidence of the struggles insures have when trying
resolve motor vehicle accident claims in a timely and efficient manner.
These current findings are then complicated further by the current legal
system that acknowledges chronic pain to be a primarily subjective
experience thus allowing any doctor to make a comment on need based on
patient response.
The truth is that In Canada an estimated 6 to 7
million people suffer from chronic persistent pain.4 The Canadian Pain
Study in 2002 reports that chronic pain patients make up to 40% of the
population, and most doctors are ill-equipped to assess or treat these
conditions due to an overall lack of education and training.
Dr.
Jovey, president of the Canadian Pain Society, reported that two-thirds
of physicians and two-thirds of patients believe chronic pain is not
well managed, and that due to the shortage of pain specialists, family
physicians are forced to provide the bulk of pain management care.5
The
overall lack of whiplash and chronic pain specific training is leading
to an environment in which providers (DCs, psychologists, GPs,
neurologists, physiatrists, orthopedic surgeons) are stepping into the
gray area of their scopes in order to make medical opinions. These
medical opinions can then lead to further expenditures and disability.
If a plaintiff chronic pain doctor indicates to a patient that a chronic
pain process is present, this changes the ideology of the injured
person, their belief in their functional abilities and their long-term
outcome. Research has shown that a patient's perception of pain is as
important as the actual pain present.6
On the same hand, if the
insurer prematurely denies benefits for those suffering from pain,
research has shown that the cause of pain can continue to exacerbate. In
general MVAs, the majority of initial pain symptoms are due to
nociceptive input, such as tissue damage resulting in a painful
response. However, if this tissue damage is not appropriately and timely
treated, continued nociceptive input can lead to neuropathic pain,
compressive pain or psychogenic pain, further complicating the overall
recovery outlook.7
Whiplash and chronic pain research has evolved
greatly over the last two decades. We now know how occupants react
inside a vehicle during specific vector collisions at different speeds
dependent on crash variables, speeds and risk factors. We also know that
chronic pain can be objectively found through specific orthopedic
testing and special tests such as fMRI and PET scans.
Whiplash
and chronic pain education is the key to overall reduced liability in
regards to chronic pain and motor vehicle trauma. Doctors who deny
benefits based on assumption and opinion, allow for increased litigation
potential, as well as reduced client retention on the insurer's part.
Doctors without specific training who freely deliver chronic pain
diagnosis based solely on subjective reports allow for flooding of the
claims process as well as psychological related adverse effects on
client.
As insurers, the answer is simple. Require specific
postgraduate training from both the plaintiff IME and defense IME firms
chosen doctors. Those requesting chronic pain assessments related to
motor vehicle trauma or denial of chronic pain benefits related to motor
vehicle trauma should have post graduate training in whiplash
traumatology as well as in chronic pain from a CME (continuing medical
education) or CCE (continuing chiropractic education) approved
organization.
The current standard in Canada is the Canadian
Academy of Pain Management. Those recognized with a Diplomat in Pain
Management have obtained this through several qualifying control steps
(completed through the AAPM). First, the doctor must have enough CME or
CCE training in pain management to be approved to sit for the qualifying
examination by a panel of pain experts. Secondly, the doctor must pass a
rigorous and comprehensive multidisciplinary pain management test.
Thirdly, and most importantly the doctor must maintain 100 hours of
continuing education per cycle.
In my view, this is just as
important as pain medicine, as medicine in general is every changing and
continued maintenance of education is required to ensure the best
possible outcomes for those injured.
By requesting this specific
education from your IME assessors, the overall quality of care will be
enhanced and the overall duration of symptoms along with overall
disability, and need for additional benefit will be reduced.
Dr.
Jason Mazzarella, DC, DAAPM, DCAPM, DAAETS, FIAMA, MVC-FRA, CBIS, CMVT,
CATSM, CPM, is a specialist in chronic pain and one of only 26 Pain
Management Diplomats in Canada.
1. World Health Organization.
http://www.who.int/en/
Retrieved May 28, 2013.
2.
The Status of Pain in Canada - moving toward a Canadian Pain Strategy
Recommended by theCanadian Pain Coalition, The National Voice of People
with Pain.
http://www.canadianpaincoalition.ca
3. Judgments of the Supreme Court of Canada. http://scc.lexum.org/decisia-scc-csc/scc-csc/scc-csc/en/item/2088/index.do Retrieved May 28, 2013
4. Definition of Chronic Pain from the Supreme Court of Canada. http://ontarioinsurancelaw.blogspot.ca/ 2009/07/definition-of-chronic-pain-from-supreme.html
5.
Health Canada Meeting Re: Scheduling of Tramadol Ottawa, December 5th
2006. Roman D. Jovey MD, President Canadian Pain Society.
6.
Barry L, Guo Z, Kerns R, Duong B, Reid MC: Functional self-efficacy and
pain-related disability among older veterans with chronic pain in a
primary care setting. Pain 104 (2003) 131-137
7. Woolf CJ: Central Sensitization: Implications for the diagnosis and treatment of pain. Pain 152 (2011) S2-S15
Source: claimscanada.ca
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