ISBN : 9780199981830
Prescription Drug Diversion and Pain provides an interdisciplinary overview of medications used to treat chronic pain, specifically the benefits and risks that are posed by long-term opioids use. This book offers a single, comprehensive source for understanding the specialzied field of the opioid crisis and is a must-read for healthcare professionals, caregivers, policy makers, regulatory officials, law enforcement, and those in the pharmaceutical industry seeking to address the current and future opioid crisis.
Introduction to Pain and Prescription Drug Diversion
John F. Peppin, John J. Coleman, and Kelly K. Dineen
Chapter 1: Opioid Medications: Old Wine in New Bottles
Timothy Atkinson, John J. Coleman, and Jeffrey Fudin
Chapter 2: Legal Regulation of Prescription Opioids and Prescribers
Kelly K. Dineen and Adam J. Ruggles
Chapter 3: Monitoring Prescriptions, Third-Party Healthcare Payers, Prescription Benefit Managers, and Private Sector Policy Options
John J. Coleman
Chapter 4: Whatever Happened to the Decade of Pain Control and Research?
John J. Coleman
Chapter 5: Evaluation and Treatment of the Chronic Pain Patient: Practice and Complexity
John F. Peppin, Pravardhan Birthi, Bill H. McCarberg, and Yvonne D'Arcy
Chapter 6: An Overview of the Abuse Potential of Non-Opioids: Sedatives, Hypnotics, and Stimulants
Christopher M. Herndon and Kelly Gable
Chapter 7: Psychiatry and Chronic Pain: An Associative Connection
Hani Raoul Khouzam
Chapter 8: Managing Pain in Patients with a History of a Substance Use Disorder: Challenges and Opportunities
Martin D. Cheatle
Chapter 9: Special Populations
Kelly K. Dineen
Chapter 10: The Demise of Interdisciplinary Chronic Pain Management and Its Relationship to the Scourge of Prescription Opioid Diversion and Abuse
Michael E. Schatman
Chapter 11: Pain Management Assessment Beyond the Physician Encounter: Urine Drug Monitoring and Patient Agreements
Anand C. Thakur
Epilogue
John F. Peppin, John J. Coleman, and Kelly K. Dineen