The emergency physician—also under caseload pressure— decides the easiest disposition is to admit the patient and dump the problem on the hospitalist. “They’re out of their pain medications at home, and when you call the attending you are told that they are drug seekers,” Dr. Weston relates. “These patients take a lot of energy. They can be manipulative. We can’t do right for them. It’s not satisfying. We don’t want to round on them. The way we hospitalists manage these patients sometimes reflects not only the patient’s personality, but our personality as well.”
Hospitalists don’t just treat these patients’ pain, they also address their suffering, he says.
High-quality pain management is multidisciplinary, Dr. Weston notes, because pain is multifactorial. The hospitalist occupies an important coordinating position and is charged with responsibility for the whole person during that patient’s brief hospital stay. But there are limits to what the hospitalist can accomplish. A palliative care team or an acute pain service can make important contributions to hospitalized patients’ pain. So can social workers, psychologists, pharmacists, and chaplains. But it is the hospitalist’s responsibility to coordinate these pieces of the pain puzzle for patients on service.
In many hospitals, the palliative care service has been set up to consult on pain, suffering, and clarification of treatment goals for patients nearing the end of life. These services vary from institution to institution in terms of whether they prefer to focus on end-of-life issues or are comfortable fielding other kinds of chronic pain questions. Acute pain services equally vary in terms of whether their focus is primarily on surgical pain “interventions” or on a multidisciplinary approach to pain management.
Ideally, Dr. Weston says, a major hospital would have both services available as resources to the hospitalist. Or, if there is only one of them, it should have a broad approach to pain management. Otherwise, it is up to the hospitalist to pull together a virtual pain team to provide a multidisciplinary response to complex pain.
“I am also board certified in hospice and palliative medicine,” Dr. Weston says. “I can use my medical knowledge to try to get the patient comfortable on oral meds so that they can go home. And I can personally make an appointment for them within 48 hours of discharge with their attending physician or a pain specialist. But for too many patients, this connection never happens.”
“Pain management in general is a hard thing to deal with,” adds Lauren Fraser, MD, regional chief of the department of hospital medicine for Kaiser Permanente Colorado in Denver. “It’s frustrating because you want to do the right thing,” she says. “We need first of all to rule out anything we can fix that might be causing the pain. Then we’re dealing with the patient’s quality of life and the disabling effects of pain. Each patient and family has a different need, and when you meet with them one-on-one you’re dealing with all of it.”
Dr. Fraser doesn’t have access to an acute pain service in her current setting, “although we have interventional folks to put in the PCAs and epidurals. We generally are able to get the services we need, although there would be an advantage to having an identified multidisciplinary pain service to provide the coordination.”