treating chronic pain in adolescents

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Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents Amanda Bye, PsyD, Behavioral Medicine Specialist Collaborative Family Healthcare Association 15 th Annual Conference October 10-12, 2013 Broomfield, Colorado U.S.A. Session # E2b Friday, October 11, 2013

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Session # E2b Friday, October 11, 2013. Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents. Amanda Bye, PsyD , Behavioral Medicine Specialist. Collaborative Family Healthcare Association 15 th Annual Conference October 10-12, 2013 Broomfield, Colorado U.S.A. Faculty Disclosure. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Amanda Bye, PsyD, Behavioral Medicine Specialist

Collaborative Family Healthcare Association 15th Annual ConferenceOctober 10-12, 2013 Broomfield, Colorado U.S.A.

Session # E2bFriday, October 11, 2013

Page 2: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Faculty Disclosure

I have not had any relevant financial relationships

during the past 12 months.

Page 3: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Objectives

• Provide an understanding of the rationale for and key components of collaborative pain care

• Identify how chronic pain affects teens, families and medical professionals

• Learn ways to treat this population that work for the family and medical professionals in an integrative setting

Page 4: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Case• 14 year old female with

chronic abdominal pain for 8 months. No clear medical cause

• Tutor comes into the home as Cindy no longer goes to school. She has also stopped spending time with friends

• Will go to emergency room or her doctor’s office at least once per week. Mother takes time off from work for these appointments.

• “Nothing helps.”• Family stress in the past year

Page 5: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Case

In your current role, what would you do to help this family?

Page 6: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

The Problem

• Adolescents with chronic pain have historically been a challenge to treat

• It is estimated that 25-46% of patients under the age of 18 years have experienced chronic pain, these patients require more emergency room, primary care and specialist visits. *

• This is a significant cost to both the family and medical team

*Harrison, T. (2011). Pediatric chronic pain: There is hope. Clinical and Health Affairs. Retrieved fromhttp://www.minnesotamedicine.com/tabid/3692/default.aspx

Page 7: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Treatment Options

Page 8: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Solution• Implementation of teen

chronic pain program that is effective in increasing overall functioning and decreasing the cost to families and in medical

• Program content was based on empirically validated chronic pain programs for adults and relationship groups for teens

• Integrative care

Page 9: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Requirements for Inclusion into the Program

• Ages 12-18 years• >6 months of pain• No clear medical explanation for the pain• Pain is interfering in basic functioning

Page 10: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Integrative Approach to Care

• Psychologist• Primary Care Physician• Specialty services• Consultation with pain physician at TCH• Mental Health• Family members• School involvement

Page 11: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

The Group• 4-week program. First week parent/caregiver

attends the 2 hour group. Attend last 30 minutes of each subsequent group

• Week 1- basic information about pain• Week 2- behavioral approaches to treating pain• Week 3- cognitive approaches• Week 4- whole body health and relapse

prevention

Page 12: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Measures used pre and post group

• Modified PHQ-9 and GAD scales were completed by the teens

• Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) • Outside referral costs to Kaiser Permanente• Number of visits• School attendance data• Anecdotal parental report

Page 13: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Results

Page 14: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Results• Clinically significant decrease in number of office and

phone visits with primary care (p=0.0011 , p=0.006 respectively)

• No significant change in email contacts• No clinically significant change in GAD scores (n=11)• Modified PHQ-9 scores approached significance

(n=18)• Increase in attendance days• Increase in functioning reported by parents but no

clinically sig difference on Brief Pain Inventory Scale (n=16)

Page 15: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Results

• No difference in severity of depression or anxiety

• Brief Pain Inventory- Pain affected walking and relationships significantly less than the other scales.

Page 16: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Limitations

• Number of participants admittedly small• Number of completed questionnaires small• Follow-up questionnaires several months later

could show if the teen functioned better after having time to use the skills

• Parent questionnaires would also be a good source of data

Page 17: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Conclusions

• Effective in decreasing outside referral costs• Decreasing number of office and telephone

visits in medical• Increasing school attendance• Parental report of improvement in symptoms• No change in patient-reported improvement in

functioning but this may be related to not having enough time to show improvement or family dynamics

Page 18: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

How might this group have benefitted Cindy, her family and her treatment

team?

Page 19: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Learning Assessment

Audience Question & Answer

Page 20: Treating Chronic Pain in Adolescents

Session Evaluation

Please complete and return theevaluation form to the classroom monitor

before leaving this session.

Thank you!