Saturday, 5 December 2015

Suicide And Chronic Neuropathic Pain

Today's post from psychologytoday.com (see link below) covers a very serious topic concerning people living with chronic pain (and that includes millions of neuropathy patients) and that is the risk that the stress becomes so great that the only option is suicide. People try to link suicides of this nature to the so-called 'opioid addiction crisis' but that is way too simplistic. Anyone living with non-stop, chronic, nerve pain will tell you that there are times when things seem so bleak that thoughts naturally go towards ending it all. Were it not for opioid (and many other) drug treatments, suicide statistics would be much much higher than they are. At the moment, there aren't any trustworthy statistics about exactly how many people commit suicide because of the pain they're in but it's likely that the problem is much greater than imagined and deserves some serious research and study. This article highlights the problem in an intelligent way.


A Nation in Pain: Chronic Pain and the Risk of Suicide
 
Judy Foreman Posted Nov 24, 2015

Chronic pain significantly increases the danger.

This fall's grim report about rising suicide and overall death rates among white, middle-aged Americans contains a slim silver lining. Here it is:

The new analysis by two Princeton economists, Anne Case and Angus Deaton, suggests that chronic pain — and the opioids used to treat it — may be a key driver of the rising deaths. While the “noisy” opioid epidemic has garnered near-daily headlines across the country for several years now, the equally horrible but silent epidemic of chronic pain has not yet broken through into the nation’s consciousness. Maybe things are beginning to change.

Many people still don’t realize it, but 100 million American adults live with chronic pain, many of them with pain so bad it wrecks their work, their families, their mental health and their lives.

There are no hard data on how many people with chronic pain die by suicide every year. But there are inferences. The suicide rate among people with chronic pain is known to be roughly twice that for people without chronic pain.

Since there are 41,149 suicides every year in the U.S., according to the National Center for Health Statistics, it’s possible that many of these suicides are driven by pain. Not proven fact, but plausible hypothesis. This would suggest that perhaps as many 20,000 or more Americans a year with chronic pain kill themselves, which would be more than the government’s tally of 16,235 deaths from prescription opioids every year. According to a CDC spokeswoman:

In 2013, there were 8,257 deaths that involved heroin and 16,235 deaths that involved prescription opioids. These categories are not mutually exclusive: if a decedent had both a prescription opioid as well as heroin listed on their death certificate, their death is counted in both the heroin as well as the prescription opioid death categories.

The truth, of course, is devilishly difficult to figure out with any certainty. Many people in severe, chronic pain have, and should have, opioids available. But unless they leave a suicide note it’s virtually impossible to tell if they overdose on purpose or accidentally. That’s in stark contrast to a pain patient who ends his or her life using a gun. That’s clearly a suicide, with or without a note.

In the course of researching my 2014 book on chronic pain, I heard many grisly stories. One Salt Lake City truck driver I interviewed would be dead today if his wife hadn’t walked in on him with a gun in his mouth. He had been in severe headache pain and after many visits to the ER, was repeatedly dismissed as a drug seeker, even without a medical workup. (Eventually, he was diagnosed with two brain aneurysms, bulging weak spots in a blood vessel).

I also heard about a surgeon with shingles who could find no relief for his pain and took a scalpel to his back in an attempt to dig out the painful nerves; he wound up in his own ER — as a patient. I heard of another man with ophthalmic shingles who finally shot himself because of unrelieved pain. A Boston surgeon I met was on the verge of suicide due to unrelenting pain from a rare autoimmune disease.

The anecdotes go on and on. Unfortunately, from a statistical point of view, they are just anecdotes. And unlike opioid abuse deaths, the stories of these and other pain patients rarely make the headlines.

Nor do these cases routinely make it into the reports of medical examiners and coroners, according to Utah pain specialist Dr. Lynn Webster, writing in a recent issue of Pain Medicine News.

In this fall's Princeton study, the lead author, Anne Case, was particularly interested in the role poor health might play in suicide because, as she told The New York Times, she herself has suffered for 12 years from disabling and untreatable lower back pain. In her research, Case discovered that middle-aged people, unlike the young and unlike the elderly, were reporting more pain in recent years than in the past. One-third of people in this group had chronic joint pain in recent years and one in seven reported sciatica.

The dismal situation with chronic pain — and the potential link with suicide — is unlikely to improve until the federal government takes the pain epidemic seriously. While the government spends $2,562 on research for every person with HIV/AIDS, it spends only $4 for every person with pain.

Clearly, chronic pain needs more attention and more research dollars. After all, it is the main reason Americans go on disability.

And it appears to be driving growing numbers of Americans to kill themselves.

(Originally posted on WBUR’s CommonHealth)

https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/nation-in-pain/201511/chronic-pain-and-the-risk-suicide

1 comment:

  1. I was wondering if the consciousness around opiod addiction would bring any awareness regarding true pain management. My Physicians were managing my conditions with every possible method. When it is managed well, I have a life. When they started to be limited by people that have no medical experience; telling him no one could remain on the medicines, even if they need them- I began to think my only option would be possible suicide. I am no where near that option, but if they remove all the medicine that has helped, I am faced with living with the sensation of being burned alive. Each part of my body additionally is struck with the sensation of needles being pushed into each burning bit of my skin. What would you do? Your life is governed by managing pain. You cannot plan when to eat or possibly see outside your home-due to screaming as a result of constant pain. Those concerned about overdoses need to Stop blaming the people that use the medications as prescribed-Leave us and our physicians alone. Those lives are on the backs of those that try to rule the physicians. Those deaths are on their them as well!

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