Skip to content
  • About
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Book
  • Careers
  • Podcast
  • Recommended
  • Speaking
  • All
  • Physician
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
  • Video
    • All
    • Physician
    • Practice
    • Policy
    • Finance
    • Conditions
    • .edu
    • Patient
    • Meds
    • Tech
    • Social
    • Video
    • About
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Book
    • Careers
    • Podcast
    • Recommended
    • Speaking

The re-education of a physician into the school of pain

Heather Finlay-Morreale, MD
Physician
July 27, 2019
Share
Tweet
Share

Since childhood, I have suffered from severe stabbing headaches. Then in my first year of medical school in anatomy, as we peeled back the scalp of our cadaver, I saw a nerve poking out of a muscle on the back of the skull. With a flash, I knew that I was seeing the source of my pain. But despite identifying it, it would be another five years before I was diagnosed with occipital neuralgia. Thus, my first lesson in pain management. Getting accurate, effective, pain treatment is a lengthy and difficult process. Throughout medical school, I learned about pain receptors and pathways, but little about how to treat pain. Most of my experience treating pain came bedside, from supervising residents who passed down what their senior residents passed down to them. On rounds, there were short snippets of advice from attendings. I recall only one lecture on pain treatment in all of residency. Board exams had little no content on pain. Pain is a complex physical, psychological process, and medical training shortchanges it. Yet, no one can dispute that pain can dictate or limit one’s activities and mood. In part, due to the lack of training, it is no surprise then, that physicians I met as a patient were usually underprepared to work with chronic pain.

Unfortunately, several years into my career in pediatrics, I learned more than I ever wanted to about pain. I developed shingles/zoster and then post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN) from the resulting nerve damage. I learned that my medical school training and residency were poor preparation for the journey ahead. Further, many of the “facts” about pain and its treatment that I learned bedside were incorrect. PHN is nerve pain, which is a tricky beast. Nothing really works well for it. I learned in school that NSAIDs, acetaminophen, and opiates all “don’t treat nerve pain.” But I have since learned that is simply incorrect. They all work in some people to a partial and variable degree and some with intolerable side effects and risks for some people. On the flip side, nerve pain agents such as TCAs and gabapentinoids, touted effective in medical school, also work to varying degrees in different people, but many cannot tolerate the side effects.  In a discussion before a procedure with one of my pain physicians, I was told that if a treatment works to lower pain by 30 percent, then it is successful. For a recent drug in the process of getting FDA approval, the benchmark for success was only 20 percent. Interventional strategies have similar success rates but are only accessed at specialty centers and are out of the reach of many. Thus I have had to alter my expectations and learn that going from a pain score of 9 to a 6 is a “success”. I had to learn that moderately severe pain was better than super severe pain and that layering on different medications that each give 10 to 30 percent pain reduction until you finally reach a place that is livable is a daily titration.

In my journey with neuralgia, I also learned about complementary methods of pain control. All of these were discussed in training as a side note and mostly dismissed. For example, electrical stimulation in the form of TENs makes a difference, but few medical providers are knowledgeable enough about its use to prescribe therapy. Topicals such as menthol, methyl salicylate, and lidocaine help in a pain flare. Music is a welcome calming agent. Aromatherapy can help. Physical modalities such as physical therapy and massage help. Psychological therapies, such as CBT and ACT, can also reduce the experience of pain. Personally, skills learned from my pain psychologist have helped me more than any medication. Learning to live your life with pain that may not go away is difficult, and a guide is invaluable. However, none of these interventions were ever mentioned in my medical training, even though all of these methods have minimal side effects, and most are available without a doctor’s prescription.

Living life with chronic pain is a bit being handcuffed to an unwelcome dance partner. Pain affects all aspects of daily life. Hoping to go out for dinner or celebrate a family event? You better hope your “dance partner” is up for it. Many an event that I have been invited to has been curtailed due to pain. I have had to accept partial events and partial participation and take joy in what I can experience and try not to mourn what I am not able to participate in.  Pain has taken away some of my independence. Some days I cannot put on my own shoes. I cannot grocery shop independently or go to events in big stadiums/arenas. An additional challenge is that this dance partner is invisible to others who at times cannot comprehend my limitations. I have had to accept my new limits. It wasn’t an easy process and took the guidance of a trained pain psychologist.

Mindfulness, gratitude, and compassion all have played a big role in my healing from neuralgia as well. I had already started a mindfulness practice before the zoster, but it became more meaningful and important as I faced living with chronic pain. I began to see mentions of gratitude both in the pain community and the mindfulness community. I began chronicling my gratitude even on bad weeks and found it helpful to reflect on what is working rather than what was not. I also read up on compassion therapy and loving-kindness meditation, which circle around the same ideas –  that we must treat ourselves with the same compassion and love that we treat our family and friends. Adopting attitudes of gratefulness and compassion has been vital in managing my life with pain.

Pain has taken many things from me.  Accepting my limits and learning to live a life with pain that holds meaning and value is a daily journey. Acceptance and gratitude have helped me heal despite my physical pain level not really decreasing all that much. Overall this journey has been a re-education of a physician, now patient, in the lessons of pain.

Heather Finlay-Morreale is a pediatrician and can be reached on Twitter @FinlayMorreale.

Image credit: Shutterstock.com

Prev

Consumers are losing the war against meat antibiotics

July 27, 2019 Kevin 0
…
Next

Paltering: When the truth is used to deceive

July 28, 2019 Kevin 10
…

Tagged as: Neurology

Post navigation

< Previous Post
Consumers are losing the war against meat antibiotics
Next Post >
Paltering: When the truth is used to deceive

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

More by Heather Finlay-Morreale, MD

  • Empathetic patient care: Addressing disability in education

    Heather Finlay-Morreale, MD
  • Having more doctors to assess rare, multi-system illnesses

    Heather Finlay-Morreale, MD
  • Focusing on the frontlines of COVID leaves behind those with disabilities and chronic illness

    Heather Finlay-Morreale, MD

Related Posts

  • A paradigm shift in acute pain assessment and management

    Myles Gart, MD
  • 5 things I wish I had known earlier about chronic pain

    Tom Bowen
  • Using low-dose naltrexone to treat pain

    Alex Smith
  • A physician’s addiction to social media

    Amanda Xi, MD
  • A physician joins TikTok to talk sex education

    Jennifer Lincoln, MD
  • 5 hidden consequences of chronic pain

    Toni Bernhard, JD

More in Physician

  • Why this doctor hid her story for a decade

    Diane W. Shannon, MD, MPH
  • When errors of nature are treated as medical negligence

    Howard Smith, MD
  • The hidden chains holding doctors back

    Neil Baum, MD
  • 9 proven ways to gain cooperation in health care without commanding

    Patrick Hudson, MD
  • Why physicians deserve more than an oxygen mask

    Jessie Mahoney, MD
  • More than a meeting: Finding education, inspiration, and community in internal medicine [PODCAST]

    American College of Physicians & The Podcast by KevinMD
  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • The silent toll of ICE raids on U.S. patient care

      Carlin Lockwood | Policy
    • Why does rifaximin cost 95 percent more in the U.S. than in Asia?

      Jai Kumar, MD, Brian Nohomovich, DO, PhD and Leonid Shamban, DO | Meds
    • Why recovery after illness demands dignity, not suspicion

      Trisza Leann Ray, DO | Physician
    • Why medical students are trading empathy for publications

      Vijay Rajput, MD | Education
    • Addressing the physician shortage: How AI can help, not replace

      Amelia Mercado | Tech
    • What one diagnosis can change: the movement to make dining safer

      Lianne Mandelbaum, PT | Conditions
  • Past 6 Months

    • What’s driving medical students away from primary care?

      ​​Vineeth Amba, MPH, Archita Goyal, and Wayne Altman, MD | Education
    • How scales of justice saved a doctor-patient relationship

      Neil Baum, MD | Physician
    • A faster path to becoming a doctor is possible—here’s how

      Ankit Jain | Education
    • Make cognitive testing as routine as a blood pressure check

      Joshua Baker and James Jackson, PsyD | Conditions
    • How dismantling DEI endangers the future of medical care

      Shashank Madhu and Christian Tallo | Education
    • The broken health care system doesn’t have to break you

      Jessie Mahoney, MD | Physician
  • Recent Posts

    • What one diagnosis can change: the movement to make dining safer

      Lianne Mandelbaum, PT | Conditions
    • Why this doctor hid her story for a decade

      Diane W. Shannon, MD, MPH | Physician
    • Reimagining Type 2 diabetes care with nutrition for remission [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • How AI is revolutionizing health care through real-world data

      Sujay Jadhav, MBA | Tech
    • Ambient AI: When health monitoring leaves the screen behind

      Harvey Castro, MD, MBA | Tech
    • How kindness in disguise is holding women back in academic medicine

      Sylk Sotto, EdD, MPS, MBA | Conditions

Subscribe to KevinMD and never miss a story!

Get free updates delivered free to your inbox.


Find jobs at
Careers by KevinMD.com

Search thousands of physician, PA, NP, and CRNA jobs now.

Learn more

Leave a Comment

Founded in 2004 by Kevin Pho, MD, KevinMD.com is the web’s leading platform where physicians, advanced practitioners, nurses, medical students, and patients share their insight and tell their stories.

Social

  • Like on Facebook
  • Follow on Twitter
  • Connect on Linkedin
  • Subscribe on Youtube
  • Instagram

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • The silent toll of ICE raids on U.S. patient care

      Carlin Lockwood | Policy
    • Why does rifaximin cost 95 percent more in the U.S. than in Asia?

      Jai Kumar, MD, Brian Nohomovich, DO, PhD and Leonid Shamban, DO | Meds
    • Why recovery after illness demands dignity, not suspicion

      Trisza Leann Ray, DO | Physician
    • Why medical students are trading empathy for publications

      Vijay Rajput, MD | Education
    • Addressing the physician shortage: How AI can help, not replace

      Amelia Mercado | Tech
    • What one diagnosis can change: the movement to make dining safer

      Lianne Mandelbaum, PT | Conditions
  • Past 6 Months

    • What’s driving medical students away from primary care?

      ​​Vineeth Amba, MPH, Archita Goyal, and Wayne Altman, MD | Education
    • How scales of justice saved a doctor-patient relationship

      Neil Baum, MD | Physician
    • A faster path to becoming a doctor is possible—here’s how

      Ankit Jain | Education
    • Make cognitive testing as routine as a blood pressure check

      Joshua Baker and James Jackson, PsyD | Conditions
    • How dismantling DEI endangers the future of medical care

      Shashank Madhu and Christian Tallo | Education
    • The broken health care system doesn’t have to break you

      Jessie Mahoney, MD | Physician
  • Recent Posts

    • What one diagnosis can change: the movement to make dining safer

      Lianne Mandelbaum, PT | Conditions
    • Why this doctor hid her story for a decade

      Diane W. Shannon, MD, MPH | Physician
    • Reimagining Type 2 diabetes care with nutrition for remission [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • How AI is revolutionizing health care through real-world data

      Sujay Jadhav, MBA | Tech
    • Ambient AI: When health monitoring leaves the screen behind

      Harvey Castro, MD, MBA | Tech
    • How kindness in disguise is holding women back in academic medicine

      Sylk Sotto, EdD, MPS, MBA | Conditions

MedPage Today Professional

An Everyday Health Property Medpage Today
  • Terms of Use | Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA Policy
All Content © KevinMD, LLC
Site by Outthink Group

Leave a Comment

Comments are moderated before they are published. Please read the comment policy.

Loading Comments...