We don't take pain into account when assessing where to invest health sector research and delivery dollars. That needs to change
By Michael Wolfson
Contributor EvidenceNetwork.ca
Pain
is a difficult topic for Canada's health care sector. It can arise from
many diseases, but not always. For example, arthritis in a joint can be
visible on X-rays and not cause any pain; but it can also be so painful
as to completely disable an individual.
Pain
is subjective, so sufferers can be dismissed as wimps or malingerers.
Science is only just beginning to find biological markers that can
provide evidence that someone is really suffering from pain.
But
there's another problem: we don't take pain into account when assessing
where to invest health sector research and delivery dollars.
There
are well known adages that "you get what you measure" and "you can't
manage what you don't measure." Canada's health sector is unfortunately
informed by misleading life-expectancy and cause-of-death statistics. We
pay much less attention to the kinds of health burdens borne while
we're alive - like pain.
But we can change that.
Canada,
as most countries, has a table of the most important health problems in
the population based on the disease written on death certificates. But
only recently, with the advent of high-quality population health
surveys, do we now have good data on what makes us feel lousy while
we're alive.
Cancer
and heart disease are number one and two on the health problem table
because they're the most frequent causes of death. Chronic pain doesn't
register on this list because it's generally non-fatal.
Pain
is not a disease in the lexicon of the medical profession; it's more
often considered only a symptom of some 'real' disease. And it doesn't
have an obvious bodily location like heart or lung.
But
what if we used another indicator: health-adjusted life expectancy or
HALE? This is like the usual life expectancy measure, with one major
difference. Instead of simply counting years as either alive = 1, and
dead = 0, we count only years in full health = 1. Periods of life spent
being mobility impaired or in chronic pain would count somewhere in
between 0 and 1. For HALE, we count years in less than full health as
positive but not as highly as years in full health.
There
are well-accepted ways to derive the numerical values to be given to
living with this or that health problem. If we do this, non-fatal health
problems like chronic pain and mental illness rise dramatically in the
health problem table. For example, the burden of arthritis
(musculoskeletal diseases) among women becomes their number one health
problem, ahead of breast cancer, lung cancer and heart disease.
Instead
of using diseases, we can also measure health problems defined in
non-technical terms that everyone can understand: Can you see? Are you
able to move around? Do you have problems remembering? Do you suffer
from chronic pain?
While
this switch from biomedically defined diseases to more ordinary
vernacular descriptions of health problems may seem innocuous, it
actually has profound implications for health care. Doctors are
generally trained to diagnose and treat diseases. With clinical
specialization, this orientation has become ever more siloed. The
cardiologist sees a patient in terms of their heart function, while a
rheumatologist sees their joints. They may only see the patient's pain
secondarily.
If
we use HALE as our measure and look at the impact of chronic pain from
whatever source (or no obvious source at all), it's about four times as
large as the two most common causes of death: heart disease and cancers.
If we allow our analysis to be more sophisticated to look also at the
impacts of risk factors like tobacco smoking and obesity, chronic pain
is still many times larger in its impact.
It's
time for Canada's health ministers to start publishing and acting on
the right indicators if they want to address the real health burdens of
Canadians.
Michael Wolfson is a member of the Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics at the University of Ottawa and a contributor with EvidenceNetwork.ca,
which is based at the University of Winnipeg. He was a Canada Research
Chair at the University of Ottawa. He is a former assistant chief
statistician at Statistics Canada. |
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Wednesday, September 5, 2018
Broadening health care's perspective on pain
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