
In the field of pain medicine, the interventions that can improve a patient's pain, mood, and functionality are only as effective as the patient's willingness to follow recommended treatment plans. Facilitating Treatment Adherence in Pain Medicine provides a practical guide to understanding and improving patient adherence with regards to both opioid and non-opioid pharmacotherapy, pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic pain interventions, and use of biometrics and behavioral techniques. The book also explores the ethics of dealing with patients who are non-adherent.Facilitating Treatment Adherence in Pain Medicine is the first book to address the obstacle patient non-adherence poses to reaching therapeutic goals in pain medicine, making it an ideal resource for pain physicians and primary care physicians who manage patients with chronic pain.
This book investigates the critical challenge of patient non-adherence in pain management and provides clinical strategies to improve treatment outcomes. Authors Martin Cheatle and Perry G. Fine, both experts in pain medicine and behavioral health, synthesize clinical data and psychological frameworks to address why patients fail to follow treatment plans. The text argues that adherence is a multifaceted issue requiring a combination of pharmacological oversight, behavioral intervention, and ethical decision-making.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Medical professionals identify this work as a specialized resource for addressing the behavioral obstacles inherent in chronic pain treatment. Experts highlight the text for its practical application in clinical settings where patient compliance directly impacts therapeutic success.
Page Count:
208
Publication Date:
2017-04-26
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190600071
ISBN-13:
9780190600075
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