1 / 45

VCU Chronic Nonmalignant Pain Management : An Online Curriculum

VCU Chronic Nonmalignant Pain Management : An Online Curriculum. Leanne M. Yanni, MD Creator & Editor VCU Medical Center November 16 th , 2007. Background. Managing Pain is challenging Spans professions and specialties Variation in chronic pain syndromes

terentia
Télécharger la présentation

VCU Chronic Nonmalignant Pain Management : An Online Curriculum

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. VCU Chronic Nonmalignant Pain Management: An Online Curriculum Leanne M. Yanni, MD Creator & Editor VCU Medical Center November 16th, 2007

  2. Background • Managing Pain is challenging • Spans professions and specialties • Variation in chronic pain syndromes • Limited evidence-based guidelines • Limited provider training • Provider fears of legal ramifications Upshur et al 2006; Chen et al 2006; Adams et al 2001

  3. IM Resident Chart Review • Inconsistent documentation of pain assessment and past history • Underutilization of a multi-modal approach to treatment • Underutilization of important clinical practice tools • Assist in recognizing and/or averting misuse Yanni et al 2006 (abstract)

  4. IM Resident Attitudes • Over half reported their experience negatively impacted their view of primary care • Nearly all residents were less confident in their ability to treat pain than other conditions • Over half rated preparation as fair or poor • No resident found treatment of pain rewarding Weaver et al 2005 (abstract); Chen et al 2007

  5. System Interventions to standardize opioid prescribing and monitoring • Pain clinic in the Internal Medicine resident practice • Development of pain curriculum

  6. Curriculum Aims • Improve knowledge of chronic nonmalignant pain • Improve attitudes towards managing patients with chronic nonmalignant pain • Offer ongoing access to practice resources • Ease practice challenges

  7. The Process • Assembled interdisciplinary team of writers • Developed outline and objectives • Wrote content and developed resources • Partnered with VCU SOM to design web module • Recruited national reviewers • Initiated educational studies in medical students and residents

  8. Completion to Date

  9. Course Evaluation Questions • Having completed the curriculum will you access any of the resources? • Is the assessment and treatment of patients with CNMP more important to you as a result of using this curriculum? • As a result of the curriculum, will you make any changes in your behavior or practice? • Would you recommend this curriculum to your colleagues?

  10. % Yes to Evaluation Questions

  11. Reviewer Data • If so, what changes? • “Change medication agreement, use urine drug screening.” • “Change contract and procedure for follow-up.” • “Use template. Specific appointments for pain.” • “Create standardized office visit forms, different urine screening policy and procedures, update my own lecture.” • “Many…”

  12. Resident Data • If so, what changes? • “I will not assume that everyone is ‘drug seeking.’ ” • “Increased utilization of multimodal approach to chronic pain.” • “More frequent office visits for patients with pain, more thorough evaluation prior to starting meds…” • “Careful prescribing habits regarding complete documentation.”

  13. Current Applications • VCU GME programs • VCU SOM undergraduate curriculum • GME and undergraduate medical schools outside of Virginia • VCU School of Pharmacy • Virginia Providers • Supported by DHP

  14. Aims of Partnership with DHP • Provide accessible resources for pain education • Create a Virginia-specific module to outline responsibilities and legalities • Highlight Virginia specific resources • Virginia’s Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP)

  15. The Curriculum • Access through DHP www.dhp.virginia.gov • Create LMS account • Register for course activity • Use valid license number • Access code: “Virginia Pain” • Review Navigation Instructions

  16. Future Directions • Analyze data from educational studies • Evaluate usefulness for Virginia Providers • Extend use in training programs • All professions and specialties • Partner with other organizations on a regional or national level for pain education

  17. The Curriculum Team: Design • John Priestley, MA • Instructional design, web design & development • Joel Browning • Learning Management System, web programming & administration • Chris Stephens • Web programming and administration • Jeanne Schlesinger, Med • Project management, instructional design, and photography

  18. The Curriculum Team: Content • Leanne Yanni, MD • Creator, Editor, & Content Contributor • lyanni@mcvh-vcu.edu • Betty Anne Johnson, MD, PhD • Laura Morgan, PharmD • Mike Weaver, MD • Sarah Beth Harrington, MD • Christine Huynh, MD • Carl Wolf, PhD

  19. VCU Chronic Nonmalignant Pain Managementwww.dhp.virginia.gov License Number Access code: “Virginia Pain”

More Related