Mental Health Needs of Chronic Pain Patients Often Go Untreated

By Pat Anson

People who live with chronic pain often experience anxiety and depression, but they are far less likely to have access to mental healthcare in the U.S. than those who do not have persistent pain, according to a new study.

Nearly 52 million American adults have chronic pain – about one in every five. Over 43% of them have a need for mental health treatment, compared to just 17.4% of adults who do not have chronic pain.

“People living with chronic pain may form a distinct population with special mental health care needs,” said lead author Jennifer De La Rosa, PhD, strategy director for the University of Arizona Health Sciences Comprehensive Center for Pain & Addiction. “Improving health care for people with chronic pain includes not only connecting people to care, but also addressing a disproportionate failure to achieve relief.”

De La Rosa and her colleagues reviewed findings from the 2019 National Health Interview Survey, which collected health information from a representative sample of nearly 32,000 U.S. adults. Their findings, recently published in the journal PAIN, show that just 44.4% of those with chronic pain, anxiety and depression had their mental health issues adequately treated, compared to 71.5% of those without pain.

“There are many possible reasons an individual with chronic pain might have suboptimal mental health experiences, including the accessibility of care and the feasibility of attending appointments,” De La Rosa said in a statement. “Additionally, few mental health providers are trained in chronic pain, so only a small percentage of people living with chronic pain are likely receiving mental health treatment that is designed to address their needs.”

It is not specifically addressed in the U of A study, but many patients on opioid pain medication no longer have access to benzodiazepines – a class of anti-anxiety medication that includes Xanax and Valium. Once commonly prescribed together, insurance companies and medical guidelines now strongly discourage that practice, due to fears that the two drugs raise the risk of an overdose.

In 2016, the CDC warned doctors to avoid co-prescribing opioids and benzodiazepines “whenever possible.” That same year, the FDA updated its warning labels to state that taking the drugs concurrently could result in “profound sedation, respiratory depression, coma and death.”

Even when mental health medications or therapy are offered, pain patients may be reluctant to accept them.

“Some patients may interpret mental health screening as potentially discrediting perhaps reflecting provider's doubts as to the legitimacy of self-reported pain,” the U of A researchers said. “Patients may also fear that acknowledging mental health comorbidity will reduce the likelihood of being prescribed opioids. The heightened mental health treatment stigma experienced by patients with chronic pain may lead many patients to resist the conceptualization of their chronic pain as having any emotional or mental components.”

A recent study by the same research team estimated that 12 million U.S. adults with chronic pain have  anxiety or depression so severe that it limits their ability to work, socialize and complete daily tasks. To improve patient outcomes, researchers say the routine evaluation of pain patients for anxiety and depression should become “a cornerstone of mental health policy.”