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CDC Seeking Comment from Pain ‘Stakeholders’

By Roger Chriss, PNN Columnist

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has made an unusual request for public comment about the use of opioids and the management of acute and chronic pain.

In a notice published last week in the Federal Register, the CDC said it wants to “obtain comment concerning perspectives on and experiences with pain and pain management, including but not limited to the benefits and harms of opioid use.”

Comments are being sought from patients with chronic or acute short-term pain, their family members, caretakers and healthcare providers – what the agency bureaucratically calls “stakeholders.”

“Public comment will help CDC's understanding of stakeholders' values and preferences regarding pain management and will complement CDC's ongoing work assessing the need for updating or expanding the CDC Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain,” the agency said.

To leave a comment in the Federal Register, click here.

The CDC doesn’t always seek comments from the public. The agency’s 2016 opioid guideline was initially drawn up without any public hearings or input from patients. It was only after a public outcry that hearings were held and comments were sought in the Federal Register. Over 4,000 people responded, most of them opposing the guideline.

Since then, the federal government has continued to get an earful from patients, providers, medical organizations and various panels about how harmful the guideline has been for pain sufferers and why a “one-size-fits-all approach” to pain management doesn’t work.

For instance, in May 2019, the Pain Management Best Practices Inter-Agency Task Force issued a long-awaited report on pain management, emphasizing the “importance of individualized patient-centered care in the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic pain.”

In December 2019, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine issued another report outlining “a framework for prescribers and others to develop their own plans for acute pain.”

At present, the National Institute of Health’s HEAL Initiative is developing web services for chronic pain management, along with working on research to predict pain.

Moreover, physicians like Dr. Stefan Kertesz have written about the need for nuance in pain management. And pain psychologist Dr. Beth Darnall has written about the need for patient-centeredness in chronic pain, while also working on clinical best practices at the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.  

Patients themselves have drawn attention to the problem, from TED talks by advocates like Kate Nicholson to nationwide rallies by the group Don’t Punish Pain.

Nearly one year ago, the CDC finally recognized that the opioid guideline was being widely misapplied and issued a long-overdue “clarification” urging policymakers to stop treating its voluntary recommendations as law.

The American Medical Association said it was about time.

“The guidelines have been treated as hard and fast rules, leaving physicians unable to offer the best care for their patients,” said AMA President Patrice Harris, MD. “The CDC’s clarification underscores that patients with acute or chronic pain can benefit from taking prescription opioid analgesics at doses that may be greater than the guidelines or thresholds put forward by federal agencies, state governments, health insurance companies, pharmacy chains, pharmacy benefit managers and other advisory or regulatory bodies.”

Patients and providers have been sharing their perspective and experiences for years, with little evidence to suggest that the CDC has been paying much attention. Not a word of the guideline has changed, although the agency is working on an “update” that may be done in late 2021.

As the number of pain stakeholders continues to rise and their care is complicated by COVID-19, the CDC needs to look seriously at the many years’ worth of clearly expressed “values and preferences.” If the CDC needs even more information, so be it. But it’s hard to figure out how much more clearly all the stakeholders can speak.

Roger Chriss lives with Ehlers Danlos syndrome and is a proud member of the Ehlers-Danlos Society. Roger is a technical consultant in Washington state, where he specializes in mathematics and research.

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