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Pain Management: a Regulatory Perspective

Pain Management: a Regulatory Perspective. William J. Schmidt, J.D . Senior Counsel, Investigations, Compliance & Enforcement Randy Beck Investigative Supervisor State Medical Board of Ohio. OVERVIEW. Organization of Medical Board Key provisions of pain management statutes & rules.

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Pain Management: a Regulatory Perspective

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  1. Pain Management:a Regulatory Perspective William J. Schmidt, J.D. Senior Counsel, Investigations, Compliance & Enforcement Randy Beck Investigative Supervisor State Medical Board of Ohio

  2. OVERVIEW • Organization of Medical Board • Key provisions of pain management statutes & rules

  3. State Medical Board of Ohio The Medical Board is a state regulatory agency founded in 1896

  4. Board Organization To protect and enhance the health and safety of the public through effective medical regulation Mission

  5. Structure Board Organization 12 members appointed by Governor to staggered five-year terms; may be reappointed 7 MD’s, 1 DO, 1 DPM, and 3 consumer representatives Monthly meetings in Columbus

  6. Operations Board Organization • 87 full time employees • $ 8 million plus annual operating budget funded solely by licensing & renewal fees • No money from general revenue fund

  7. Approximately 60,000 professionals*, including MEDICAL BOARD LICENSEES * and c*and coming soon… Radiologist Assistants Data as of 12-31-08

  8. Regulatory Authority STATUTES - Chapters 4730, 4731, 4760, 4762 & 4774, Ohio Revised Code RULES - Chapters 4730, 4731 & 4774 Ohio Administrative Code Medical Board interprets & enforces statutes and rules

  9. The Medical Board’sPain Management Guidelines

  10. The Medical Board has never taken an action against a physician for the appropriate use of medication

  11. The Medical Board has never taken an action against a physician for the treatment of cancer pain

  12. Ohio Intractable Pain Statute – October 1997 • Section 4731.052, Ohio Revised Code • Required Medical Board to write rules defining standards & procedures for diagnosing & treating intractable pain

  13. Ohio Intractable Pain Statute Physician who manages intractable pain with dangerous drugs in accordance with law not subject to Medical Board disciplinary action

  14. The Medical Board’sPain Management Rules Chapter 4731-21, O.A.C.

  15. Medical Board Rules Intractable pain is not • Pain associated with a terminal condition, or • Pain associated with a disease that may be expected to result in a terminal condition

  16. Rules do not apply to . . . Treatment using only non-CNS drugs or antidepressants

  17. Rules apply only to . . . Treatment on a protracted basis Use of amounts & combinations of drugs that may not be appropriate in other conditions For example: • Using doses far exceeding PDR’s usual recommended dosage • Adding opioids for breakthrough pain

  18. Requirements for Treating Intractable Pain

  19. Initial Evaluation 4731-21-02, O.A.C. • Patient history, including alcohol & substance abuse • Assessment of pain impact on function • Review of previous studies & therapies • Assessment of coexisting illnesses • Physical exam

  20. Medical Diagnosis Document presence of intractable pain Identify signs, symptoms & causes • Nature of underlying disease • Pain mechanism

  21. Individualized Treatment Plan Specify medical justification for drugs and role of drug therapy Document drugs that did not succeed, adjust drug therapy Document response Modify treatment plan as necessary

  22. Evaluation by Specialist • Must specialize in treatment of anatomic area, system or organ perceived as pain source • Evaluator must review prior treatment records & prepare written report • Referring physician must keep copy of specialist’s report • May assume patient’s care, but usually acts as a consultant

  23. Evaluation not required … if patient had prior satisfactory evaluation within reasonable time if treating physician has records of prior evaluation

  24. Informed Consent • Obtain from patient or person having authority to consent • Inform of benefits & risks of treatment • Inform of treatment alternatives • Document in patient record

  25. Be Sure to Document • need for using more than one controlled substance in pain treatment • patient’s name & address, dates, amounts, dosage forms & refills of all prescription drugs Consider use of duplicate prescription forms

  26. Other Considerations • Consider Pain Contract with patient • Consequences of non-compliance • Expectation of refills & follow-up visits • Consider urine sample for drug screening to confirm patient’s use • Ohio Automated Prescription Reporting System (OARRS) report

  27. OARRS • Ohio Automated Prescription Reporting System, a prescription monitoring program overseen by Ohio Board of Pharmacy • OARRS contains dispensing information for all controlled substances, carisoprodol products and tramadol products within the past 2 years • Physicians may register for OARRS access to review patient prescription history reports

  28. OARRS Registration www.ohiopmp.gov for registration information to obtain a user name and password Patient prescribing report requested on-line; data from January 1, 2006 provided; turn around time is about 15 minutes for report Approximate 25 day lag time in data entry, as pharmacies send dispensing reports to OARRS twice a month

  29. Patient Follow-Up • Periodically assess treatment efficacy • Assure drug therapy still indicated • Evaluate progress toward treatment objectives • Note functional ability & quality of life • Consider drug screens • Consider OARRS report review

  30. Obtain Objective Measures • Ability to engage in work • Pain intensity & interference with life • Family & social activities • Physical activity

  31. Suspected drug abuse? Physician may obtain a drug screen if there are indications of drug abuse Consult with substance abuse specialist

  32. If drug abuse suspected • Continue therapy consistent with specialist’s recommendations • Refer patient to substance abuse specialist if recommended • Continue to monitor for signs of abuse • Keep copy of any report from consultant • If termination of patient is considered, refer to Rule 4731-27, OAC

  33. Tolerance and physical dependence do not always equal addiction or require cessation of opioid therapy

  34. med.ohio.gov Medical Board website has links to: Pain Rules (Chapter 4731-21, OAC) Policy – Office-based Treatment of Opioid Addiction

  35. State Medical Board of Ohio 30 E. Broad St. 3rd Floor Columbus, OH 43215-6127 Phone: 614-466-3934 FAX: 614-728-5946 MED.OHIO.GOV

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